By Katheryn Tucker | June 15, 2020
"I really miss seeing the lawyers in person," U.S. District Court Judge Steve Jones said as he opened a Zoom hearing on Georgia's abortion ban.
By Charles Toutant | June 15, 2020
The high court's decision lets stand a U.S. District Court ruling that rejected a challenge to New Jersey's law requiring anyone seeking a permit to carry a weapon to prove they have a justifiable need.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | June 14, 2020
How this order could possibly withstand judicial scrutiny under the public forum doctrine is dubious. And how compelling a publisher to speak is different from a mandated flag salute is unclear.
By Ellen Bardash | June 12, 2020
Criminal defense attorney Adam Windett wrote a letter to Mayor Robin R. Christiansen on Thursday urging him to end the indefinite nightly curfew, and a similar letter was sent Friday by the ACLU of Delaware.
By Dara Kam | June 12, 2020
"I don't believe that it's appropriate for law enforcement officers in the course and scope of their employment, acting under color of law, to have their names and their personal information withheld," says Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri.
By Marcia Coyle | June 12, 2020
The justice said the Eleventh Circuit's procedures present a "troubling tableau" and questioned whether they are "consistent with due process."
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Mitchell S. Goldberg and Richard Lloret | June 12, 2020
As the backlog of cases build, we write to start a dialogue and suggest that trial lawyers and trial judges, both of whom are understandably concerned about timely case resolution, need to give more thought and consideration to bench trials.
By Mitchell S. Goldberg and Richard Lloret | June 12, 2020
As the backlog of cases build, we write to start a dialogue and suggest that trial lawyers and trial judges, both of whom are understandably concerned about timely case resolution, need to give more thought and consideration to bench trials.
By Ryan Tarinelli | June 11, 2020
According to the suit, social distancing rules are not neutral policy but instead a "content-based regulation of First Amendment-protected activity."
By Jacqueline Thomsen | June 11, 2020
"This case concerns a day that will live in infamy. It's the day that our federal executive branch unleashed a military and paramilitary force on a band of peaceful protesters assembled in historic Lafayette Park across from the White House," the complaint reads.
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