By Cheryl Miller | January 8, 2021
"The governor's proposed budget for the judicial branch is welcome news," Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye said. "It is careful and cautious, but also reflects his concern for those trying to access our court system during a pandemic."
By Charles Toutant | January 7, 2021
The order represents the judiciary's latest effort to keep court cases moving since the challenges of the coronavirus were first felt last March.
By Angela Morris | January 6, 2021
The most sensitive, confidential sealed filings in federal courts can no longer be filed through CM/ECF because of a vulnerability revealed in the SolarWinds Orion breach.
By Tom McParland | January 6, 2021
Chief Judge Colleen McMahon said that in-person operations at the Manhattan federal court would remain halted due to the "recent spike in coronavirus cases, both nationally and within the Southern District of New York, and other medical developments."
By Cheryl Miller | January 5, 2021
In a letter sent to the governor last month, Chief Justice Cantil-Sakauye said that while courts have increasingly turned to remote proceedings, some matters still require courthouse appearances.
By Jane Wester | January 5, 2021
In the Eastern District of New York, U.S. District Judge Margo Brodie is set to become chief judge upon Mauskopf's departure. Brodie will be the Eastern District's first Black chief judge.
By Charles Toutant | January 5, 2021
Much is riding on the case. If a court rules in favor of the ACDL's argument that virtual grand juries are unconstitutional, the judiciary would have to come up with a new plan for conducting grand jury proceedings during the pandemic.
By Max Mitchell | January 5, 2021
Allowing an injured plaintiff to videoconference his family into the courtroom on monitors displayed to the jury is a step too far, according to one Pennsylvania judge.
By Ryan Tarinelli | January 4, 2021
State court officials shutdown new jury trials in November as New York saw climbing coronavirus figures.
By Ryan Tarinelli | January 4, 2021
"To simply argue that the Board has 'unfettered discretion' to deny any and all applicants for certification, and that the Board's actions 'are beyond judicial review' smacks of such alien concepts as the divine right of kings and papal infallibility," Baisley wrote in the ruling.
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