Business Litigation

Complex Business Litigation Attorneys

Federal and state antitrust laws seek to protect consumers from the sort of concentrated economic power among businesses in a given industry that, when too concentrated, result in higher industry prices and decreased consumer choice.  In other words, antitrust laws prevent the improper acquisition of market power.  To bring a cause of action under the federal antitrust laws, a private plaintiff must generally show an injury to its business or property that was directly caused by the defendant’s antitrust violation, antitrust injury, and reasonable and quantifiable damages.  Antitrust injury is injury that effects competition itself, not just the individual plaintiff.   In addition to recovering damages for antitrust injury, which are trebled, in the appropriate circumstance, the antitrust plaintiff may move the court for injunctive relief, i.e., to keep the antitrust defendant from engaging in or from continuing to engage in behavior violative of the antitrust laws.
Two Major Construction Safety Updates: Strengthening Worker Protection in 2026

New York City has enacted two significant construction safety reforms in early 2026, to address both physical hazards and overall worker wellbeing. Construction workers are now required to...

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Informed Consent Is Not Optional: What the Yale NICU Verdict Means for Parents

A recent $32 million judgment against Yale University and Yale New Haven Hospital has sent shockwaves through neonatal care, medical malpractice, and product liability litigation nationwide. At the...

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Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern Merger: The Great Connection and the Responsibility That Comes with It

By Christopher Schnieders A proposed 85-billion-dollar merger between Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern is now under regulatory review. The companies say the deal would create America’s first truly...

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