By John Council | March 6, 2018
A Texas court of appeals has ordered a new trial for a convicted sex offender after a Fort Worth judge instructed his bailiff to administer an electric…
By Jonathan Ringel | March 6, 2018
This contest is not about who represented the largest or most prestigious client. Nor is it necessarily about who got the biggest—or smallest—verdict.
By Jonathan Ringel | March 6, 2018
The panel, chaired by Randy Evans of Dentons and Pete Robinson of Troutman Sanders, noted that "only the persons in this nomination pool will be considered in filling the other additional vacancies. Additional nominations will not be solicited or accepted."
By Kate Brumback, Associated Press | March 5, 2018
The rare directive came Monday in an opinion on an appeal that took nearly two decades to reach the high court.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Martin A. Schwartz | March 5, 2018
In his Section 1983 Litigation column, Martin A. Schwartz discusses the recent decision in 'District of Columbia v. Wesby', in which the U.S. Supreme Court articulates several important Fourth Amendment and qualified immunity principles.
By Tom McParland | March 2, 2018
All five justices ruled that Trinity Carr could not be blamed for the death of Amy Inita Joyner-Francis, who went into cardiac arrest and died of a rare and undiagnosed heart condition shortly after the attack in a Howard High School of Technology bathroom.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By John Leighton | March 2, 2018
I cheer for these kids, these survivors from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the site of just the most recent mass shooting at an American school. I cheer for their families.
By Randall T. Eng | March 1, 2018
Transitioning from Presiding Justice of the Appellate Division, Second Department to the private practice of law has given me the opportunity to reflect upon my service in the New York state courts for over three decades.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas J. McNamara | March 1, 2018
While the debate about the nature and future of Bitcoin rages in the marketplace, sparked by recent volatility in its price, courts also cannot agree on the nature of Bitcoin and whether, legally speaking, it constitutes “money.”
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Matthew T. Mangino | March 1, 2018
On June 15, 2010, Michael Toll called 9-1-1 and reported he had been shot on a street corner in Philadelphia. A police officer responded and found Toll in his vehicle.
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