Sunday, July 5, 2026
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Personal Injury

Judge rejects claims dog pepper-sprayed by mailman caused children’s asthma

The family of two children in San Diego claimed a USPS mail carrier repeatedly and maliciously pepper-sprayed their family dog, which resulted in their two young children developing asthma.

Court overturns $1.25 million labeling suit against Roundup

The high court’s ruling comes months before the government is set to release an updated safety review of Roundup’s key ingredient.

Raw dough eater settles suit

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — A man who was hospitalized after eating raw take-and-bake bread dough from a Colorado Springs Walmart settled his lawsuit against the store and the dough’s baker. He had neglected to bake the bread before eating it, resulting in a three-day hospital stay as the dough expanded in his stomach.

27 ecstasy pills found in detainee’s cavity

CHICAGO — A federal court in Illinois declined to dismiss civil rights and negligence claims brought by the guardians of a woman who suffered permanent cognitive damage after allegedly overdosing while in police custody. The family claims at least 16 Chicago police personnel were aware that at least 27 ecstasy pills were inside the detainee’s vagina, but nobody sought medical treatment or warned jail personnel before she went into cardiac arrest hours later. The allegations plausibly show that reasonable officers would have understood the obvious risk of overdose.

Diddy survives Dawn Richard’s federal suit

MANHATTAN — A federal court in New York tossed Danity Kane girl group member Dawn Richard’s lawsuit against Sean “Diddy” Combs. Fifteen of her claims are time-barred, her two copyright claims fail because Diddy was a co-author of the song in question and the court declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the first count for sexual assault. This last claim may be refiled in state court.

Supreme Court says bankruptcy paperwork error shouldn’t knock out debtor’s injury suit 

The high court considered whether an accidental bankruptcy nondisclosure could sink an Arkansas man’s personal injury lawsuit.

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