By Ross Todd | July 5, 2023
Over a six-week span in May and June, Halpern argued appeals in the Second, Fifth and Seventh Circuits as well as New York's Appellate Division, Second Department.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | July 5, 2023
The defendants noted that in Pennsylvania the rules say "original process shall be served within the commonwealth only by the sheriff," therefore the use of a private process server was "legally improper and ineffective."
By Riley Brennan | July 5, 2023
MGM property Aria Resort & Casino was hit with a racial discrimination suit following the alleged detainment of an African-American attorney staying at the luxury hotel.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas R. Newman and Steven J. Ahmuty Jr. | July 3, 2023
Because the Appellate Division has the power to review both "questions of law and questions of fact," as well as questions involving the exercise of judicial discretion, that court has inherent power to consider a point raised for the first time on appeal in "the interest of justice."
By Riley Brennan | July 3, 2023
The Arizona Court of Appeals ruled that a government entity cannot avoid disclosing a public document by arguing that the use of encryption to redact nondisclosable information stored in an electronic database constituted creation of a new record.
By ALM Staff | July 3, 2023
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By ALM Staff | July 3, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | June 30, 2023
"Much of our practice is not based on medical bills or based on diagnosis," Mohan Sreenivasan said. "Our focus is to present to the jury what effects these injuries have on activities of daily living. ... We really embrace the jury charge that you have to put the plaintiff back to where they were if this negligence never occurred."
By Andrew Goldenberg | June 30, 2023
A discussion of the recent NY Court of Appeals decision Gottwald v. Sebert, including the implications it has on the retroactive application of the 2020 amendments to New York's anti-SLAPP statute.
By Riley Brennan | June 30, 2023
The North Dakota Supreme Court reversed a woman's conviction for forgery after concluding the district court had erred in closing the courtroom to provide jurors with the opportunity to discuss "embarrassing or intrusive" matters "in private."
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