New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Paul Shechtman | February 13, 2019
Eliminating all forms of monetary bail in all cases and sharply limiting the cases that are detention eligible may go too far.
By Jonathan Ringel | February 12, 2019
In a win for a New Jersey lawyer representing a historian in Georgia, a split appeals court upheld a judge who ordered unsealing the transcript of a grand jury tasked with investigating the lynching of two African-American couples in 1946.
By Marcia Coyle | February 12, 2019
Conservative and liberal critics, forming an unusual alliance, have widely assailed the Supreme Court's order allowing an Alabama inmate's execution to go forward.
By Mike Scarcella | February 12, 2019
Conservative and liberal critics, forming an unusual alliance, have widely assailed the Supreme Court's order allowing an Alabama inmate's execution to go forward.
By Jonathan Ringel | February 11, 2019
"There is no indication that any witnesses, suspects, or their immediate family members are alive to be intimidated, persecuted, or arrested," Judge Charles Wilson wrote.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | February 8, 2019
Despite his partner's acquittal of several of the same charges, a would-be bank robber who was caught before he could execute his plan still stands convicted of conspiracy and gun crimes, a federal appeals court has ruled.
By Charles Toutant | February 5, 2019
Officers lacked a reasonable suspicion to justify detaining 10 party guests, after finishing their investigation of a complaint about loud music coming from a motel room, the justices said.
By Max Mitchell | February 5, 2019
The Pennsylvania Superior Court vacated a 30-60-year sentence based on U.S. Supreme Court decisions on mandatory minimums.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Steven B. Epstein and Alexander R. Klein | February 5, 2019
VTL §1192(1) suffers a shortcoming that will render it anachronistic in the near future.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Kamins | February 1, 2019
In his Criminal Law and Procedure column, Barry Kamins writes: Two months ago, a new hearing was mandated as a result of 'People v. Suazo', in which the Court of Appeals held, in a 5-2 decision, that a noncitizen defendant charged with a deportable class B misdemeanor (maximum of three months in jail) is entitled to a jury trial under the Sixth Amendment, even though the maximum authorized sentence is a term of imprisonment of less than six months.
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