By Riley Brennan | January 19, 2024
The decision overturns a prior unanimous ruling and comes after five new justices have been added to the court.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Riley Brennan | January 19, 2024
The ruling marks a win for Washington, D.C., boutique litigation firm Cooper & Kirk, which represents the plaintiffs challenging the statutes.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Matthew B. Weisberg | January 19, 2024
In United States v. Zolin, the court granted certiorari to determine whether the attorney-client privilege crime-fraud exception applies to a case arising out of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) investigation of the tax returns of L. Ron Hubbard, founder of the Church of Scientology.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | January 19, 2024
This decision underscores the requirement for attorneys to not tell or suggest to a witness how to respond to questions. The consequence may be severe.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jules Epstein | January 19, 2024
The question lawyers need to ponder—and adversaries need to pounce upon—is whether that same admonition applies to what lawyers say in their openings and closings, with the added concern that the warning will be anything you say SHALL be used against you, and you can't dispute it.
By Lisa Willis | January 17, 2024
Suppose you parked in the City of Miami during the past seven years. At $200 a month that means you paid $360 a year in a 15% parking tax that appears not…
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Linton Mann III and William T. Russell Jr. | January 16, 2024
In 'People v. Butler', the Court of Appeals recently decided an issue of first impression concerning the use of police dogs to detect the presence of illegal drugs on a suspect's body. In a unanimous opinion, it ruled that the use of a narcotics-detecting dog to sniff a suspect's body for evidence of a crime constitutes a search for purposes of the Fourth Amendment.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Timothy D. Kenison | January 16, 2024
The Florida Supreme Court is revising the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure and adopting the "rocket docket" case management standards of our federal courts. Trial continuances will soon become procedural antiquities, granted only under the most exceptional and rare circumstances.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Riley Brennan | January 12, 2024
U.S. District Judge Wendy Beetlestone of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania held that the issue of counsel paying for their client's living expenses didn't warrant disqualifying the attorney, concluding a potential ethical violation didn't require disqualification.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | January 12, 2024
The result should not be surprising to attorneys. However, we suspect that it would unpleasantly surprise many owners of closely held corporations.
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