By R. Robin McDonald | March 11, 2019
The Supreme Court of Georgia said police and prosecutors waited too long to obtain search warrants for data on electronic devices they had held in custody for more than a year.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Norman A. Olch | March 11, 2019
Four-judge panels are unfair to litigants because they reduce the chances of taking a case to the Court of Appeals: dissents by two out of four justices are simply harder to come by than dissents by two out of five.
By Dan M. Clark | March 8, 2019
When it comes to reforming, and most likely ending, the state's system of monetary bail, doing it right has turned out to be a more arduous task than some may have expected.
By Dan M. Clark | March 7, 2019
The legislation builds on a proposal with the same intent that Gov. Andrew Cuomo included in his executive budget proposal in January.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan | March 7, 2019
In their Eastern District Roundup, Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan report on several significant, representative decisions, including a decision that dismissed §1983 and due process claims by a suspended school superintendent; another denying defendant's appeal from an order of detention pending trial in an international fraud case; another which enforced a subpoena to a third party, over the objections of defendant lenders, in a suit alleging violations of the Fair Debt Collections Act; and the last dismissing an action under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, asserting food poisoning by a restaurant.
By Jim Saunders | March 7, 2019
The issue before the Supreme Court centers on whether the revised law should apply to cases that began before 2017.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | March 6, 2019
The attorney for a man convicted of attempted murder after a fistfight escalated into gunshots fired blindly into a crowd argued before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court that the jury in his client's case should have been more thoroughly screened for victims of gun violence.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas R. Newman and Steven J. Ahmuty Jr. | March 5, 2019
In their Appellate Practice column, Thomas R. Newman and Steven J. Ahmuty Jr. discuss potential perils that could prove fatal to an appeal.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | March 5, 2019
U.S. District Judge Mitchell S. Goldberg, who called the murders "particularly horrific" in his ruling, said District Attorney Larry Krasner offered little reason for taking the death penalty off the table.
By Jonathan Ringel | March 1, 2019
"To paraphrase Justice Antonin Scalia, if you always like your decisions, then you are not doing your job right."
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