By Marcia Coyle | December 5, 2022
The two justices' questioning foreshadows a likely divide between the court's conservatives and liberals.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Kamins | December 5, 2022
This article discusses the recent Appellate Division, Third Department decision in 'People v. Jones', where the court held that the exclusionary rule can be applied to a racially motivated traffic stop even where a police officer has probable cause to believe a traffic infraction was committed. In doing so, the court has held that the state Constitution provides broader protection than the federal Constitution with respect to pretextual traffic stops.
By Marcia Coyle | December 5, 2022
Two of the term's most closely watched cases will be argued this week. We take a look at the lawyers and cases.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Martin London | December 2, 2022
Trump, the Oath Keepers, the Proud Boys, West, Fuentas, and other would-be authoritarians have their own version of democracy that does not include allowing its use to oust them once they gain power, a retired Paul Weiss partner writes.
By Emily Cousins | December 1, 2022
"In the present case, no activity or occurrence relevant to the plaintiffs' strict products liability claim against the defendant took place in Connecticut," the opinion said.
By Allison Dunn | November 30, 2022
"You can read it as saying that a workers' comp injury has to be a physical harm related to an unexpected incident at work or the cause of which was unseen. If that's the case, this decision breaks the grand bargain that was struck in 1912 between Arizona workers and Arizona industry. The court doesn't seem to appreciate how destabilizing that could be," said attorney Laura Clyme.
By Brian Lee | November 30, 2022
U.S. District Judge Lorna Schofeld said that a challenger lacked standing because he applied for his pistol license after the law took effect on Sept. 1.
By Adolfo Pesquera | November 30, 2022
The Texas Supreme Court considered two questions related to a constitutional challenge over a local law requiring Houston firefighters receive the same pay as Houston police officers.
By Colleen Murphy | November 29, 2022
The plaintiffs "invite us to hypothesize about future scenarios in which not only does the COVID-19 pandemic reach crisis levels comparable to early-2020, but New Jersey's executive officials will choose to ignore everything—both legal and factual—we have learned since those early months and bluntly reintroduce legally-suspect gathering restrictions on religious worship," the majority wrote.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | November 29, 2022
"Everything about this is unprecedented," said Craig Green, a political law expert at Temple University Beasley School of Law.
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