By Colby Hamilton | June 8, 2018
The report was the first by former federal Judge Stephen Robinson, who was installed as civilian oversight following the settlement of two surveillance cases by the NYPD last year.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Editorial Board | June 8, 2018
Recent incidents have revealed ways white people—often specifically white women—are still using the law to maintain white dominance in the northern states.
By Charles Toutant | June 6, 2018
When the patient objected to the use of the term "monkey," the technician denied doing anything wrong and the clinic owner defended the term as a "silly colloquialism," according to the plaintiff.
By R. Robin McDonald | June 6, 2018
The panel verbally brawled in concurring opinions over the credibility of state witnesses.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Christopher Dunn | June 6, 2018
Presidential pardon fever has spiked over the last week following President Donald Trump's pardon of conservative commentator Dinesh D'Souza, who had been convicted of federal finance violations, and Trump's suggestion he also might pardon former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich and lifestyle maestro Martha Stewart.
By Colby Hamilton | June 5, 2018
Counsel for the news organization BuzzFeed claim the department was wrong not to hand over transcripts of a proceeding attended by one of its reporters.
By Michael Booth | June 5, 2018
"[T]he inscription of the motto on currency would place sufficiently substantial pressure on plaintiffs to violate their alleged religious beliefs only if using payment methods other than cash is more than a mere inconvenience," Judge Jane Stranch said.
By Jim Turner, News Service of Florida | June 5, 2018
And all five announced attorney general candidates, from both parties, object in some fashion to a wide-ranging law approved by the Legislature and Gov. Rick Scott after the Feb. 14 mass shooting at Parkland's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that killed 17 people.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | June 5, 2018
Attorney Erin Ryan filed a federal gender discrimination lawsuit against MDC, alleging the agency fired her after she returned from maternity leave.
By Katheryn Tucker | June 4, 2018
“This is a case about just how far the First Amendment bends in allowing government to punish its employees for the viewpoints they communicate in theirprivate lives,” Justice Nels Peterson wrote. “I am doubtful that it allowed the punishment imposed here.”
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