73-year-old bicyclist Calvin Ray Sapp was struck and killed by a hit-and-run driver at the beginning of June. It’s a story that happens far too often, and one that can be avoided.
Hit and run accidents happen more often than most people think they do. If you have been the victim of a hit and run and have suffered injury or lost a loved one as a result of a hit and run accident, you’ll want to know what legal steps you should take.
It has recently been revealed that two big-name athletes who died recently suffered from CTE, once again returning the spotlight to the dangers of traumatic brain injuries and sports.
Recently Steve Hogen, the athletic director of Mesa Public Schools, was injured in a hit-and-run accident that occurred while he was riding his bike.
In an update on the Johnson & Johnson talcum powder case, the company has been ordered by a U.S. jury to pay $55 million to Gloria Ristesund.
While accidents involving cars and light-rail trains do not occur that often, they do happen. When they do, you’ll need to know what to do and how to pursue any claims you might be entitled to.
Baltimore Ravens player Terrell Suggs has pled not guilty to all of the charges in his Arizona car crash case. The NFL player has denied that he left the scene of a March 4th accident.
On April 3, within a 12 hour period, three train accidents occurred in the Northeastern United States. Those crashes happened just a month after another Amtrack train that was headed from Chicago to LA was derailed, injuring 32 people.
In early March, aspiring 18-year-old singer Keli May Rutledge died as the result of injuries sustained during a car crash. According to police, the driver of the other vehicle, Emilio Deleon, may have been impaired.
Eight Ivy League schools have ruled to ban all full-contact hitting from practice sessions during the regular season. This would be an update to rules already banning tackling during spring and pre-season practices.