New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | November 29, 2021
We commend the chief justice and our court for convening the conference. The issues addressed are of the utmost importance in ensuring both the fairness of our jury system and the public perception of its fairness.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Julie F. Kay | November 29, 2021
Over the past 30 years, the Supreme Court has heard oral argument on abortion rights in at least seven different cases. Each time abortion rights supporters feared it would be the end of Roe. Yet this time is different.
By Tom McParland | November 22, 2021
The request came after a motions panel for the Second Circuit issued an order temporarily exempting the 15 individually named plaintiffs from the end-of-month deadline and establishing a new mechanism to have their exemption claims heard.
By Andrew Goudsward | November 22, 2021
"This is a battle between the office of the former president and the select committee involving the issue of executive privilege," Bannon's defense lawyer Robert Costello said in an interview. "We are mere spectators here."
By News Service of Florida | November 22, 2021
U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle wrote that the waterfront property owners were still able to use much of their property and that the Walton County commission was using its "police power in a public-health emergency" when it closed the beaches.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 22, 2021
"The committee is seeking official presidential records, not Trump's personal papers. And it is not studying general social phenomena; it is investigating a physical attack on Congress that was aimed at thwarting the peaceful transfer of power," the former DOJ officials said.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Joel Cohen | November 22, 2021
There may be another, more tangible, benefit in a belated pardon for Plessy. Doesn't revisiting 'Plessy', most importantly, raise anew for the public consciousness the Supreme Court's action in addressing a case that on its limited facts ostensibly seemed largely inconsequential in 1896?
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | November 21, 2021
An incident last June in Arvada, Colorado, shows that an armed citizenry won't promote public order.
By Jason Grant | November 18, 2021
"It makes no difference … whether a 'nonprofit legal services organization' is working on the case, as here, or high-priced 'private counsel," wrote the circuit court panel. "The rate is the same, regardless of whether some might view it as a 'windfall.'"
By Tom McParland | November 18, 2021
The complaint argued that the CUNY policy "irrationally" targeted students over faculty or other employees, and discriminated against those who refused to take the vaccine due to sincerely held religious beliefs.
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