By New Jersey State Bar Association | May 28, 2018
Oral argument can be absolutely critical, according to a panel of expert jurists who spoke at the NJSBA annual meeting.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jeffrey Campolongo and Alisha L. McCarthy | May 25, 2018
It has been perhaps a disorienting couple of weeks for those keeping track of where, and how, employers can be sued by their employees. Take, for example, the May 10 step toward transparency in the #MeToo era by Uber Technologies, Inc. (Uber), which announced that it will not push for individual sexual harassment and assault claims to be determined through private arbitration proceedings going forward.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | May 25, 2018
An insurance carrier has no obligation to defend against a lawsuit aimed at holding a motel liable for sex trafficking that occurred on its premises.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Ryan Boland | May 25, 2018
The Pennsylvania Superior Court decided an issue of first impression in Pennsylvania—what is the standard for the authentication of social media postings at trial.
By Katheryn Tucker | May 25, 2018
It was a heated contest. But on Tuesday, Ken Hodges, 52, a former district attorney in Albany who worked as a prosecutor for 15 years and a civil trial lawyer for the last 12 years, defeated trial lawyer and former state bar president Ken Shigley, 67, with nearly 70 percent of the vote.
By Ross Todd | May 24, 2018
Although U.S. District Judge William Alsup appeared to lean the way of the six oil companies defendants on the merits at a hearing Thursday, he said he'll hold off ruling until he clears up jurisdictional issues that five of them have raised.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Colby Hamilton | May 24, 2018
The same day Barbara Underwood was selected as interim attorney general the office was part of a plea agreement with an associate of Michael Cohen who agreed to cooperate with the government.
By Charles Toutant | May 24, 2018
U.S. District Judge William Walls made the award to Zimmer as the prevailing party after four patents that Howmedica claimed were infringed were found to be invalid.
By VerdictSearch | May 24, 2018
On April 4, 2014, plaintiff Sharon Weil, 51, a part-time restaurant employee, was driving on Route 309 in Quakertown. After she stopped at a red light at Route 663, her sport utility vehicle was rear-ended by a sedan. She claimed permanent neck injuries.
By Greg Land | May 24, 2018
The Atlanta Development Authority sued the city's Board of Ethics after it refused to rescind a 2013 opinion barring the development agency from getting free tickets to events at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
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