By Max Mitchell | February 6, 2015
Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane's challenge to the appointment of a special prosecutor in the grand jury leak case possibly pending against her wades into a relatively uncharted area of the law, according to some legal observers.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | February 6, 2015
The state Supreme Court has declined to hear a case in which a woman was awarded $10.5 million after being injured in a car accident caused by an out-of-control dump truck.
By David Newman | February 6, 2015
While it is not necessary to be a “rockstar” to reach licensing success, planning carefully to present opportunities for the parties to reach an early compromise may keep your stars aligned.
By Noreen Marcus | February 6, 2015
U.S. District Judge Federico Moreno, who previously supervised major cases against the managed care industry, will consider lawsuits over 7.8 million recalled Takata airbags.
By Carlos Harrison | February 6, 2015
Broward County Court Judge Linda Pratt had embarked on a career to become a translator, but through serendipity she wound up in law school.
By Julie Kay | February 6, 2015
Greenberg Traurig is representing superstar Katy Perry in an intellectual property dispute with an Orlando man who created a toy version of the Left Shark from Super Bowl halftime fame.
By Andrew Keshner | February 6, 2015
A judge heard widely divergent views Wednesday about the consequences of revealing grand jury proceedings in the Eric Garner matter.
By Ben Bedell | February 6, 2015
Patrons of the Metropolitan Museum of Art do not have standing to enforce a 1893 state statute that granted a subsidy to the museum on condition that it was kept open to the public "free of charge throughout the year for five days each week", the First Department ruled Thursday.
By Ben Bedell | February 5, 2015
The fact that a defendant could have been arrested for littering did not justify a search that turned up a pistol, the First Department said Tuesday, invoking a new standard governing searches incident to arrest adopted by the Court of Appeals last December.
By Mark Hamblett | February 5, 2015
Michael Duhs was convicted for the bathtub scalding of the child of his live-in companion, in part because a doctor who treated the 3-year-old was allowed to testify the child said "he wouldn't let me out," which an Eastern District judge found to be a violation of the Confrontation Clause.
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