By Ryan Tarinelli | October 15, 2020
Members of the New York Legislature have added their names to the growing chorus opposing the termination of 46 judges due to an approximate $300 million cut to the judiciary budget.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | October 15, 2020
Federal criminal trials will resume in November, and judges overseeing them will have leeway to decide how to pick juries.
By Ryan Tarinelli | October 15, 2020
The study was led by Jeh Johnson, a partner at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison and a former secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Johnson and his team conducted 96 interviews that involved 289 people.
By Angela Morris | October 15, 2020
A socially distanced federal jury returned a verdict for Roku in a patent case filed by a Palm Beach Gardens company over technology that allows content on a smartphone to be displayed on a TV.
By Greg Land | October 15, 2020
While Georgia's Cherokee County convened its first grand jury on Monday, superior courts in Fulton, Gwinnett and DeKalb counties won't crank them up until later this month or November, while Cobb hasn't set its schedule yet.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | October 15, 2020
Philadelphia Judge Jacqueline Allen, administrative judge of the First Judicial District's trial division, is set to be removed from that position at the end of the month, according to sources familiar with the matter.
By Angela Morris | October 14, 2020
Unless lawmakers choose to restore funding, the Texas Supreme Court has proposed to cut 18 law clerk positions in 2022-2023, which would drastically decrease the court's number of oral arguments and disposed cases each year.
By Angela Morris | October 14, 2020
Intermediate appellate courts in Texas would face growing case backlogs if forced to cut their budgets by 5% as state leaders are demanding, according…
By Amanda Bronstad | October 14, 2020
The pandemic has postponed upcoming opioid trials, while another drug company, which is a defendant in thousands of cases, filed for bankruptcy.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Joshua Denbeaux | October 14, 2020
The courts have worked with the preconceived notion that the Entire Controversy Doctrine applies to foreclosure litigation, when it does not.
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