The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | March 13, 2018
A federal judge won't reconsider dismissing two counts of a discrimination lawsuit filed by a former University of Pennsylvania police officer claiming he was fired for not shaving.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lisa H. Thurau and Daniel Pollack | March 13, 2018
Just as the medical profession has created pediatrics and adolescent medicine to address the unique needs of these age groups, law enforcement agencies need to train and guide law enforcement officials to handle cases with youth with the skills, resources, and information necessary to avoid results leading to severe miscarriages of justice resulting in traumatic impacts.
By Michael Booth | March 13, 2018
In yet another case calling into question the extent of evidence to be produced at detention hearings under New Jersey's revamped bail system, the Supreme Court on Monday heard arguments over whether a criminal defendant had the right to call witnesses adverse to him.
By Andrew Denney | March 12, 2018
The New York City Police Department has backed out of a two-year arrangement with the Manhattan District Attorney's Office in which department legal staff appeared as the prosecution in certain low-level cases.
By Verdict Search | March 12, 2018
Two women charged other deputies covered up a corporal's repeated on-the-job misconduct.
By Caroline Spiezio | March 9, 2018
A lawsuit filed by Bay Area advocacy group this week against Uber Technologies Inc. highlights the accessibility issues facing sharing economy companies.
By Erin Mulvaney | March 9, 2018
Gay rights advocates and the National Football League said an unnamed team should not have asked a prospective player whether he “likes men,” a question that spotlights broader risks for LGBT employees and employers in an unsettled legal landscape.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Geneva Campbell Brown, Michelle Nguyen, Amanda Reed and Steve Stoute | March 9, 2018
Although more attention has been paid to increasing diversity in the legal profession, the industry as a whole still struggles to make meaningful progress on the hiring, retention and promotion of diverse attorneys.
By VerdictSearch | March 8, 2018
On July 27, 2015, plaintiff Pamela Johnson, in her 40s, started working as a paratransit van driver at Keystone Quality Transport Co., a company that provides nonemergency medical transportation in the Philadelphia region.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | March 8, 2018
A Middletown artist from the Democratic Republic of Congo who was nearly executed while incarcerated in his home country is scheduled to find out Thursday in New Jersey if his request for asylum has been granted.
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