A recent study by two trial lawyer groups makes inflammatory statements about how insurance companies handled customers and their claims after Hurricane Katrina.
You may be reading this in early October, but I'm writing it on the evening of September 11, the fifth anniversary of the World Trade Center terrorist attacks. It's deja vu.
LAWYERS are the butt of many a joke, but the last one they want to hear goes something like this: "Did you hear about the lawyer who was sued down to his briefs?" Nevertheless, many lawyers have to grin and bear it, as they discover that knowledge of
LAWYERS are the butt of many a joke, but the last one they want to hear goes something like this: "Did you hear about the lawyer who was sued down to his briefs?" Nevertheless, many lawyers have to grin and bear it, as they discover that knowledge of
As certain as the fact that apples are green before they turn yellow or red, there will be structures and possessions damaged this hurricane season by wave wash and storm surge.
By the end of August in 2005, an extraordinary seven tropical storms and five hurricanes already had formed in the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico.
Several insurance industry organizations recently testified before a subcommittee of the House Financial Services Committee regarding the government's role in preparing for natural disasters via legislation.
One year after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, the U.S. District Court of Southern Mississippi has dismissed a lawsuit that contended a Nationwide insurance agent misled a policyholder.