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Before Alva Ray Sullivan died last year, he had transformed Sullivan College from a single business course into the first fully accredited private career college in the South — one that now ...
Sullivan when applied to today's media and social media. [30] Thomas reiterated his stance against the New York Times v. Sullivan decision in the Court's denial to grant certification in October 2023 to hear a case brought by Don Blankenship claiming defamation from news agencies; Thomas argued in a dissent to the denial that NYT v.
In January 2013, prior to the purchase of Spencerian College by Sullivan University, [4] Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway filed a consumer-protection lawsuit against Spencerian College for alleged misrepresentation of job placement data. The suit alleges that Spencerian College knowingly and intentionally provided false job placement data ...
Reason for the change: The 2013 section involving Spencerian College is inaccurate as the lawsuit was filed against Spencerian college (not Sullivan University), and it was also filed prior to the acquisition of Spencerian College by Sullivan University. As a part of the merger, Sullivan agreed to settle the lawsuit against Spencerian and ...
If you were affected, you can file a claim at this site with your computer’s serial number and proof of repairs. Synchrony Bank Total settlement: $2.6 million.
The suit also adds a separate claim against Sullivan and Daigle for pointing guns at the vehicle's occupants during the stop and a third claim against Sullivan saying the officer slammed Woods ...
Westmoreland's claims were governed by the landmark 1964 New York Times Co. v. Sullivan decision, which held that, in order to recover for defamation, a "public figure" like Westmoreland must prove that the defendant made the statements in question with "actual malice" (essentially, with knowledge, or reckless disregard, of falsity). [1]
The case was not about Johnson & Johnson selling off label. That was what the qui tam false claim cases were about. This was a personal injury claim. The jury was made up of six men and six women, of whom 11 were African American and one was white. They included a security guard, a clerk at Macy’s and a nurse’s aide.