By Charles Toutant | March 19, 2020
"We can't go on indefinitely without bringing in new business or settling cases," one litigator said.
By Tom McParland | March 19, 2020
All three judges participated from locations outside the courthouse, and Courtroom 1703 sat empty. Katzmann donned a jacket and tie as he presided, but did not wear his robe, he told the Law Journal.
Daily Business Review | Update
By Catherine Wilson | March 19, 2020
State court operations will be cut back until at least April 17, and South Florida federal courts trim down to "essential" operations.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | March 18, 2020
"The administration urges that such drastic measures are now necessary to protect the health and lives of Pennsylvanians," Pennsylvania Secretary of Health Rachel Levine wrote in a letter to Chief Justice Thomas Saylor on Wednesday.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | March 18, 2020
On Wednesday, Connecticut's chief court administrator announced the superior courts' latest responses to the coronavirus.
By Zack Needles | March 18, 2020
The Delaware Supreme Court announced Tuesday that, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, it has canceled all oral arguments scheduled before the court through May of this year.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | March 18, 2020
The U.S. Marshals Service informed the D.C. Superior Court late Tuesday that the deputy marshal stationed at the courthouse had tested positive for coronavirus.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Peter H. Lederman | March 18, 2020
OP-ED: In light of all that is going on around us, public safety demands that Municipal Courts be closed until we can be certain that the coronavirus pandemic is under control. Sadly, this probably will not happen.
By R. Robin McDonald | Angela Morris | March 17, 2020
On one hand, attorneys are relieved. They say court closures minimize their own exposure to the coronavirus. But on the other, a gnawing worry tempers that relief.
By Jason Grant | March 17, 2020
The bar association detailed 10 measures that it said should be considered for "follow-up, and possible ... modification," including requiring judges to consider releasing from pretrial detention anyone above age 60 or with underlying health conditions that could increase their risk for contracting the potentially deadly virus.
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