Heyl Royster
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Peoria, IL 61602
Recent News About Heyl Royster
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Harrison It's been about three months since Madison County Associate Judge Clarence Harrison eliminated the court's 2013 advance setting of asbestos trial weeks, but some members of the local legal community said they are already seeing the effects of the judge's decision.
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Pictured from left, front row: Samantha Wehrle, Madison Klope, Jenna Smith and Corinisha Barnes. Second row from left: Evan Buenger, Nic Harkey and Sterling Bram Coleman-Selby. Seven local students from four high schools are the first participants in the Madison County Internship Program (MCIP), started by the Madison County Bar Association and the Third Judicial Circuit Pro Bono Committee.
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Fournie Local attorneys had mixed reactions after Madison County Associate Judge Clarence Harrison put a stop to advance asbestos trial settings.
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Shultz Sixty-one asbestos defendants are asking Madison County Associate Judge Clarence Harrison to revise the court's 2013 advance trial docket.
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Hunsaker Heyl, Royster, Voelker & Allen announces that sixteen of the firm's lawyers have been selected for inclusion on the list of 2012 Illinois Super Lawyers and eight lawyers have been selected as 2012 Illinois Super Lawyers Rising Stars.
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Shultz More than 40 asbestos defendant companies hope to prove to Madison County Associate Judge Harrison that the court's trial reservation system is no longer being used for its original purpose - to resolve local asbestos controversies.
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Pinter Madison County Circuit Judge William Mudge on Wednesday ordered a case settled in an Olin employee's suit against a security firm after he was assaulted in a parking lot.
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Cloud The law firm of Heyl, Royster, Voelker & Allen announces that five attorneys have become partners with the firm: Patrick Cloud, Renee Monfort, Jana Brady, Michael Denning, and Heidi Ruckman.
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Shultz Edwardsville attorney Robert H. (Barney) Shultz, Jr. has been named "Lawyer of the Year" for 2012 by Best Lawyers in America.
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Crowder EDWARDSVILLE – In America's asbestos court, where procedure and reality seem to run in opposite directions, lawyers debated politely for 45 minutes on Wednesday about how many hundred trials to schedule for the year after next.
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A Troy woman's lawsuit against a photo studio where she was formerly employed -- over claims she was demoted and fired after filing workers' compensation benefits -- has been removed to federal court.
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Foster More than 150 Madison County lawyers provide hundreds of hours of free legal help each year to those unable to afford an attorney, according to Madison County Bar Association President Ron Foster.
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Shultz EDWARDSVILLE – Madison County Circuit Judge Barbara Crowder, heir to the biggest asbestos docket of any state court in the nation, must decide the future dimensions of her docket.
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Goldenberg A 10 year-old Madison County class action against Federal Express over alleged late deliveries is over.
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Shultz Madison County Circuit Judge Barbara Crowder on Friday said she was open to suggestions about how to schedule cases for trial in the court's packed asbestos docket.
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Shultz Target Corporation is moving to change attorneys in a St. Clair County immune system supplement class action.
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Fitzgerald A mesothelioma suit brought against Union Carbide Corp. and other defendants settled Tuesday even as prospective jurors occupied seats in Madison County Circuit Judge Barbara Crowder's courtroom.
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Plotner Three attorneys at the Edwardsville office of Heyl, Royster, Voelker & Allen have been selected for inclusion in 2010 Illinois Super Lawyers.
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A dog bite case stemming from an incident in Granite City nearly two years ago has settled.
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Schag Attorney Mike Schag, a partner with the law firm of Heyl, Royster, Voelker & Allen in its Edwardsville office, is a contributing author for a book published by the Illinois Institute for Continuing Legal Education aimed at raising awareness of the legal issues surrounding military service.