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Tag: Lawsuit

  • ‘Mansion tax’ prevails in court as judge dismisses lawsuit challenging Measure ULA

    ‘Mansion tax’ prevails in court as judge dismisses lawsuit challenging Measure ULA

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    An L.A. County judge dismissed a lawsuit challenging L.A.’s “mansion tax” on Tuesday, marking the end of a months-long legal challenge from the luxury real estate community that looked to declare the measure unconstitutional.

    The transfer tax known as Measure ULA was passed in November and took effect April 1, bringing a 4% charge on all residential and commercial real estate sales in the city above $5 million and a 5.5% charge on sales above $10 million, pumping millions into housing and homelessness-prevention efforts.

    Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Barbara Scheper issued a tentative ruling dismissing the challenge on Monday after hearing arguments from both sides, and she officially dismissed the lawsuit on Tuesday, according to court documents.

    The ruling is a big win for housing activists, who say that L.A. desperately needs the money raised by the tax.

    “This is a great day for Los Angeles,” said Joe Donlin, who serves as director of the United to House LA coalition, which brought the measure onto the ballot in November. “The judge’s ruling confirms what we knew all along: ULA is the law of the land and it’s the will of the people. And it reminds us of the power of the people to shape our city’s future for the good.”

    Donlin said he was surprised the ruling came out so soon.

    “Before the hearing, we thought it might take weeks or months, but this was a positive sign that the judge didn’t feel compelled by the plaintiff’s arguments,” he said.

    Advocates for Measure ULA gather outside Stanley Mosk Courthouse in downtown L.A. on Monday. A judge on Tuesday dismissed a lawsuit challenging the measure.

    (United to House LA)

    Greg Bonett, senior staff attorney for the Public Counsel who worked to defend the measure, applauded the decision, calling it “a resounding victory for the power of the people to initiate transformative solutions to address our city’s housing and homelessness crises.”

    The judge’s ruling is a blow for many in the luxury real estate community, who claim that the transfer tax has frozen the market and stifled development.

    Keith Fromm, an attorney for Newcastle Courtyards, one of two groups challenging the measure, said he plans to appeal the decision.

    “The order contains numerous errors of law which the appellate courts will hopefully recognize and correct,” Fromm said. “The ruling is simply one step in a very long journey to justice.”

    The legal battle — which was headed by two main groups: Newcastle and Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. — became a national conversation, as other cities looked to L.A. to see how it would implement such a tax.

    Other cities such as San Francisco, New York City and Culver City have implemented transfer taxes, but L.A.’s is unique in scope and scale, not just taxing home sales but all property sales above $5 million.

    Voters approved the measure with a 57% majority in November, and the tax became a hot-button issue immediately after.

    Advocates argue that the tax is a way for luxury property owners to contribute to solving L.A.’s housing crisis, while opponents say it discourages development and pushes owners out of L.A. and into cities that don’t have the tax, such as Beverly Hills, West Hollywood or Santa Monica.

    “With Measure ULA, we are now going to lose billions of dollars every year in economic development and property tax revenue in order to raise less than $500 million through the tax,” said Jason Oppenheim, a real estate agent with the Oppenheim Group and star of Netflix’s “Selling Sunset.”

    The luxury real estate market froze in the months after the measure took effect, as many luxury homeowners looked to find loopholes to avoid paying the tax. Many hired accountants to find workarounds, such as dividing their homes into three parcels and selling them separately to stay under the $5-million threshold at which the tax kicks in.

    Many homeowners held off on selling their homes, hoping the lawsuit would overturn the tax. As a result, funds raised by the tax have fallen dramatically short of original projections since sales have slowed.

    In November, proponents of the tax estimated it would raise roughly $900 million a year. In March, a report from the city administrative officer lowered that number to $672 million. Then in April, Mayor Karen Bass’s first budget proposal, a $13.1-billion plan, included only $150 million in projected revenue from Measure ULA.

    The number was chosen out of caution, as the city wanted to funnel as much money as possible toward housing and homelessness issues but not so much that it wouldn’t be able to pay it back if the measure were ruled unconstitutional.

    But with the court’s latest ruling, spending will likely increase.

    On Wednesday, the L.A. City Council’s budget, finance and innovation Committee will meet to discuss the implementation process, and the ULA coalition will propose that $12 million be reallocated to short-term emergency assistance for renters.

    In August, the City Council passed a $150-million spending plan for funds raised by Measure ULA. It was the first time funds were specifically allocated since the tax was passed in November, and the plan sent money to six programs: short-term emergency rental assistance, eviction defense, tenant outreach and education, direct cash assistance for low-income seniors and people with disabilities, tenant protections and affordable housing production.

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    Jack Flemming

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  • Meta sued by states claiming Instagram and Facebook cause harm in children and teens

    Meta sued by states claiming Instagram and Facebook cause harm in children and teens

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    Dozens of states are suing Meta, alleging the tech giant has deliberately engineered its social media platforms Instagram and Facebook to be addictive to children and teens.

    Attorneys general from states ranging from California to Wisconsin filed federal lawsuits on Tuesday,  accusing Meta of intentionally turning kids into social-media addicts. The lawsuits claim that Meta was motivated to keep children hooked in order to boost profits, and allege that Meta routinely collects data on children under 13 without their parents’ consent, in violation of federal law.

    Features like “infinite scroll” and constant streams of alerts are hooking children and teens, contributing to the mental health crisis that now affects many young people, the states allege. The lawsuits come after failed settlement discussions with Meta, according to the Wall Street Journal. 

    “Children are particularly susceptible to addictive technologies, and Meta has exploited these vulnerabilities, putting its quest for advertising revenue over the psychological and emotional well-being of young people,” said Brian L. Schwalb, the attorney general for Washington, D.C., in a statement.

    The lawsuits claim that the company “falsely [assured] the public that its features were safe and suitable for young users.”

    “Its motive is profit, and in seeking to maximize its financial gains, Meta has repeatedly mislead the public about the substantial dangers of its social media platforms,” attorneys for the states allege in the suit.

    In an emailed statement, Meta said it was disappointed by the route taken by the attorneys general.

    Meta is determined to provide teens with “safe, positive experiences online, and have already introduced over 30 tools to support teens and their families,” the company said.

    The issue became front and center in 2021 when Meta employee-turned whistleblower Frances Haugen shared documents from internal company research. In an interview with CBS News’ Scott Pelley, Haugen noted data indicating Instagram worsens suicidal thoughts and eating disorders for certain teenage girls. 

    The former Facebook product manager’s testimony to Congress is noted in Tuesday’s lawsuit.


    Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen on book, “The Power of One,” and impacts of social media

    06:51

    Privacy concerns surrounding the handling of children’s personal information have also led to large fines against social media companies. Google-owned YouTube paid $170 million to settle government and state claims that it illegally took data from users under 13.

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  • Lawsuit says Meta made apps addictive to kids

    Lawsuit says Meta made apps addictive to kids

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    Lawsuit says Meta made apps addictive to kids – CBS News


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    Lawsuits brought by 41 state attorneys general accuse Meta, the company that owns Facebook and Instagram, of designing apps that were addictive to children. Jo Ling Kent reports.

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  • Panera lemonade has more caffeine than Red Bull and Monster combined, killing student, lawsuit claims

    Panera lemonade has more caffeine than Red Bull and Monster combined, killing student, lawsuit claims

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    Eye On Your Health: Coffee and caffeine


    Eye On Your Health: Coffee and caffeine

    03:40

    Panera is being sued by the parents of a college student with a heart condition who died after drinking its Charged Lemonade, which the lawsuit alleges contains more caffeine than Red Bull and Monster Energy Drink combined and no consumer warning.

    The lawsuit claims that Sarah Katz, 21, believed Charged Lemonade was a “traditional lemonade and/or electrolyte sports drink containing a reasonable amount of caffeine safe for her to drink.” On Sept. 10, 2022, the University of Pennsylvania student drank the Charged Lemonade and then suffered cardiac arrest, leading to her death.

    As a child, Katz had been diagnosed with the heart condition Long QT Type 1 Syndrome. Throughout her life she avoided energy drinks and heavily caffeinated drinks which could “adversely affect the heart’s rhythm” in people with the syndrome, the lawsuit states.

    But Panera allegedly failed to alert consumers to the caffeine levels in its Charged Lemonade, according to the lawsuit, which says the chain advertises the drink as “plant-based and clean with as much caffeine as our dark roast coffee.”

    “Panera Charged Lemonade does not declare the total quantity of caffeine from all sources on the container itself — rather, it merely compares it to an unspecified size of Panera Dark Roast coffee, a beverage which does not contain the added stimulants of sugar and guarana,” the lawsuit alleges. In reality, the beverage “is a dangerous energy drink,” the suit claims

    Panera Charged Lemonade
    Dispensers for Charged Lemondade, a caffeinated lemonade drink sold at Panera Bread.

    Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images


    “We were very saddened to learn this morning about the tragic passing of Sarah Katz, and our hearts go out to her family,” a Panera spokesperson said in a statement issued Monday in response to the lawsuit. “At Panera, we strongly believe in transparency around our ingredients. We will work quickly to thoroughly investigate this matter.”

    Panera serves different flavors of Charged Lemonade, such as Strawberry Lemon Mint Charged Lemonade and Mango Yuzu Citrus Charged Lemonade. On its website, the fast-food bakery-cafe chain includes the caffeine content for the drinks. A 20-ounce serving of the Strawberry Lemon Mint flavor drink contains 260 milligrams of caffeine, for example.

    Other beverages have recently been called out for their caffeine levels, with New York Sen. Charles Schumer asking the FDA earlier this year to investigate PRIME, a drink co-founded by YouTube star Logan Paul, for its high level of the stimulant. In that case, the drink, which is popular with teens and preteens, includes 200 milligrams of caffeine, or about two Red Bulls. 

    Accusations of exorbitant levels of caffeine

    The Panera lawsuit claims that a 30-ounce serving of Charged Lemonade contains as much as 390 milligrams of caffeine, more than the combined caffeine levels of a Red Bull and Monster Energy Drink, which together have about 274 milligrams of the stimulant. 

    Panera markets the product as a juice beverage, and serves it next to other non-caffeinated juice drinks, the lawsuit claims. 

    “Consumers are not provided a factual basis for understanding it is an energy drink containing exorbitant amounts of caffeine, caffeine sources, stimulants and sugar,” it alleges. 

    Because of the highly caffeinated contents of the Charged Lemonade, Panera should have known that it poses the threat of injury or death to some consumers, including children, pregnant and breastfeeding women and caffeine-sensitive individuals, such as those with heart conditions like Katz, the lawsuit claims. 

    Katz was studying international relations and health and societies with a minor in East Asian languages and civilizations at UPenn, and had taught CPR in high schools and underserved communities. She also worked as a research assistant at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. 

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  • States sue Meta over alleged harm to children on Facebook, Instagram

    States sue Meta over alleged harm to children on Facebook, Instagram

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    A group of 41 attorneys general from dozens of states are filing lawsuits claiming Meta Platforms Inc. built addictive features in its Facebook and Instagram services that harm children.

    The lawsuits in federal and state courts allege Meta
    META,
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    knowingly marketed its products to users under the age of 13, who are barred from the platform by both Meta’s policies and federal law. The states are seeking to force Meta to change product features that they say pose dangers to young users.

    The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in federal court in Northern California, claims Meta, “has harnessed powerful and unprecedented technologies to entice, engage, and ultimately ensnare youth and teens.” Meta has “profoundly altered the psychological and social realities of a generation of young Americans,” the suit also said.

    The lawsuit also accuses Meta of violating the law by collecting data on users under 13 without parental consent. California Attorney General Rob Bonta said the suit was the result of a multiyear investigation.

    Meta said it was “disappointed” with the legal action.

    “We share the attorneys general’s commitment to providing teens with safe, positive experiences online, and have already introduced over 30 tools to support teens and their families,” a Meta spokesman said in an email. “We’re disappointed that instead of working productively with companies across the industry, the attorneys general have chosen this path.”

    Meta’s stock was flat in late-afternoon trading Tuesday.

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  • (Media News) Consortium News files lawsuit against U.S. government and NewsGuard Technologies

    (Media News) Consortium News files lawsuit against U.S. government and NewsGuard Technologies

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    By Dave Van Zandt

    Consortium News has initiated a legal case against NewsGuard Technologies and the U.S. government, citing First Amendment violations and defamation. The lawsuit is based on a contract awarded to NewsGuard by the Department of Defense (DOD) for its “Misinformation Fingerprints” program.

    Valued at $749,387, the contract directs NewsGuard to identify media organizations that publish known hoaxes, falsehoods, and misinformation narratives that are spreading online.

    Consortium News argues that NewsGuard’s labeling of their content related to Russia and Ukraine is conducted as part of this contract. They state:

    In the course of its contract with the Pentagon, NewsGuard is “acting jointly or in concert with the United States to coerce news organizations to alter viewpoints” as to Ukraine, Russia, and Syria, imposing a form of “censorship and repression of views” that differ or dissent from policies of the United States and its allies, the complaint says. 

    In addition, NewsGuard has confirmed its collaboration with Cyber Command, a component of the U.S. Intelligence Community. This was revealed in an email from NewsGuard’s co-founder, Gordon Crovitz, dated March 10, 2023. In the email, he states:

    “[A]s is public, our work for the Pentagon’s Cyber Command is focused on the identification and analysis of information operations targeting the US and its allies conducted by hostile governments, including Russia and China. Our analysts alert officials in the US and in other democracies, including Ukraine, about new false narratives targeting America and its allies, and we provide an understanding of how this disinformation spreads online. We are proud of our work countering Russian and Chinese disinformation on behalf of Western democracies.”

    The complaint seeks a permanent injunction declaring the joint program unconstitutional, barring the government and NewsGuard from continuing such practices, and more than $13 million in damages for defamation and civil rights violations.  


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    Media Bias Fact Check

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  • California sues Facebook parent Meta over alleged harm to young people

    California sues Facebook parent Meta over alleged harm to young people

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    California and other states on Tuesday sued Facebook parent company Meta over allegations that it “designed and deployed harmful features” on the main social network and its platform Instagram.

    “Our bipartisan investigation has arrived at a solemn conclusion: Meta has been harming our children and teens, cultivating addiction to boost corporate profits,” California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta said in a statement. “With today’s lawsuit, we are drawing the line. We must protect our children and we will not back down from this fight.”

    The 233-page lawsuit, filed in a federal court in Northern California, alleges the social media giant violated consumer protection laws and a federal law aimed at safeguarding the privacy of children under 13 years old. Bonta co-led a bipartisan coalition of 33 attorneys general filing the federal lawsuit against Meta. Eight attorneys general are also filing lawsuits against Meta on Tuesday in state courts, according to Bonta’s office.

    In 2021, a bipartisan group of state attorneys general, including from California, Tennessee and Nebraska, announced they were investigating Meta’s promotion of its social media app Instagram to children and young people. Advocacy groups, lawmakers and even parents have criticized Meta, alleging the platform hasn’t done enough to combat content about eating disorders, suicide and other potential harms.

    As part of the investigation, the state attorneys general looked atMeta’s strategies for compelling young people to spend more time on its platform. The lawsuit alleges that Meta failed to address the platform’s harmful impact to young people.

    Meta said it’s committed to keeping teens safe, noting it rolled out more than 30 tools to support young people and families.

    “We’re disappointed that instead of working productively with companies across the industry to create clear, age-appropriate standards for the many apps teens use, the attorneys general have chosen this path,” a Meta spokesperson said in a statement.

    Scrutiny over Meta’s potential damage to the mental health of young people intensified in 2021 after Frances Haugen, a former Facebook product manager, disclosed tens of thousands of internal company documents. Some of those documents included research that showed Facebook is “toxic for teen girls,” worsening body image issues and suicidal thoughts, the Wall Street Journal reported in 2021. Meta said its research was “mischaracterized,” and teens also reported Instagram made them feel better about other issues such as loneliness and sadness.

    That year, executives from the social media company including Instagram’s head Adam Mosseri testified before Congress. Instagram then paused its development of a kids’ version of the app and rolled out more controls so parents could limit the amount of time teens spend on it. Social media apps like Instagram require users to be at least 13 years old, but children have lied about their age to access the platform.

    The photo- and video-sharing app Instagram is popular among U.S. teens, according to a Pew Research Center survey released this year. About 62% of teens reported using Instagram in 2022. Google-owned YouTube, TikTok and Snapchat are also commonly used by teens.

    The amount of time teens spend on social media has been a growing concern especially as platforms use algorithms to recommend content it thinks users like to view. In 2022, attorneys general across the country started investigating TikTok’s potential harm to young people as well.

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    Queenie Wong

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  • Danny Elfman is accused of sexual assault by a second woman, alleging abuse when she was a young composer

    Danny Elfman is accused of sexual assault by a second woman, alleging abuse when she was a young composer

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    A second woman has accused Danny Elfman of sexual assault, alleging in a lawsuit filed this week that the composer abused her while she was a young, aspiring film composer.

    The suit, filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court on Thursday and obtained by The Times, accuses Elfman of using “his clear power as a successful public figure in the film and music industry, as a form of control,” during the alleged instances of sexual abuse, such as exposing his genitals to her and masturbating in front of her while she slept. The events allegedly took place between 1997 and 2002. Elfman’s company, Musica de la Muerte, was also named as a defendant in the complaint, which demanded a jury trial.

    The woman, identified in the complaint only as Jane Doe XX, said she was inspired to come forward with her allegations after reading a Rolling Stone report from July. The report brought to light prior accusations from Nomi Abadi, a 35-year-old musician and composer, who alleged Elfman had assaulted her between 2015 and 2016.

    Elfman did not immediately respond to The Times’ requests for comment but has denied allegations from both women in statements provided to other outlets.

    “The allegations of misconduct made against Mr. Elfman are baseless and absurd,” a spokesman for Elfman told the Hollywood Reporter. “His legal team is assessing all options and he will vigorously defend these claims in court.”

    Jane Doe XX was a 21-year-old film student at the New York Film Academy when she first met Elfman, who at the time was 47, in 1997 at the home of a mutual friend. By then, Elfman had already led a storied career, having found prominence as the leader of the popular new wave band Oingo Boingo and composed film scores for Tim Burton classics “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure” and “The Nightmare Before Christmas.” He also composed the iconic, enduring theme song for long-running animated sitcom “The Simpsons.”

    Elfman and Doe immediately connected over their shared interest in film and music, the complaint said. She was eager to get help to “make it” in the music and film industry. Over the next several years, their relationship grew and Elfman began to treat the woman as a “consultant and protégé,” and would often ask her for input when scoring films such as 1999’s “The Mummy,” according to court documents. He also would invite Doe out to Hollywood outings, such as cast-and-crew events for “Good Will Hunting.” She would later view these instances as “grooming” and emotional manipulation in order to “sexually abuse and exploit” her, the suit said.

    During one of her visits with Elfman, as the pair were spending time in the Oscar-nominated composer’s hotel room at the Mercer Hotel in New York, the complaint alleges that Elfman had suddenly taken off his clothes and exposed his genitals in front of Doe. He then walked over to a window where he stood naked and asked Doe to take off her clothes and join him, the suit said. She complied but felt uncomfortable being naked in front of Elfman and put her clothes back on, while he remained nude in front of the window for another five minutes, according to the suit.

    The next time the pair saw each other, Elfman stripped nude and started taking a bath, Doe alleges in the suit. He allegedly asked her to join him and watch him bathe. Each time the two worked with each other afterward, the lawsuit said that Elfman would strip naked in front of Doe, saying it was “the only way he could work, be creative, and successful.” In one other instance, Doe alleged in the lawsuit that Elfman had “coerced her” to also strip naked, to which she agreed.

    Doe said in the court document that she was uncomfortable but did not speak up for fear of losing her relationship with Elfman, referring to him as “a mentor and a friend,” adding that she felt “very lucky” to be in this position. The lawsuit described the “imbalance of power” between them as playing a factor in her silence and compliance to Elfman’s demands.

    When Doe would visit Elfman in his hotel rooms, or at his home in Topanga, where she stayed with him for several weeks as she prepared to move from New York to Los Angeles, the pair would sleep together in the same bed. Still, Doe would remain fully clothed and often would remain above the covers, the complaint said.

    However, sometime in 2002, Elfman revealed to her, “Every time you have ever slept next to me, I would masturbate next to you,” the lawsuit alleged. He further explained that a part of his fetish was that she had to be asleep; Doe said in the complaint that she did not consent to this act. She also wondered whether Elfman had physically touched her during those instances. Doe said in the court filing that she ended her friendship with Elfman after that revelation.

    For years, Doe never reported the alleged abuse after sharing the incidents with her colleagues, who told her there was no point in speaking up because of “who he is” in the industry. In July 2023, Doe read a Rolling Stone exposé that included accusations that Elfman allegedly exposed himself to Abadi and masturbated in front of her without her consent on several occasions. The report included descriptions that mirrored Doe’s own alleged experiences. She said she realized she wasn’t alone and filed the suit, she said in the complaint.

    The allegations surfaced after Abadi sued Elfman in July, accusing him of not paying out a full settlement as part of a nondisclosure agreement between them.

    The July lawsuit against Elfman said the composer had failed to pay Abadi $85,000 of a total of $830,000 to settle an “underlying dispute.” The suit, which was reviewed by The Times, did not specify what the dispute related to. The Rolling Stone report cited a 2017 police report in which Abadi alleged Elfman had sexually assaulted her several times between 2015 and 2016, and had allegedly leveraged his power and exploited Abadi’s desire to further her career in the music and film industry.

    Doe’s complaint said Elfman and his company had engaged in “coverups” of the alleged sexual assaults of both women.

    Times researcher Scott Wilson and staff writer Emily St. Martin contributed to this report.

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    Jonah Valdez

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  • Florida Woman Sues Chick-Fil-A For At Least $50K After Allegedly Consuming ‘Black’ Chicken Nugget In 2020

    Florida Woman Sues Chick-Fil-A For At Least $50K After Allegedly Consuming ‘Black’ Chicken Nugget In 2020

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    A 29-year-old Florida woman has filed a negligence lawsuit against Chick-fil-A, seeking at least $50,000 in damages. According to Fox 35 Orlando, Shi’terra Sharp filed the suit Thursday, alleging she ate a “black” chicken nugget from one of the restaurant locations in 2020.

    RELATED: LAWSUIT: Atlanta Mother Alleges Three Popeyes Workers Left Her Partially Bald For Speaking Out About Incorrect Order

    More Details Regarding The Alleged Incident

    According to the outlet, Sharp filed the lawsuit in Orange County, Florida. Sharp alleges that she purchased chicken nuggets from a Chick-fil-A in Brooksville on January 8, 2020. Then, she consumed the nuggets at her residence.

    The woman alleges that as she ate the food, she noticed the meat of the nuggets was black-colored. Additionally, she became “violently ill” and began to experience diarrhea, cramps, and nausea.

    “… Directly after consuming the chicken nuggets purchased from Defendant, Plaintiff… became violently ill, was nauseated, vomited until [she] had no strength left to do so, suffered from cramping, nausea and diarrhea,” the lawsuit reads, per Fox 35 Orlando.

    Ultimately, the suit alleges Sharp “sustained great injury” to multiple parts of her body. The injured areas reportedly include her mouth, throat, stomach, and digestive system.

    “I was as sick as a dog. I lost so much weight due to what happened,” Sharp reportedly told Daily Mail in a report published on October 20.

    According to Daily Mail, Sharp reached out to the company in 2020 following the incident. However, Chick-fil-A reportedly alleged, “there was nothing wrong with the meat.”

    Furthermore, the suit adds that Sharp has undergone “great pain and suffering for some time” and has been diagnosed with “gastrointestinal illnesses.”

    More Information Regarding The Florida Woman’s Lawsuit Against Chick-fil-A

    According to Fox 35 Orlando, Sharp is suing Chick-fil-A for alleged negligence. The woman alleges the restaurant failed to “inspect” and ensure its food was “fit for consumption.” Additionally, Sharp alleges Chick-fil-A failed to “properly supervise employees” during the food preparation process and “offered food for sale and consumption,” which was unfit.

    Sharp’s final accusation against Chick-fil-A in the suit cites that the restaurant ultimately “failed to prevent” the incident “from occurring.”

    Furthermore, the suit adds that Sharp experienced “bodily injury… pain and suffering, disability, mental anguish” and accumulated “expense of hospitalization, medical and nursing home treatment.”

    “These losses are either permanent or continuing in nature, and the Plaintiff will suffer said losses in the future, to-wit, permanently,” the lawsuit reads, per Fox 35 Orlando.

    The suit explains that Sharp seeks compensation for damages “in the excess sum” of $50,000. Additionally, the woman is reportedly seeking “costs of court and trial by jury,” along with compensation for her attorney’s fees.

    The Alleged Incident Mirrors Another Involving McDonald’s & An 8-Year-Old Child

    The effects of the alleged incident on Sharp closely mirror the effects of a similar incident allegedly involving a New Jersey child. As The Shade Room previously reported, an 8-year-old was left “traumatized” after ingesting chicken nuggets from an East Orange McDonald’s location in August.

    According to the child’s father, Derrick Wilson, the 8-year-old allegedly ingested a nugget that contained a dead mouse.

    Watch as Justin Carter unpacks the alleged events with the New Jersey family for TSR Investigates below.

    RELATED: New Jersey Family Says Child Discovered Dead Mouse Inside Chicken McNugget | TSR Investigates

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    Jadriena Solomon

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  • British actress Julia Ormond sues Harvey Weinstein, Disney and Miramax over sexual assault

    British actress Julia Ormond sues Harvey Weinstein, Disney and Miramax over sexual assault

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    Emmy Award winner Julia Ormond has added herself to the long list of women who have legally accused Harvey Weinstein of sexual assault and is now suing the disgraced producer.

    The “Walking Dead: World Beyond” star also filed suit against The Walt Disney Company, Miramax — the production company Weinstein founded — and CAA talent agency for enabling the imprisoned the 71-year-old rapist, according to Variety.

    Ormond’s suit was reportedly filed in New York City on Wednesday. It alleges the former movie mogul lured the 58-year-old British star into giving him a massage in her apartment, then masturbated and forced her to perform oral sex after a 1995 business dinner.

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    Brian Niemietz

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  • Court dismisses $224 million verdict against Johnson & Johnson in talcum power lawsuit

    Court dismisses $224 million verdict against Johnson & Johnson in talcum power lawsuit

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    A New Jersey court has tossed a nearly $224 million verdict against Johnson & Johnson that was awarded to four people who alleged in a lawsuit that they got cancer after using the company’s talcum-powder products. 

    The three-judge appeals court ordered a new trial after ruling that expert testimony presented in a lower court on behalf of the plaintiffs was faulty. J&J was ordered in 2019 to pay New Jersey residents Douglas Barden, David Etheridge, D’Angela McNeill-George and William Ronning $37.3 million, along with $186.5 million in punitive damages. 

    The company appealed that decision the following year, arguing that three experts selected to testify during the trial — William Longo, Jacqueline Moline and James Webber — presented flawed or incomplete information. Moline is an occupational medicine doctor at North Shore University Hospital on Long Island in New York. Longo is a materials scientist in Georgia, CEO of Micro Analytical Laboratories and a former member of the National Asbestos Council. Webber is an independent environmental health scientist and consultant from Oregon who has done research on asbestos contamination in air and water.

    Moline never concluded that using J&J’s talc led to cancer prior to the J&J trial, while Longo did not precisely determine how many times the plaintiffs had used the powder, J&J attorneys argued. Webber also testified that certain minerals found in the baby powder, known as cleavage fragments, can cause cancer, but he based that conclusion on an outdated study from 1980 that needed further research, J&J further alleged.

    The appeals court agreed with the company’s argument that the lower court should not have allowed the three experts’ testimony.

    “In sum, the trial court erred when it admitted Webber’s and Moline’s testimony about cleavage fragments, and Longo’s extrapolation testimony,” the judges wrote in their opinion. “These errors, taken singularly or collectively, were harmful and require the reversal of the jury verdict.”

    Thousands of lawsuits

    J&J has spent years battling — and sometimes losing — thousands of lawsuits alleging that asbestos in J&J’s talcum powder caused cancer. In 2019, a Missouri court ordered J&J to pay $4.7 billion in damages to women who alleged the product gave them cancer. That amount was later reduced to $2.1 billion.

    Johnson & Johnson maintains that the baby powder — which it no longer sells — is safe and doesn’t cause cancer. A U.S. government-led analysis of 250,000 women, the largest such study to look at the question, found no strong evidence linking baby powder with ovarian cancer, although the lead author of the analysis called the results “very ambiguous.” 

    In 2020, the company recalled 33,000 bottles of baby powder after the Food and Drum Administration found a small amount of asbestos in a bottle purchased online. Later that year, J&J said that 15 tests of the same bottle of baby powder conducted by two laboratories hired by the company found no asbestos.

    Erik Haas, J&J’s worldwide vice president of litigation, said in a statement to CBS MoneyWatch that the appellate court’s decision “resoundingly rejects, again, the junk science advanced by purported experts paid by the mass tort asbestos bar.”

    “This marks the third time in three years that an appellate court has overturned outsized verdicts that asbestos lawyers secured by confusing and misleading juries with unscientific opinions touting baseless liability theories,” Haas said. “The decision appropriately strikes a blow to the heart of the asbestos bar’s improper strategy and its meritless talc litigation.” 

    Chris Placitella — a New Jersey attorney who helped represent Barden, Etheridge, McNeill-George and Ronning — said his clients are disappointed in the appeals court decision.

    “Everyone involved knew that no matter what the result this case would eventually be presented to the New Jersey Supreme Court,” Placitella told CBS MoneyWatch in a statement Wednesday. “We look forward to the opportunity to do so.

    Etheridge, Barden and Ronning have died since filing their suit, and their family members have continued the suits.

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  • Seattle to pay $1.86 million after man dies of a heart attack at address wrongly put on 911 blacklist

    Seattle to pay $1.86 million after man dies of a heart attack at address wrongly put on 911 blacklist

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    The city of Seattle will pay $1.86 million to the family of a man who died of a heart attack after a caution note attached to his address delayed medics’ response.

    William Yurek, 48, died in his townhouse in 2021 after his son called 911 and arriving Seattle Fire Department medics initially waited outside for law enforcement before entering, The Seattle Times reported.

    The family alleged Yurek was wrongly included on a blacklist of people known to be hostile to police and fire crews. Yurek lived in the unit a couple of years before his death and the previous tenant had been on the outdated list, according to the lawsuit filed last year. The suit initially asked for $10 million, CBS News affiliate KIRO reported

    Medics were told to wait for a law enforcement escort, the lawsuit stated. As Yurek’s condition worsened, his then 13-year-old son called 911 again and was told help was on the way, even though medics had already arrived. 

    Medics then decided to enter the home without police, but despite their treatment, Yurek died.

    “Once inside, medics did everything they could to save Will’s life,” the family’s attorney, Mark Lindquist, said in a news release. “The family has always been grateful to the medics who broke protocol to go in and do their best.”

    The city has modified its operating guidelines on the caution notes, Seattle city attorney’s office spokesperson Tim Robinson told the newspaper, saying they expire after 365 days in the system, or get reviewed and renewed. Notes about the need for Seattle Police Department help because of alleged violent or threatening behavior are to be verified after every alarm dispatched to the address, Robinson said.

    Relying on addresses, Lindquist said, puts renters and those who move often more at risk.

    Seattle also agreed in August to pay $162,500 to a former 911 call center manager who in a lawsuit said he was wrongly punished for bringing up problems at work, including the dispatch practice of the blacklist.

    A medical doctor said that without the delay, Yurek would have had a 25% chance of survival, Lindquist said. In addition to his 13-year-old son, Yurek was also the father of a 23-year-old woman, an eight-year-old child and a five-year-old child, KIRO reported. His ex-wife is now the children’s guardian. 

    “From the beginning, the family wanted the city to take responsibility,” Lindquist said. “That’s happened.”

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  • Tesla sued by EEOC for allegedly allowing a racist and hostile work environment

    Tesla sued by EEOC for allegedly allowing a racist and hostile work environment

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    White employees at Tesla have hurled racist slurs at Black co-workers inside the automaker’s factory in Fremont, California, for at least eight years and the company has refused to stamp out the behavior, a federal lawsuit filed Thursday alleges.

    Lawyers with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) also claim in the lawsuit that the still-present racial harassment has created a hostile work environment dating back as far as May 2015. Black employees regularly hear their colleagues say “monkey,” “boy,” or even use the N-word to address them, the lawsuit claims. The White co-workers involved in the behavior span from managers and supervisors to line leads and production associates, court documents allege. 

    “Black employees also encountered displays of racist graffiti, including swastikas, threats and nooses,” the lawsuit states. “They found such graffiti on a variety of surfaces, including on desks, in elevators and on equipment, including vehicles rolling off the production lines.”

    EEOC lawyers want a federal judge to award Black Tesla employees back pay and punitive damages but don’t specify an exact amount of money in the lawsuit. 

    “Today’s lawsuit makes clear that no company is above the law, and the EEOC will vigorously enforce federal civil rights protections to help ensure American workplaces are free from unlawful harassment and retaliation,” EEOC Chair Charlotte Burrows said in a statement Thursday. 

    Allegations denied by Tesla

    Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday. The company denied previous allegations of racist comments made by White employees. In a 2017 blog post on the company’s website titled “Hotbed of Misinformation,” Tesla stated it “is absolutely against any form of discrimination, harassment or unfair treatment of any kind.”

    The EEOC’s lawsuit comes roughly two years after a California judge ordered Tesla to pay a former Black employee $1 million when he was exposed to racist language at the factory. The employee, Melvin Berry, filed two complaints against his supervisors at Tesla in 2017 after he confronted them for calling him the racial slur and forcing him to work longer hours. 

    In April, a federal jury awarded another former Tesla employee $3.2 million for racial abuse he suffered. Owen Diaz alleged he was called the N-word more than 30 times, shown racist cartoons and told to “go back to Africa” during his roughly nine-month tenure at Tesla that ended in 2016.

    Tesla also faces a class-action lawsuit from employees of color alleging they heard racial slurs as well. 

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  • 9/26: CBS Evening News

    9/26: CBS Evening News

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    9/26: CBS Evening News – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Trump and his company “repeatedly” violated fraud law, judge rules; New York City Ballet celebrates 75 years

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  • Amazon faces lawsuit in landmark monopoly case

    Amazon faces lawsuit in landmark monopoly case

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    Amazon faces lawsuit in landmark monopoly case – CBS News


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    Tech and retail giant Amazon is facing a lawsuit from the Federal Trade Commission and 17 state attorneys general, who claim the company operates as an illegal monopoly. The lawsuit alleges Amazon stifles competition by charging sellers high fees, which in turn also raises prices for consumers. Jo Ling Kent has the details.

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  • Lizzo Accepts Humanitarian Award on the Heels of Another Lawsuit

    Lizzo Accepts Humanitarian Award on the Heels of Another Lawsuit

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    Lizzo has been sued again, this time by a former employee in her wardrobe department. The complaint, handled by the same legal team representing three dancers who previously filed legal action against the performer and her production company Big Grrrl Big Touring, alleged that Lizzo’s wardrobe manager Amanda Nomura was verbally and physically abusive to her staff member Asha Daniels. Along with Lizzo and Nomura, the suit names Lizzo’s production company and tour manager, Carlina Gugliotta, as defendants.

    Daniels alleges in the suit that during the 2023 tour, Nomura would “mock both Lizzo and Lizzo’s background dancers on multiple occasions. Nomura would imitate the dancers and Lizzo by doing an offensive stereotypical impression of a Black woman. Nomura would also refer to Black women on the tour as ‘dumb,’ ‘useless,’ and ‘fat.’” She also allegedly shoved Daniels into a clothing rack, which injured her foot, and would not allow her to wear orthopedic shoes on the job to reduce her foot pain. Daniels blames the work culture on Lizzo and claims her company was aware of the conditions Daniels worked under. 

    “Lizzo’s Management was well aware of this pattern of behavior,” the complaint reads. “Lizzo’s tour manager even requested Plaintiff to record Nomura without her knowledge, which Plaintiff did not do as it was both unethical and possibly unlawful.”

    Stefan Friedman, Lizzo’s spokesperson, responded to the suit with a statement: 

    As Lizzo receives a Humanitarian Award tonight from the Black Music Action Coalition for the incredible charitable work she has done to lift up all people, an ambulance-chasing lawyer tries to sully this honor by recruiting someone to file a bogus, absurd publicity-stunt lawsuit who—wait for it—never actually met or even spoke with Lizzo. We will pay this as much attention as it deserves. None.

    Friedman is referring to the Quincy Jones Humanitarian Award at the 2023 Black Music Action Coalition Gala on Thursday. Lizzo received the award for her $250,000 donations to The Marsha P. Johnson Institute, Black Girls Smile, and the Sphinx Organization in June, among other philanthropic organizations. The performer’s current “Big Grrrls” and “Big Boys” dancers presented her with the award before she gave her acceptance speech. Nomura and Gugliotta did not immediately respond to VF‘s requests for comment.

    “It’s easy to do the right thing when everybody’s watching you, and it’s what you do in those moments where nobody’s watching that defines who you are,” the performer said. “I’m going to continue to be who I am, no matter who’s watching. 

    “I’m going to continue to shine a light on the people who are helping people because they deserve it,” she continued. “I’m going to continue to amplify the voices of marginalized people because I have a microphone and I know how to use it. And I’m going to continue to put on and represent and create safe spaces for Black fat women because that’s what the fuck I do.”

    Lizzo is also facing a lawsuit from three of her former dancers, Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams, and Noelle Rodriguez. They claim a series of workplace transgressions and sued after they were fired from or left the company. They sued Lizzo for failing to prevent sexual or religious harassment, disability discrimination, and assault, and added her production company, Big Grrrl Big Touring, and Shirlene Quigley, captain of her dance team, as defendants. 

    Lizzo has vigorously denied all of the dancer’s allegations against herself and her company in a statement posted to Instagram and through her lawyer Marty Singer. She called the claims “unbelievable.” Quigley has said the accusations against her are “baseless” and “profoundly hurtful.” In August, after the allegation, Lizzo’s current dancers also released a statement defending their employer. 

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  • Lizzo facing new lawsuit from former employee alleging harassment, discrimination

    Lizzo facing new lawsuit from former employee alleging harassment, discrimination

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    Lizzo is facing another lawsuit from a former employee who alleges that the entertainer condoned a hostile work environment in which staff were subjected to harassment, discrimination and bullying. Asha Daniels, a wardrobe designer who worked on Lizzo’s tour earlier this year, filed the new complaint in Los Angeles Superior Court on Thursday, the same day Lizzo was expected to receive the Quincy Jones Humanitarian Award from the Black Music Action Coalition.

    The suit names multiple people involved with the most recent tour, including Lizzo, whose given name is Melissa Jefferson, her production company Big Grrrl Big Touring, Inc. (BGBT), and her wardrobe and tour managers, Amanda Nomura and Carlina Gugliotta. It comes on the heels of another lawsuit filed in August by three of Lizzo’s former dancers, who accused her of sexual harassment and fostering toxic working conditions in which they were subjected to taunts, racism and weight-shaming. 

    Identified in the court filing as a professional clothing designer, Daniels said she was contacted in January 2023 by Nomura, who asked her to join Lizzo’s 2023 tour. She was tasked with altering and repairing clothing for the tour’s dancers, which she had designed in 2022, according to the lawsuit.   

    What are the allegations in Asha Daniels’ lawsuit?

    Daniels alleges in the new suit that she endured racial and sexual harassment during her term of employment with Lizzo, as well as disability discrimination, assault and illegal retaliatory termination, according to the complaint.

    The suit alleges Nomura, who was Daniels’ direct supervisor, and other members of Lizzo’s team established a working environment for the dancers that was “set up to humiliate, degrade, alienate, and, in some cases, fire, the Black female performers.” Daniels claims the dancers were forced to change with “little to no privacy” and that members of Lizzo’s stage crew, who were mainly White men, “would lewdly gawk, sneer, and giggle while watching the dancers rush through their outfit changes.”

    Lizzo
    Lizzo performs at Qudos Bank Arena on July 23, 2023 in Sydney, Australia.

    Don Arnold/WireImage


    The lawsuit claims Daniels was instructed “not to dress attractively” in front of Lizzo and told she shouldn’t interact with the entertainer or her boyfriend. 

    Daniels alleges that in a group chat with more than 30 members of Lizzo’s tour team, a backstage manager sent a photo “graphically depicting male genitalia,” which other management personnel “found … to be comical.”

    Daniels claims that throughout her employment she was routinely forced to work 20-hour days, frequently denied breaks and, in one instance, denied medical care while suffering an allergic reaction during the tour. She allegedly heard racist and fatphobic comments from Nomura, who allegedly called Black women involved with the tour “dumb,” “useless,” and “fat,” and used threatening language in interactions with the employees whom she supervised.

    In one alleged incident, Daniels says Nomura rolled a clothing rack over her foot while they were moving it together. Nomura allegedly dismissed Daniels’ request “to sit down, as her foot was in serious pain” after the incident, and instead “proceeded to shove the Plaintiff into the rack of clothing, while asserting Plaintiff should not make excuses about her foot and must help NOMURA transport the clothing,” according to the complaint. Daniels then lost her balance and rolled her ankle, the lawsuit alleges. When Daniels later came to work wearing Crocs, “which minimized the pain,” Nomura allegedly forced her to change into tennis shoes, the lawsuit says, “so that she could move more heavy cases while injured.”

    Daniels was eventually fired, and in the wake of her termination experienced anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, migraines, ocular distortions, brain fog and fatigue, according to the lawsuit.

    The lawsuit says Daniels believes the “experiences of degradation, forced physical labor, denial of medical care, sexual harassment, and racial harassment were allowed to take place by LIZZO’s management without consequence because she is a Black woman.”

    What is Lizzo’s response to the allegations?

    An attorney for Lizzo did not respond to a request for comment from CBS News on the latest allegations from Daniels at the time of publication.  

    Lizzo responded to the allegations initially brought by three former backup dancers in August, saying the aftermath of the accusations had been “gut wrenchingly difficult and overwhelmingly disappointing.” 

    “Usually I choose not to respond to false allegations but these are as unbelievable as they sound and too outrageous to not be addressed,” she said at the time.

    Ron Zambrano, an attorney representing Daniels, told CBS News in a statement Thursday, “With Lizzo’s attack on the other plaintiffs, we’ve heard from more than two dozen former Lizzo employees sharing similar stories of abuse and harassment who could be potential new plaintiffs. This is not going away.”

    “Lizzo is the boss so the buck stops with her,” Zambrano said. “She has created a sexualized and racially charged environment on her tours that her management staff sees as condoning such behavior, and so it continues unchecked. Lizzo certainly knows what’s going on but chooses not to put an end to this disgusting and illegal conduct and participates herself.” 

    Read the full lawsuit


    Asha Daniels’ Lawsuit by
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  • Chicago sues Monsanto, saying company contaminated city’s water with PCBs. Monsanto denies it.

    Chicago sues Monsanto, saying company contaminated city’s water with PCBs. Monsanto denies it.

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    Chicago sues Monsanto, says company contaminated city’s water


    Chicago sues Monsanto, says company contaminated city’s water

    00:45

    Chicago’s lakefront may be one of the city’s biggest gems, but the city says the water, shoreline and Chicago River contain a dangerous chemical known to cause harm to humans and the environment.

    The claims are contained in a lawsuit the city filed against Monsanto and three of its corporate successors.

    PCBs were banned in the 1980s but continue to be released into waterways through storm water.

    The city’s complaint says, “For decades, Monsanto knew that its commercial PCB formulations were highly toxic and would inevitably produce precisely the contamination and human health risks that have occurred. Yet Monsanto intentionally misled the public.”

    As a result, the complaint alleges, there’s “widespread contamination within the city.”

    In a statement, a company representative told CBS News Chicago, “Monsanto believes the case is meritless as the Company never manufactured or disposed PCBs in or near the Chicago area and voluntarily ceased its lawful manufacturing of PCBs more than 45 years ago. Moreover, the products that are alleged to be the source of any environmental impairments were manufactured by third parties, not Monsanto. Additionally, the City itself may be responsible for water quality impairments as it has over 200 combined sewage outfalls that discharge into the Great Lakes watershed. 

    “… The Company has strong defenses and will vigorously defend against these claims.”

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  • George R.R. Martin, John Grisham and other major authors sue OpenAI, alleging

    George R.R. Martin, John Grisham and other major authors sue OpenAI, alleging

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    OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, is facing a lawsuit from bestselling writers including George R.R. Martin, John Grisham and Elin Hilderbrand that claims the company fed their books into its “large language models” allegedly violating their copyrights and engaging in “systematic theft on a mass scale.”

    The suit was filed in the Southern District of New York on Tuesday on behalf of the Authors Guild and 17 noted writers, including Scott Turow, Jodi Picoult, David Baldacci, Michael Connelly and George Saunders. OpenAI didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. 

    The complaint is the latest legal challenge facing OpenAI over the data it collects and uses to create the algorithm that underpins ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence tool that can answer questions and write text in sophisticated language that mimics how a human would respond. To create these AIs, companies like OpenAI rely on large language models, or LLMs, that are fed massive amounts of text and data.

    “ChatGPT and the LLMs underlying it seriously threaten the livelihood of the very authors — including plaintiffs here, as discussed specifically below — on whose works they were ‘trained’ without the authors’ consent,” the lawsuit alleges. 

    It added, “ChatGPT is being used to generate low-quality ebooks, impersonating authors and displacing human-authored books.”

    The suit alleges that ChatGPT has been used by a programmer named Liam Swayne to “write” the sequels to George R.R. Martin’s best-selling series “A Song of Ice and Fire,” which was adapted into the hit HBO show “Game of Thrones.” Martin hasn’t yet published the two final novels in the series – the lawsuit notes that he’s currently writing them — but Swayne used ChatGPT to create his own versions of these novels, which he has posted online.

    “When prompted, ChatGPT accurately generated summaries of several of the Martin infringed works, including summaries for Martin’s novels ‘A Game of Thrones,’ ‘A Clash of Kings,’ and ‘A Storm of Swords,’ the first three books in the series A Song of Ice and Fire,” the suit notes, adding that ChatGPT has also created prequels and alternate versions of his books.

    “ChatGPT could not have generated the results described above if OpenAI’s LLMs had not ingested and been ‘trained’ on the Martin infringed works,” the complaint alleges.

    The lawsuit, which makes similar claims for the other authors, is seeking class-action status as it proposes to represent “tens of thousands” of authors whose works have allegedly been used by OpenAI’s programs. The other authors who are suing are Mary Bly, Sylvia Day, Jonathan Franzen, Christina Baker Kline, Maya Shanbhag Lang, Victor LaValle, Douglas Preston, Roxana Robinson and Rachel Vail.

    The authors want the court to prohibit OpenAI from using copyrighted works in LLMs without “express authorization,” and they are also seeking damages including up to $150,000 per infringed work.

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  • McDonald’s faces lawsuit over “scalding” coffee that left woman with “severe burns”

    McDonald’s faces lawsuit over “scalding” coffee that left woman with “severe burns”

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    A new lawsuit may leave McDonald’s once again crying over spilled coffee. 

    A lawyer for Mable Childress has alleged in a complaint that “scalding” coffee from a McDonald’s drive-thru in San Francisco spilled onto Childress in June, leaving her with “severe burns and emotional distress.” According to the lawsuit, filed last Thursday in a California court, McDonald’s employees “improperly” secured the lid to Childress’ coffee cup, causing it to open unexpectedly and pour hot liquid onto her when she tried to drink from it.  

    “[The employees’] negligence was a substantial factor in causing [Childress] harm,” the lawyer said in the complaint.

    The incident left Childress with scarring in her groin area, according to the suit. 

    Childress, described as “an elder woman,” in the suit, tried to report the incident to three employees at the restaurant, they “refused” to help her, the and later “ignored,” according to her claim. She eventually left the restaurant to seek medical attention for her injuries after being “ignored.” 

    “My restaurants have strict food safety protocols in place, including training crew to ensure lids on hot beverages are secure,” McDonald’s owner and operator Peter Ou said in a statement.

    “We take every customer complaint seriously – and when Ms. Childress reported her experience to us later that day, our employees and management team spoke to her within a few minutes and offered assistance. We’re reviewing this new legal claim in detail,” he said.

    Previous cases

    This isn’t the first time McDonald’s has faced a lawsuit over the temperature of its beverages. In 1992, a court famously ordered the company to pay nearly $3 million to an elderly woman who suffered “severe burns” from a 49-cent cup of coffee that was heated to a temperature between 180 and 190 degrees. 

    A California woman also sued the fast-food restaurant in 2014, alleging its employees “improperly” secured the lid of the cup her hot she ordered, causing the scalding liquid to spill onto her and burn her. A settlement was reached in that case as well, according to Eater.com, which reported at the time that details had not been disclosed.

    In July, a Florida jury awarded $800,000 to a girl who alleged she suffered severe burns when a Chicken McNugget fell onto her leg in 2019. 

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