Authors: James Dunlop, Tara Fumerton
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Latest News
- Lake County Bar Foundation celebrates scholars - Daily Herald
- Springfield leaders rally at Supreme Court for TPS case - WDTN.com
- WATCH: Illinois Supreme Court considers another FOID challenge - The Center Square
- What's at stake in Springfield if SCOTUS lets Trump deport Haitians? - The Columbus Dispatch
- Haitian TPS supporters in Springfield file brief for Supreme Court to consider - WKEF
- Haiti TPS: Supreme Court to hear case impacting program in April as local advocates highlight impact - Springfield News-Sun
- U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments on TPS for Haiti, Springfielders head to D.C. to demonstrate - WYSO
- Advocates for Haitian immigrants in Springfield file Supreme Court brief as TPS fight continues - 10tv.com
- Springfield leaders defend Haitians in SCOTUS brief, plan trip to Washington - The Columbus Dispatch
- Will judges appear on your ballot in the 2026 Illinois primary? How to find out - NBC 5 Chicago
Scholarship & White Papers
Public Opinion Research
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Challenges to Illinois Gun Control Policy: People v. Aguilar – Podcast
Criminal Law & Procedure Practice Group Podcast, September 20, 2013
Featuring: Nelson Lund, Dean A. Reuter
Media & Commentary
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A Recent History of Medical Malpractice and Civil Justice Reform in Illinois: The Five Year Wait for the Supreme Court to Decide the Fate of Reform in LEBRON V. GOTTLIEB MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Recently, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled on the validity of the bipartisan Medical Malpractice Reform Act of 2005.1 The last effort to enact civil justice reform occurred in 1995 when a Republican majority controlled the Illinois General Assembly and the Governorship. That General Assembly promulgated several civil reforms and bundled a hard cap on noneconomic damages inside a larger omnibus bill. At the time, the Illinois civil justice reforms were considered the most comprehensive tort reform to be enacted by any state legislature. A Cook County trial judge ruled the legislation unconstitutional almost immediately after its effective date. On appeal from Cook County, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled in Best v. Taylor Machine Works2 that the caps on noneconomic damages were an infringement of the separation of powers and the bar on “special legislation” and struck the entire tort reform package. In doing so, the supreme court considered a severability clause meant to preserve the other tort reforms in the legislation and determined that the parts that were unconstitutional could not be severed from those remaining.


Illinois Supreme Court