By Allison Dunn | April 3, 2023
"It's unclear what else the prosecutor could have done to explain what 'completely nonresponsive' meant, short of repeating herself verbatim," Chief Justice Brian D. Boatright wrote in the lone dissent, adding, "In these circumstances, the line between 'completely nonresponsive' and 'unengaged' is not immediately apparent."
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | March 31, 2023
Though The Satanic Temple is a new client for Dechert, the firm's co-counsel is familiar, Dechert associate Noah Becker said.
By Adolfo Pesquera | March 31, 2023
Pitman criticized defense counsel Jonathan Mitchell for donating to the library the previously removed books three months into litigation.
By Colleen Murphy | March 27, 2023
"While the Legislature's goal to protect children is laudable, the effect of the amendment is to criminalize protected speech by way of its definition of child erotica and its proscription of private possession of child erotica," stated Whipple.
By Ryan Dailey | March 27, 2023
The bill would end a decades-old requirement that people obtain state concealed-weapons licenses before they can carry guns. The process includes background checks and firearms training.
By Adolfo Pesquera | March 24, 2023
"If enforcement to just compensate is purely a matter of discretion, the government is going to exercise its discretion not to pay for things it takes," Institute for Justice attorney Bob McNamara said.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | March 24, 2023
Raynes & Lawn's Harold Goodman said the resolution puts to rest a suit that would have otherwise been bound for a lengthy slog through the litigation process due to the tricky legal theories at play.
By Avalon Zoppo | March 24, 2023
"Rather than leave the FCC with 'no guidance whatsoever,' Congress provided ample direction for the FCC in [the statute]," Judge Carl Stewart wrote.
By Avalon Zoppo | March 23, 2023
The Ninth Circuit weighed whether several teachers' negative comments about a student Christian club should be considered in deciding if the school district selectively enforced its nondiscrimination policy and was motivated by anti-religious animus.
By Colleen Murphy | March 22, 2023
"It is the first major appellate decision in New Jersey construing the latest holdings of the U.S. Supreme Court on the question of firearm regulations," said former state Supreme Court Justice Peter G. Verniero, a partner at Sills Cummis & Gross. "I predict the Appellate Division's analysis will be cited by other courts in and outside New Jersey, until or unless the case is heard by a higher court."
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