Brian D. Murray Admitted Pro Hac Vice for US Roche Medical Plan
Case Summary
The court granted Brian D. Murray admission pro hac vice to represent US Roche Medical and Prescription Plan. Murray must register for electronic filing and notifications in the District of Utah to maintain active participation in the case.
Latest development
ORDER granting 7 Motion for Admission Pro Hac Vice of Attorney Brian D. Murray for US Roche Medical and Prescription Plan.Attorneys admitted Pro Hac Vice must register to efile and receive electronic notification of
Order · May 10, 2026
The court granted Motion for Admission Pro Hac Vice of Attorney Brian D.
Key Issues
- • Pro hac vice admission
- • Attorney registration
- • Electronic filing requirements
Docket Snapshot
Court
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Docket
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Civil
Stage
Court order issued
Active
Filed
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Latest Filing
ORDER granting 7 Motion for Admission Pro Hac Vice of Attorney Brian D. Murray for US Roche Medical and Prescription
Order · May 10, 2026
Coverage
0 articles
0 sources tracked
Participants
1 Presiding Judge
1 linked entity
Judge
Dustin B. Pead
What the record shows
The court metadata has not been resolved yet, so Juryvine is keeping the page conservative until a reliable court match lands.
The newest docket activity we have is a order dated May 10, 2026.
The visible party/entity graph currently includes Dustin B. Pead.
No independent press coverage is attached yet; this page is currently docket-led rather than media-led.
The Story So Far
The District of Utah court granted the motion to admit attorney Brian D. Murray pro hac vice on March 20, 2025. Murray will represent US Roche Medical and Prescription Plan in this case.
The order requires Murray to register for electronic filing and case notifications through the court’s CM/ECF system. Failure to register will prevent him from receiving electronic notices of filings and case activity. The court directed Murray to follow the District of Utah’s local rules, which are available on the court’s website.
Magistrate Judge Dustin B. Pead signed the order. This admission allows Murray, who is not licensed in Utah, to participate fully in the litigation.
The case remains active, but details on the underlying dispute and docket number are not publicly available. The pro hac vice admission is a procedural step that enables out-of-state counsel to appear in this federal court.
The court’s instructions emphasize compliance with electronic filing requirements to maintain access to case documents and notifications. This order does not address the merits of the case or any substantive motions. The next procedural moves will likely involve filings by Murray now that he is admitted to appear.
Monitoring subsequent motions and case management orders will clarify the case’s direction.
update What Changed This Week
receipt_long Source expand_more
ORDER granting 7 Motion for Admission Pro Hac Vice of Attorney Brian D. Murray for US Roche Medical and Prescription Plan.Attorneys admitted Pro Hac Vice must register to efile and receive electronic notification of case activity in the District of Utah at Instructions are available at Pro Hac Vice Attorney who fails to register for CM/ECF access will not receive notifications of electronic filings.Attorneys admitted Pro Hac Vice may download a copy of the District of Utahs local rules from the
Juryvine summaries are generated from court records. Expand "Source" on any row to see the underlying filing.
Case Timeline
1 eventORDER granting 7 Motion for Admission Pro Hac Vice of Attorney Brian D. Murray for US Roche Medical and Prescription Plan.Attorneys admitted Pro Hac Vice must register to efile and receive electronic notification of case activity in the District of Utah at Instructions are available at Pro Hac Vice Attorney who fails
The court granted Motion for Admission Pro Hac Vice of Attorney Brian D.
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Sources tracked
0 outlets · 0 articles
Timeline events
1 record on file
Last updated
3 hours, 58 minutes ago
Juryvine aggregates docket entries from PACER/CourtListener, press coverage, and GDELT signals. Ingestion timestamps do not appear in the What Changed feed — that reflects real court activity only.