Bankrupt Purdue Pharma LP and members of the billionaire Sackler family agreed to pay $7.4 billion to a group of US states and other parties to settle long-running litigation over OxyContin’s role in ...
Members of the Sackler family who own OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma, and the company itself, agreed to pay up to $7.4 billion to settle lawsuits over the toll of the powerful prescription painkiller.
A discussion on Donald Trump's "shock and awe" flood of executive orders on MSNBC on Thursday morning led one "Morning Joe" contributor to report that there is a belief the Supreme Court may have a ...
The Tesla CEO and X owner posted about Wisconsin's Supreme Court race a day after a Milwaukee meteorologist was fired for ...
One of Trump's executive orders moves to end birthright citizenship, a right enshrined in the Constitution. Here's what you need to know about the legal principle and its possible future.
A group of 15 states have reached a tentative new deal that would require them to set aside hundreds of millions of dollars from the settlement in a legal-defense fund for the family.
Purdue Pharma and the Sackler families agreed Thursday to increase their financial contribution to $7.4 billion to resolve mass opioid litigation.
U.S. District Judge John Coughenour, a Reagan appointee, scheduled the session to consider the request from Arizona, Illinois, Oregon and Washington.
Purdue Pharma and its Sackler family owners have reached a new $7.4 billion settlement to resolve thousands of lawsuits alleging that the pain medication Oxycontin caused a widespread opioid addiction ...
The North Carolina Supreme Court dismissed on Wednesday a request by the trailing candidate in an extremely close race for a seat on this same court to rule now on whether well over 60,000 ballots ...
This effort to end birthright citizenship is just Trump tossing red meat to MAGA. None of it is going to actually happen.
Five wild-born elephants that have long inhabited a two-acre plot in a Southern Colorado zoo will not be able to pursue their own release, the state’s highest court ruled this week.