New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael D. Schottland | June 15, 2018
OP-ED: Once again we see a joining of progressives and conservatives for the good of our nation and its judicial system.
By Dan M. Clark | June 15, 2018
The NRA has claimed that Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the head of a state agency conspired to coerce financial institutions to sever business ties with the association, causing it to suffer financial losses.
By Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida | June 15, 2018
The justices ordered a new sentencing hearing for inmate Eric Kurt Patrick because the jury split 7-5 in recommending the death penalty to a judge.
By Greg Land | June 14, 2018
After a jury acquitted the former housekeeper and her lawyers of criminal charges related to secretly video recording former Waffle House CEO Joe Rogers Jr. engaged in a sex act, the Georgia Supreme Court sent the related civil appeals back to the Court of Appeals for reconsideration.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Marcia Coyle | June 14, 2018
U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts Jr., leading the court in striking down Minnesota's ban on political apparel in the voting booth, showed again he is the justice steering the court through challenges under the First Amendment and making these rulings a crucial part of his legacy.
By Michael Booth | June 13, 2018
The U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of New Jersey on Wednesday filed the suit against Woodcliff Lake, a suburban community located in Bergen County, about 20 miles northwest of Manhattan and closer still to New York's Rockland County to the north.
By Tom McParland | June 13, 2018
A magistrate judge is considering whether to stay a ruling to strike down a provision of the Delaware Constitution requiring party balance on key state courts until a federal appeals court can decide the issue.
By Jenna Greene | June 12, 2018
More than 30 years ago, 68-year-old Helen Wilson was raped and murdered in the Nebraska town of Beatrice. On Monday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit doled out a small measure of justice in a case where it's been almost entirely lacking
By Marcia Coyle | June 12, 2018
"The contracts clause categorically prohibits states from passing 'any ... law impairing the obligation of contracts,'" Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in a solo dissent in the case Sveen v. Melin. The framers, Gorsuch said, "were absolute. They took the view that treating existing contracts as 'inviolable' would benefit society by ensuring that all persons could count on the ability to enforce promises lawfully made to them."
By Lloyd Dunkelberger, News Service of Florida | June 12, 2018
The poll, conducted in late May and early June, showed four amendments with the necessary 60 percent of voter support.
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