By Jane Wester | October 13, 2020
If the high court grants Trump's petition, it would be the case's second trip to the Supreme Court this year.
By Jane Wester | October 13, 2020
Under the order, houses of worship in "red zones," the most severely restricted areas, can only permit gatherings of 10 people or 25% of the building's capacity, whichever is lower.
By Marcia Coyle | Jacqueline Thomsen | October 13, 2020
"And I'm answering a lot of questions about 'Roe,' which I think indicates that 'Roe' doesn't fall in that category," Barrett said.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Stephen Humphreys | October 13, 2020
How the state Supreme Court lost its way and found the CSA,
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By J. Richard Caldwell Jr., Christian Tiblier and Kathleen Shea | October 13, 2020
As the judicial system attempts to recover from the effects of the COVID-19 crisis, basic constitutional rights in civil as well as criminal cases must be protected in the haste to resume trial proceedings.
By New Jersey State Bar Association | October 13, 2020
NJSBA files amicus brief raising constitutional concerns with jury selection process used in Bergen County criminal trial
By Ellen Bardash | October 12, 2020
Though concerns raised by U.S. Postal Service delays may have warranted a further look at whether requiring what's expected to be a significantly higher than usual number of mail-in ballots to be received by 8 p.m. Nov. 3 was unreasonable, the current circumstances aren't enough for the deadline to be considered a constitutional issue.
By Greg Land | October 12, 2020
Overcoming an officer's assertion of qualified immunity, a federal judge refused to toss claims stemming from the 2016 shooting death of a teen in Mobile.
Daily Business Review | Profile
By Catherine Wilson | October 12, 2020
After widespread police corruption was uncovered in Biscayne Park, Miami-Dade Public Defender Carlos Martinez assembled a team to examine every conviction from the tiny suburb for four years and ended up erasing 60 convictions.
By Jane Wester | October 10, 2020
U.S. District Judge Eric Komitee agreed with a factual argument advanced by Randy Mastro of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher that the order was aimed at combating outbreaks among Orthodox Jewish communities, but said it would be "problematic" if different religious groups were subject to different restrictions.
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