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 Samantha Joseph | March 12, 2018
The Broward Sheriff's Office has been ordered to release surveillance camera recordings.
By Lidia Dinkova | March 12, 2018
Greenberg Traurig Miami shareholder Adam Foslid filed a complaint on behalf of a Cambridge House resident in Port Charlotte.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Peter F. Vaira | March 12, 2018
The Pennsylvania Senate Judiciary Committee is currently holding hearings to study possible changes to the Pennsylvania Grand Jury Statute. I contend that Section 4552 of the statute should be stricken for reasons discussed below.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Mark A. Cuthbertson and Matthew DeLuca | March 9, 2018
While there is an extensive body of law on the First Amendment, New York courts have only addressed government social media in evidentiary disputes. However, recent decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court and a federal district court in Virginia suggest that the rigorous protections afforded to freedom of speech generally extend to the digital realm as well.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | March 9, 2018
Four Connecticut law students have earned a trip to San Francisco, California, to represent the state at the Hispanic National Bar Association's 2018 Corporate Counsel Conference.
By Jason Grant | March 8, 2018
Manhattan Federal Judge Jed Rakoff fiercely criticized the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and the federal judiciary as a whole, for repeatedly upholding U.S. companies' use of mandatory arbitration clauses that consumers sign on to via internet-based customer agreements that appear on screens.
By Tom McParland | March 8, 2018
Lawyers for the Carney administration are arguing in federal court that Gov. John Carney has the discretion to consider party affiliation in judicial nominations, despite a federal court ruling that struck down a provision of the Delaware Constitution that requires strict political balance among the state's judges.
By Marcia Coyle | March 8, 2018
The number of questions asked by the justices has remained "remarkably constant" since 1995 even as the number of words used increased significantly, according to the new study. But those extra words "are being devoted to comments and statements, not to inquiries of the advocates."
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