By ALM Staff | March 27, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
By Ellen Bardash | March 24, 2023
Biden is represented in the matter by Dalton & Associates and Winston & Strawn. A computer repair shop owner has sued him, a congressman and Joe Biden's presidential campaign over disclosure of his identity.
By Adolfo Pesquera | March 24, 2023
The appellate court found the FDA unlawfully changed its rules without providing notice or opportunity for public comment on standards for fulfilling the requirements of applications by creating a substantive rule in the guise of an internal memorandum.
By Adolfo Pesquera | March 16, 2023
"Here, the agency has barely articulated any basis at all. The paucity of reasoning is especially glaring in the face of the agency's statutory mandate to prioritize safety," the opinion states.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Dennis Boshnack | March 15, 2023
VTL 238 requires a parking violation to be dismissed upon application of the person charged with the violation if the parking summons charging the violation omits, misdescribes, or illegibly states certain information, including the vehicle's body type.
By Ellen Bardash | March 15, 2023
Considering the rise of made-to-order cars and direct sales, especially among newer manufacturers of electric vehicles, the court's decision either way has the potential to impact how and if companies sell cars in Delaware.
By Avalon Zoppo | March 8, 2023
If the Fifth Circuit rules against the government, legal experts said the decision would extend an existing at-will removal requirement for agencies led by single directors to the multimember Consumer Product Safety Commission, and could have more far-reaching effects if the U.S. Supreme Court gets involved.
By Brian Lee | March 3, 2023
The New York State Bar Association said that the record-keeping requirement has no basis in the enabling legislation and creates significant challenges for New York attorneys.
By Brian Lee | February 23, 2023
The new law doesn't provide specific consequences, nor does it provide safe harbors, which means lawyers are left to look at existing case law concerning mistakes made by a notary public.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Benjamin Rosenberg, Matthew Mazur, and Brian Kulp | February 21, 2023
The Sentencing Guidelines have always presented novel constitutional and interpretive issues. One issue that has recently divided the lower courts is how much deference to afford to the Sentencing Commission's commentary interpreting the Sentencing Guidelines. The Supreme Court answered this question nearly 30 years ago in Stinson v. United States, but Stinson is now on shaky ground.
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