By Jason Grant | March 19, 2019
“This inequality in pay deprives our staff of a sustainable living wage, impeding their ability to pursue careers as defenders,” said Janet Sabel, CEO and attorney-in-chief of the Legal Aid Society.
By Dan M. Clark | March 1, 2019
State Sen. Brad Hoylman, a Democrat from Manhattan who chairs the Judiciary Committee, said he's considering holding hearings on restructuring the state's trial courts.
By Samantha Joseph | February 1, 2019
Judge Noel Hillman's ruling ends years of litigation, dating back to 2008, when the named plaintiff first filed suit alleging civil rights violations under federal and New Jersey law.
By Susan Smith Blakely | October 25, 2018
In a new book, What Millennial Lawyers Want: A Bridge from the Past to the Future of Law Practice (Wolters Kluwer/Aspen Publications, 2018), I explore the new generation of lawyers, their importance to law practice today, and their link to practitioners of the past. One thing is undisputable from my research. Millennial lawyers view the world differently than recent past generations of lawyers, and they have different expectations.
By Jenna Greene | October 11, 2018
Why does anyone give up what is often thought of as the ultimate job in the profession?
By Amanda Bronstad | October 10, 2018
Labaton acknowledged it should have disclosed a $4.1 million referral payment and agreed to make several internal changes.
By Ellis Kim | September 18, 2018
Cooper & Kirk is working with the state attorney general to investigate allegations a tech company, reported to be Google, is deceiving consumers by tracking and storing their location data.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Dan M. Clark | July 25, 2018
Their financial disclosure forms, released by the state's Joint Commission on Public Ethics, showed a wide array of incomes in 2017, ranging from below $200,000 to more than $4 million. The state attorney general has an annual salary of $151,500.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | July 17, 2018
The case involved a contentious dispute over how much the firm representing the government should be paid for the time put into the case. While the case settled for $1.7 million, lawyers for the government requested $3.11 million in fees.
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis
By Lizzy McLellan | July 12, 2018
Starting salaries for judicial clerks are less than a quarter of what top-paying law firms offer their first-year associates.
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