Daily Business Review | Profile
By Samantha Joseph | August 10, 2018
“We've never gotten around to developing the trial court,” said Stan Wolfe, administrative director of the Seminole Tribal Court.
By Charles Toutant | August 9, 2018
A civil rights suit over a municipal judge's jailing of an indigent defendant for nonpayment of a $239 fine, a case that helped lead to the mounting calls for municipal court reform in New Jersey, has been resolved by a $180,000 settlement, according to records obtained by the Law Journal.
By Tony Mauro | August 8, 2018
What accounts for the larger number of Supreme Court clerks? The answer seems to be Anthony Kennedy's retirement on July 31 and its impact on the allocation of his clerks.
By Colby Hamilton | August 7, 2018
The Queens tradition of judges and ADAs coming from the same family—unique in its scale among New York's boroughs—has created a perception in the defense bar that its members are on the outside of an insular courthouse community.
By Tom McParland | August 3, 2018
Colm Connolly and Maryellen Noreika were confirmed this week to serve as judges on Delaware's federal bench, in a sudden move that was expected to bring much-needed relief to a shorthanded district court amid a surge of filings.
By Katheryn Tucker | July 31, 2018
Cobb Superior Court Chief Judge C. LaTain Kell announced Tuesday that his bench has appointed Senior Assistant District Attorney Wayne Grannis to the Cobb County Juvenile Court.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Michael Friedman | July 30, 2018
“The New York Criminal Justice System is one of the best if not the best in the United States. If it costs money, that money is well spent.” – retired Fourth Dept. Justice Joseph Valentino
By Michael Booth | July 26, 2018
The New Jersey Senate on Thursday approved state Supreme Court Justice Anne Patterson for tenure, entitling her to serve as many as 11 more years on the court if she wishes.
By Lidia Dinkova | July 25, 2018
Five development teams are in play for construction set to start in July 2020.
By Andrew Denney | July 24, 2018
An attorney for a Bronx state judge who was stripped of his caseload and his chambers last week for refusing a new assignment to a Domestic Violence Part said court system officials were hasty and heavy-handed in dealing with his client's case.
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The Court of Appeal, First Appellate District in San Francisco is accepting applications for a full-time regular Judicial Secretary I, Judic...
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