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When we last checked in on the Taxotere MDL back in January, we described the court’s brand and generic preemption rulings as chronological, not contradictory. At the time, that seemed like the most charitable reading.

The court had concluded that certain medical literature—the 2003 and 2006 studies—qualified as “newly acquired information” for the brand manufacturer

If ever there were a case that reads like a checklist for how not to plead around preemption, it’s Dunham v. Boston Scientific Corp., — F.Supp.3d–, 2026 WL 539533 (W.D. Mich. Feb. 24, 2026). Plaintiff alleged that his spinal cord stimulator—a Class III, premarket approved device—implanted to treat his chronic back pain caused him

The recent decision in Cousin-Sabra v. Smith & Nephew, Inc., 2026 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25576 (E.D.N.C. Feb. 5, 2026) is short and straightforward. So too, therefore, will be this post. What we have is an ambitious plaintiff who filed a products liability/medical malpractice case against her doctors and the manufacturer of the device they

As our slew of recent posts on standing demonstrate, plaintiffs’ lawyers continue their search for a version of federal jurisdiction that does not require anyone to have been hurt. This time, the vehicle was a box of band-aids—and the court declined to take the ride, dismissing the case in its entirety.

In Aronstein v. Kenvue

If you ever needed proof that timing is everything, the Taxotere litigation has you covered.

Last month, a court denied summary judgment to the brand manufacturer, finding that it allegedly acquired “newly acquired information” post-dating Taxotere’s original FDA approval in 1996. This month, however, the very same court granted summary judgment to the 

Every so often a summary judgment decision comes along that makes you wonder whether the plaintiff thought the rules of civil procedure were more like suggestions. Neal v. Smith & Nephew Inc., 2026 WL 87302 (W.D. LA Jan. 12, 2026), is one of those cases.

The facts are familiar product liability territory. Plaintiff

We litigators love a good hearing. Judges asking sharp questions, counsel delivering crisp arguments, everyone believing they’ve advanced the ball. What no one loves—especially our clients—is realizing after the hearing that confidential business information just galloped into the public record. That’s apparently what happened recently in In re Suboxone Buprenorphine/Naloxone Film Products Liability Litigation