The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. Dannunzio | December 14, 2017
A federal appeals court has ordered a federal judge to explain why he decided that minor political parties in Pennsylvania should be required to gather a certain number of signatures from a specific number of counties in order to get their candidates on the ballot.
By Katheryn Tucker | December 14, 2017
Oral arguments have an intangible value that lawyers and judges seem to understand instinctively. At best, they're conversations—starting in midsentence with many interruptions—that mostly seem mutually useful.
By Jenna Greene | December 14, 2017
When your client is a convicted drug dealer who got hurt playing basketball in prison, it's no easy feat to convince a jury to award damages using…
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | December 13, 2017
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has agreed to review whether the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission's record-high fine against an energy distribution company that allegedly overcharged customers during the 2014 polar vortex was impermissibly excessive.
By Katheryn Tucker | December 13, 2017
Appellate attorneys say the opportunity to argue their cases in person is useful, especially for complex matters and important questions of law.
By R. Robin McDonald | December 11, 2017
VOTERGA has asked Georgia's governor not to appoint attorney and part-time magistrate judge Clint Bearden to the superior court bench, citing his role in the arrest and prosecution of citizen journalist Nydia Tisdale.
By Ross Todd | December 11, 2017
Judge Alex Kozinski, sitting for his first oral argument after the Washington Post reported harassment allegations against him on Dec. 8, appeared to be in the court's minority in a case over whether there's a constitutional right to a livable climate.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. Dannunzio | December 11, 2017
A Catholic group opposed to birth control can't intervene in the state's lawsuit challenging the administration's authority to exempt organizations from providing contraceptive services to women.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jana S. Farmer and Adam Bialek | December 11, 2017
Jana S. Farmer and Adam Bialek examine, through an intellectual property lens, the current debate over the issue of confederate or other controversial monuments, specifically addressing the question: Do the creators of confederate monuments or their heirs have a say in whether these works stay or go under the Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990?
By Marcia Coyle | December 11, 2017
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to decide whether the nation's workplace anti-bias law bars sexual orientation discrimination. The justices may soon have another opportunity to take up the closely watched question. The full U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit heard arguments Sept. 26.
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