By Bill Leone and Neil O'May | March 29, 2019
There is a better formula for corporate cooperation. It preserves the attorney-client privilege. It empowers corporate compliance efforts. And it gives the government the benefit of the corporation's willing assistance in tasks that would otherwise consume vast amounts of limited enforcement resources. It protects the rights of individual employees. It respects the relative roles of the government and private actors. In the end, it will produce better results for the corporate and government actors.
By Maranda Fritz and Brian Lanciault | March 29, 2019
Given that all attorneys (except prosecutors) litigate effectively every day with the certainty that if they violate ethical principles or engage in improper conduct they will be subject to monetary and disciplinary penalties, we should continue to question why prosecutors possess enormous power but face little accountability.
By Lauren Bursey and Dean Nicyper | March 29, 2019
While it would seem to be good public policy to enact legislation that will prevent money laundering, terrorism, and fraud, art market leaders are concerned that money laundering in art transactions is not a big enough issue to justify the regulatory burden.
By Ross M. Kramer and Seth C. Farber | March 29, 2019
District courts appear destined to wrestle with the “private prison” issue unless and until the Second Circuit issues definitive guidance, or the legislature amends the Bail Reform Act.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Kamins | March 29, 2019
In his Criminal Law and Procedure column, Barry Kamins focuses on one discrete issue that has arisen in light of current events: Does a presidential pardon pose a bar to a state prosecution for the same acts or criminal transactions committed under federal law?
By Tony Mauro | March 29, 2019
The stay for Patrick Murphy is in contrast to a 5-4 February ruling by the high court to deny a stay requested by an Alabama inmate who wanted his Muslim imam to attend his execution.
By Greg Land | March 28, 2019
The order said all but three justices agreed that the lack of funding for experts and an investigator to assist in defending the accused killer raises "difficult and important issues" that the court must address.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Stephen A. Miller and Matthew Ohlheiser | March 28, 2019
The U.S. Supreme Court is currently considering whether a jury—as opposed to a judge—must make certain findings of fact necessary to revoke a defendant's supervised release
By Mike Scarcella | March 28, 2019
The U.S. Justice Department, opposing Joe Arpaio, says the U.S. Supreme Court should not disturb the appointment of a Boies Schiller partner as a special prosecutor in the contempt case against the former Arizona sheriff.
By Mike Scarcella | March 28, 2019
The U.S. Justice Department, opposing Joe Arpaio, says the U.S. Supreme Court should not disturb the appointment of a Boies Schiller partner as a special prosecutor in the contempt case against the former Arizona sheriff.
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