The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | February 25, 2019
For the next two weeks, several offices used for Philadelphia's adult probation, parole and pretrial services are set to be closed as the facilities will be moved to a new location in Center City.
By Katheryn Tucker | February 25, 2019
“Kudos to Chief Justice Melton for his leadership in this area,” Georgia Court of Appeals Judge Carla Wong McMillian tweeted.
By Ben Hancock | February 25, 2019
Pay has risen for sharply for trial court judges in New York over the past decade, while the D.C. judges have made the most on average for years. But cost of living factors mean the bench is more lucrative elsewhere.
By Tom McParland | February 20, 2019
All state courts in New Castle and Kent Counties closed at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday on the order of Gov. John Carney, with only the 24-hour Justice of the Peace Courts remaining open.
By Andrew Denney | February 19, 2019
Judith McMahon was transferred to a new court part in Manhattan amid accusations from a court clerk that she improperly intervened in criminal matters at the Staten Island courthouse.
By Tom McParland | February 13, 2019
Strine in recent years has made the plea a staple of his annual request to members of the General Assembly's Joint Finance Committee, the legislative panel panel tasked with writing the state's appropriations bills.
By Tom McParland | February 13, 2019
The Court of Chancery's overall caseload declined for the third straight year in 2018, as the court underwent a historic expansion that added two new judges to the bench, according to a report published Wednesday by the Delaware Judiciary.
By Raychel Lean | February 13, 2019
The Florida Supreme Court warned on Wednesday that it doesn't send legal notices via email after a scam has resurfaced, featuring counterfeit letterheads aimed at bilking its targets. Similar frauds have also emerged in Georgia.
By Tom McParland | February 12, 2019
Strine's presentation to the General Assembly's joint finance committee is expected to renew calls for additional funding to complete two new downstate court facilities and create a stable technology fund for the courts, both a major focus of the Judiciary in recent years.
The Legal Intelligencer | Letter to the Editor
By Richard Wexler | February 8, 2019
Judges Margaret Murphy and Walter Olszewski claim they keep hearings closed to protect children “plain and simple.” They appear blissfully unaware that at least 40 percent of America's foster children already live in states where, for decades, such hearings have been open to the press and/or the public. There is no move in these states to close them again. That's because the fears have proven unfounded.
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