This evening on Less than 1: a federal jury awards more than ten million dollars to the family of Adrian Sanchez, fatally shot by an L.A. County Sheriff's deputy during a twenty twenty-one traffic stop -- after forensic evidence undermined the deputy's account of the encounter. Also: a federal hearing puts a novel question to the court in a lawsuit accusing Meta of harvesting sensitive health data through its Pixel tool -- can you value information that has no legal market? And: Trial Lawyers for Justice launches a dedicated appellate practice, bringing in two Arnold & Porter Supreme Court veterans to handle appeals in-house. Plus: a new survey finds Big Law's rush to recruit first-year law students is stressing them out.
Stories mentioned in this episode:
Jury awards $10M in fatal deputy shooting case
https://www.dailyjournal.com/articles/392182-jury-awards-10m-in-fatal-deputy-shooting-case
Trial Lawyers for Justice launches appellate division with Supreme Court veterans
https://www.dailyjournal.com/articles/392183-trial-lawyers-for-justice-launches-appellate-division-with-supreme-court-veterans
Meta class bid turns on value of health data
https://www.dailyjournal.com/articles/392179-meta-class-bid-turns-on-value-of-health-data
(Reuters) 'It sucks.' Students pan law firms' rushed recruiting
https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/it-sucks-students-pan-law-firms-rushed-recruiting-2026-06-11/
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