Mudge Madison County Circuit Judge William Mudge will hold the final pre-trial in a conveyor belt injury case has been set for trial several times in the coming weeks.
Simmons SPRINGFIELD – Businesses that expose families of employees to asbestos deserve equal justice with drivers who run over pedestrians and researchers who release anthrax, John Simmons of East Alton argues at the Illinois Supreme Court.
Dripps Defendant RCS Construction Inc. has been dismissed from a pair of consolidated lawsuits brought over an injury an employee at an East Alton Olin Corporation plant allegedly suffered when he fell into a roller conveyor belt.
A former Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis employee claims he sustained severe injuries to his back, neck and wrists after years of work for the company.
Dripps Madison County Circuit Judge William Mudge has denied two moves for summary judgment filed by two companies sued by a man who was injured by a rolling conveyor belt six years ago.
A former Norfolk Southern Railway Company employee claims he sustained severe and permanent injuries to his spine, knee and shoulders because of repetitive injuries caused by his work for the railroad.
A Madison County woman had to endure multiple surgeries after doctors left an eight-inch detached bone fragment in her back, according to a recently filed lawsuit.
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.
Reitz SPRINGFIELD – Illinois Supreme Court Justices must decide whether to allow claims that asbestos caused disease in families of workers who brought fibers home on their clothing.