By Greg Land | September 10, 2018
Bulloch County Superior Court Judge F. Gates Peed knew his refusal to consider the underlying arguments was "not the law" when he refused to seal a man's expunged record.
By Tom McParland | September 7, 2018
A federal appeals court on Friday upheld the convictions of David Matusiewicz and his sister Amy Gonzalez, who were sentenced to life in prison in the nation's first prosecution of cyberstalking resulting in death.
By Katheryn Tucker | September 7, 2018
“Divided loyalties often prove to be a source of mischief in human relations. As this case illustrates, they also cause serious trouble for an attorney and his client,” Eleventh Circuit Judge Adalberto Jordan said.
By Katheryn Tucker | September 7, 2018
“Divided loyalties often prove to be a source of mischief in human relations,” Eleventh U.S. Circuit Judge Adalberto Jordan noted.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | September 7, 2018
A former college student accused of sexual assault should have been able to present an account from his accuser about her sexual history at trial, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has ruled.
By Greg Land | September 5, 2018
Former Atlanta police officer James Burns, re-indicted on murder charges Wednesday for a 2016 shooting, had filed an emergency petition asking that the same grand jury rules that applied when he was first indicted—including allowing him to deliver a statement without being questioned—be applied again. A Fulton judge said "no."
By Roy Strom | September 4, 2018
Matthew Kluger will continue to serve hot dogs after he unsuccessfully argued that federal prosecutors in New York wouldn't have bothered to bring his $37 million insider trading case.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Martin A. Schwartz | August 31, 2018
In his Section 1983 Litigation column, Martin A. Schwartz notes that probable cause is a complete defense to a § 1983 Fourth Amendment false arrest claim. But is it also a complete defense to a § 1983 First Amendment retaliatory arrest claim?
By P.J. D'Annunzio | August 30, 2018
The Third Circuit in a precedential decision denied the prosecution's appeal of a ruling below that evidence obtained by Edison Township police officer Daniel Bradley from defendant Theodore “Tyrone” Clark during the 23-minute stop could not be used against him.
By C. Ryan Barber | August 28, 2018
A Covington partner is yanked from the ZTE special compliance contract over his signing a "never Trump" letter in the run-up to the election. Plus: Larry Thompson, the VW monitor, issues his first annual report. Scroll down for an epic Who Got the Work. This is Compliance Hot Spots.
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