News from 2023
Madison County real estate Oct. 16-20
A Bethalto home sold for $665,000 as part of the Madison County real estate transactions for Oct. 16-20.
St. Clair County real estate Aug. 7-11
An O'Fallon property sold for $2.24 million as part of the St. Clair County real estate transactions for Aug. 7-11.
Madison County civil docket Dec. 4-8
Madison County Circuit Judge Sarah Smith has hearings scheduled on the civil docket for Dec. 4-8.
Yandle denies sanction request in BIPA suit against Oldcastle; Discovery dispute continues under new counsel
BENTON - Oldcastle Lawn and Garden, defending a class action claim that it violated fingerprint privacy, switched law firms in the midst of depositions and a brush with sanctions.
Illinois Supreme Court Announces Creation of Executive Committee on Practice of Law
The Illinois Supreme Court has announced the creation of the Supreme Court Executive Committee on the Practice of Law (Executive Committee).
IL Supreme Court: Plaintiffs don't need to ID proper personal estate representative before suing dead person
A split Illinois Supreme Court ruled insurer State Farm couldn't defeat a lawsuit against a deceased man for insurance proceeds by arguing the plaintiff failed to properly identify and sue a personal representative of the dead man's estate. The majority said it was enough to ask a court to appoint a special representative instead
Fifth District rejects man's claim that his right to a speedy trial was violated
The Fifth District Appellate Court affirmed St. Clair County Circuit Judge Zina Cruse’s order denying a convicted murder’s request for a new trial.
Kansas City lawyers voluntarily dismiss BIPA class actions they pursued in Illinois federal court
EAST ST. LOUIS - Kansas City area lawyers Jayson Brown and Jason Watkins, who jumped into Illinois fingerprint litigation with two potential class actions, voluntarily dismissed both cases.
Illinois mandated annual reports on Invest in Kids: 4 years, no reports
The Illinois State Board of Education failed to publish diagnostic reports required by the Invest in Kids Act to track scholarship recipients’ progress starting in 2019. State lawmakers are letting the program expire without seeing a single report.
Attorney General Raoul and Cfpb Obtain Order Requiring Student Lender Prehired to Provide Students More Than $30 Million in Relief
Attorney General Kwame Raoul, along with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and 11 attorneys general, announced today that student lender Prehired will provide more than $30 million in relief to student borrowers for making false promises of job placement, trapping students with income share loans that violated the law, and resorting to abusive debt collection practices when borrowers could not pay.
Fifth District reverses Hoerner's rejection of summons delivery in suit involving evasion of service
MOUNT VERNON - St. Clair County Circuit Judge Kevin Hoerner improperly found that dropping a summons at a door didn’t count as service of process, Fifth District appellate judges ruled on Nov. 20.
Illinois licensing makes escaping poverty harder than in other Midwestern states
Illinois could make it easier to escape poverty by letting more people work without first getting a license. Six neighboring states do a better job of easing occupational licensing on low-income professions.
Multiple Polsinelli Litigation Practices Recognized Among the Nation’s Best by BTI Consulting Group
Am Law 100 firm Polsinelli is pleased to announce it has once again been recognized in six categories in BTI Consulting Group’s newly published 2024 Litigation Outlook guide.
Bethalto homeowner alleges landscaping company failed to complete work
EDWARDSVILLE - A Bethalto homeowner alleges a landscaping company failed to complete the contracted deck work, resulting in water damage due to a hole left exposed on the side of his house.
Wrongful death suit alleges nursing home patient suffered brain injury from fall
EDWARDSVILLE — A family member of a nursing home patient who died after suffering a traumatic brain injury claims the patient fell as a result of negligent care.
Attorney General Raoul Files Brief to Protect Access to Lifesaving Gender-affirming Care
Attorney General Kwame Raoul is opposing a state law in Oklahoma that severely limits the ability of transgender youth to access critical, lifesaving gender-affirming care.
Suit alleges man contracted MRSA while getting COVID booster
EDWARDSVILLE - A man claims he contracted MRSA due to an unsterile environment while getting a COVID booster vaccination at the Collinsville CVS.
McGlynn rejects state's request for more time to respond to motion for injunctive relief from firearm registration deadline
U.S District Judge Stephen McGlynn denied the state’s request for additional time to respond to a motion by gun advocates seeking injunctive relief from the approaching firearm registration deadline, but he granted their request to file a lengthy response “due to the complexity of the arguments in the motion for preliminary injunction.”
O'Fallon homeowners claim storm sewer renovation caused basement to flood
BELLEVILLE - O’Fallon homeowners claim the city damaged their sump pump drainage system during a storm sewer renovation project and refused to pay for the repairs.
John A. Logan College settles suit with student over its refusal to approve vaccination exemption
EAST ST. LOUIS - Luke Wegmann of Woodlawn and John A. Logan College of Carterville settled his claim that rejection of his request for religious exemption from virus vaccination cost him $222,059.