By Jonathan Ringel | March 14, 2020
Statewide action comes a day after local chief judges declared emergencies in their circuits.
By Jonathan Ringel | March 11, 2020
They include resumes, writing samples, lists of important cases they've handled and more.
By Dara Kam | March 11, 2020
Clifford Williams, right, thanked his lawyers and other people who helped him while he was incarcerated and said he plans to go back to prison, this time to help the friends he left behind when he was released last March.
By Alaina Lancaster | March 9, 2020
California's First District Court of Appeal passed on the case's constitutional questions, writing that the California Supreme Court is teed up to answer whether barring defendants from obtaining electronic communications truly prevents them from presenting a complete defense.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Brad Rosen | March 9, 2020
In a Chicago courtroom in January, nearly a decade after the flash crash, Navinder Sarao received a remarkably lenient sentence of one year of home confinement. What explains such a light sentence for the man blamed for causing one of the most turbulent days in market history?
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | March 9, 2020
The 'Thompson' opinion on sleeping drunk behind the wheel appears to paint too broad a brush in challenging attorneys who represent clients in these cases.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Alan Peyrouton | March 9, 2020
The public doesn't understand our role in protecting their rights—until they have some skin in the game.
By Lara Yeretsian | March 5, 2020
Despite emerging support for shorter prison terms and more rehabilitation, most low-level nonviolent offenders still end up behind bars for lengthy periods, and mentally ill inmates remain incarcerated under conditions that would try anybody's sanity.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | March 3, 2020
The justices turned to a familiar face to lead the inquiry into whether the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office is conflicted out of handling the appeal of convicted cop killer Mumia Abu-Jamal because of work District Attorney Larry Krasner and others in the office previously did in support of Abu-Jamal.
By Thomas R. Newman and Steven J. Ahmuty Jr. | March 3, 2020
In their Appellate Practice column, Thomas R. Newman and Steven J. Ahmuty Jr. discuss the three basic jurisdictional considerations in the Appellate Division: aggrievement, appealability and reviewability. Judging by the volume of decisions addressing these threshold jurisdictional requirements, practitioners often overlook them before embarking upon the time and expense of an appeal.
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