Americans for Prosperity-Missouri (AFP-MO) announced its 2021 legislative scorecard, grading lawmakers on whether their actions and votes were freedom-friendly.
This ruling is important because it provides a clear pathway for the General Assembly and governor to fix excessive liability that harms people’s lives.
A proposed constitutional amendment that would expand the powers of the treasurer’s office has lead to litigation.Treasurer Scott Fitzpatrick sued fellow Republican Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft over changing how his office invests taxpayer money
United Way of Greater St. Louis announced that Todd Schnuck, chairman and CEO of Schnuck Markets, Inc., and Roman Wuller, chair of Thompson Coburn, will serve as co-chairs of the 2021 annual community campaign.
When Southern District Court of Appeals Judge Gary Lynch heard that Missouri Supreme Court Judge Paul C. Wilson was elected chief justice by fellow jurists on the seven-member high court, he had mixed emotions.
After a federal judge rejected its attempt to settle Roundup litigation, a German chemical company announced it could potentially stop selling the weedkiller for residential use in the United States.
Over the course of its 120-year history, Armstrong Teasdale has enjoyed a proud tradition of strong and visionary leadership. In keeping with that tradition and the firm’s continuing growth strategy, Armstrong Teasdale is proud to announce that effective June 1, 2021, David W. Braswell has been elected chairman of the firm and Patrick W. Rasche has been elected managing partner.
A recent ruling by the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District upheld the decision of a lower court to apply the Missouri snow-and-ice rule, sometimes known as the “Massachusetts Rule” to a slip-and-fall case involving a woman who sued River City Casino.
ST. LOUIS - A man who spent more than two decades in jail for crimes he did not commit is suing the City of O'Fallon, St. Charles County and numerous law enforcement officers.
ST. LOUIS - A jury on Friday decided that Johnson & Johnson was not responsible for development of a St. Louis woman’s stage-two ovarian cancer from the use of its baby powder, which the plaintiff alleged had been contaminated with asbestos.