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Charles Toutant

Charles Toutant

Charles Toutant is a litigation writer for the New Jersey Law Journal.

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January 26, 2004 | New Jersey Law Journal

Suit Challenges Expanded DNA Law

The American Civil Liberties Union filed suit to overturn New Jersey's mandatory DNA testing of criminals. The Mercer County suit asserts that collection of biological samples violates the rights of privacy and "bodily integrity" and also flouts constitutional due process and ex post facto provisions. The suit was triggered by the expansion last fall of the DNA collection law.

By Charles Toutant

3 minute read

May 17, 2004 | New Jersey Law Journal

A Southern Gentleman in 'Joisey'

At age 64, Ed McCreedy's laid-back, country-club style is about to be tested in a prickly way. On Thursday, he takes the oath of president of the New Jersey State Bar Association at a time when lawyers - especially trial lawyers - feel as though they're under siege.

By Charles Toutant

7 minute read

July 18, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Passaic Case Measures Fairness of Compensation in 'Kelo'-type Taking

As the dust settles from the U.S. Supreme Court's ground-shaking decision allowing private property to be taken for economic development, a case in Passaic is laying bare the economic aftermath. The dispute raises the issue that many lawyers feel the Court gave short shrift on June 23 in Kelo v. New London: what is the "fair compensation" due to an owner when his property is taken for a developer's use that will measurably increase its value?

By Charles Toutant

4 minute read

November 04, 2009 | New Jersey Law Journal

GPS Evidence in Criminal Case Held Inadmissible Absent Expert Testimony

Global Positioning System readings are inadmissible without expert testimony establishing the accuracy of the specific device used, a state appeals court rules.

By Charles Toutant

4 minute read

July 27, 2009 | New Jersey Law Journal

Andrew Berry, 69, Led McCarter & English's Growth to Regional Firm

Andrew Berry, the chairman of McCarter & English who spearheaded its transformation from a local firm to a regional power, died on July 24 at his vacation home in Southport, Maine. He was 69.

By Charles Toutant

5 minute read

March 11, 2009 | New Jersey Law Journal

Attorney General Wants Court's Mandate On Telephonic Search Warrants Delayed

Attorney General Anne Milgram has asked the state Supreme Court to postpone application of its holding on police searches of vehicles until a statewide telephonic warrant system is implemented, saying that the state will otherwise be left with a "Hobson's choice."

By Charles Toutant

5 minute read

March 20, 2006 | New Jersey Law Journal

No Authority in Spill Act for DEP To Seek Order of Remediation

The N.J. Spill Compensation and Control Act does not provide a legal basis for the Department of Environmental Protection to seek a court-ordered cleanup of polluted property, a state judge rules.

By Charles Toutant

3 minute read

May 29, 2007 | The Legal Intelligencer

N.J. Turnpike Authority Settles Suit Over Posting of Crash Video

YouTube and two other video-sharing Web sites agreed Thursday to stop showing a surveillance video of a car exploding on impact with a tollbooth on the Garden State Parkway.

By Charles Toutant

5 minute read

August 31, 2007 | National Law Journal

Schering-Plough Defends Suits Over Marketing of 'Off-Label' Drug Uses

Schering-Plough Corp. faces a spate of federal court litigation over promotion of its drugs for uses not approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Eight putative class action suits are pending with U.S. District Judge Stanley Chesler in Newark, N.J., consolidated by the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation. Schering's lawyer, Joan McPhee of Ropes & Gray, said the company will defend what it considers a free-speech right to discuss off-label uses with doctors.

By Charles Toutant

4 minute read

April 13, 2007 | Law.com

'Go Directly To Jail' Rule for DWIs Irks N.J. Bar

The New Jersey State Bar Association is hollering mad at a policy, enforced by state court regulators, requiring third-time drunken-driving offenders to be hauled off to jail the minute they're convicted. In a resolution made public last week, the Bar said the Administrative Office of the Courts lacks legal authority to impose such a policy. And what's more, the Bar said, the directive exemplifies a pattern of "overarching and unauthorized exercise of control by the AOC."

By Charles Toutant

4 minute read