CVN News

Update: Dog Bite Case Ends in Pre-Trial Settlement

Written by Courtroom View Network | Apr 13, 2018 3:14:43 PM

Stock image. 

Update: CVN received word that the case has settled before trial. 

 

CVN is proud to make our full, archived trial library more accessible than ever—at just $99 month-to-month!

To mark the launch of our best subscription plan ever, we’re offering FREE access to Wright v. Cranman, et al., an Atlanta-area dog bite case, live and on demand for the trial’s duration, to all of our CVN archive subscribers.*

Harlan Wood, of Atlanta’s Wood Craig & Avery, is expected to seek compensatory and punitive damages for bites a 7-year-old girl suffered when a German Shepherd attacked her at a playground.

According to court documents, the child’s family claims the dog’s owners failed to control the animal, whom they say may have had a history of biting. The dog’s owners, on the other hand, contend the dog was properly leashed, and the child, who they say was not supervised, provoked the animal into biting her.

CVN will provide live, gavel-to-gavel coverage of this 2-4 day-long trial, and CVN video library members can watch it for free.**

The Wright trial is just an example of the wide scope of cases you receive with access to CVN’s digital archive. Our library offers more than 40,000 hours of courtroom video in cases ranging from high-stakes product liability lawsuits and medical malpractice actions to fender bender claims.

It’s the most extensive trial library of its kind, allowing you to learn how the best attorneys win the cases you face every day.

And it’s all yours, plus live access to the Wright trial, for just $99 a month, with no further commitment.

Interested? Sign up here by selecting “CVN Video Library” on the order page. You can also contact us at sales@cvn.com for more information.

Current archive subscribers can access the Wright trial as well. Simply email  sales@cvn.com.

* This offer applies only to CVN Video Library subscriptions.

**All subscription orders are final, regardless of the trial’s ultimate resolution.