By Kim Chandler Associated Press | April 19, 2018
Walter Leroy Moody Jr., 83, is scheduled to receive a lethal injection Thursday and become the oldest inmate put to death since executions resumed in the U.S. in the 1970s.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | April 18, 2018
Kimberly Coppola alleges the St. Bernadette Catholic School in New Haven was dismissive of her son's Tourette syndrome, forcing her to remove him from the school.
By Colby Hamilton | April 18, 2018
The attorney general said that state law prevents, absent a court-provided exception, the prosecution of certain crimes already brought along to the point of a plea or a grand jury's swearing in.
By Greg Land | April 18, 2018
In a dispute going back nearly 30 years, the Harford County in Maryland was hit with a verdict of more than $45 million for its successful efforts to block construction of a rubble-fill project the county originally asked for.
By Katheryn Tucker | April 17, 2018
The changing of the chiefs marks the ascent of the high court's younger generation of justices. The difference between their ages—and their bar admission dates—is 23 years.
By Colby Hamilton | April 17, 2018
The plaintiffs allege issues arose after the NFL hired Cathy Lanier, the former Washington, D.C., chief of police, as its new security chief in 2016.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Gregory Copeland | April 17, 2018
Immigration Judge Dana Leigh Marks characterized removal proceedings as “death penalty cases heard in traffic court settings.”
By Andrew Denney | April 16, 2018
While David Buckel, an attorney who died on April 14 after setting himself on fire in a park in Brooklyn, had become widely known for his work on LGBT causes, he spent the final years of his life out of the legal limelight and focused his energy on environmental protection.
By Dara Kam, News Service of Florida | April 16, 2018
Attorneys for felons trying to have their voting rights restored are accusing Gov. Rick Scott and the Florida Cabinet of “foot-dragging” by trying to block a federal judge's order that gave the state until April 26 to revamp its controversial rights-restoration process.
By Associated Press | April 16, 2018
A group of alumni from Ave Maria University wants the school to rescind an invitation to Education Secretary Betsy DeVos to speak at the school's graduation, citing rollbacks she has made to programs aimed at protecting civil rights and the disabled.
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