By njlawjournal | New Jersey Law Journal | September 6, 2017
Intimate Parts Were "Exposed" to View Under Criminal Statute Where Visible Through Sheer Undergarments
By therecorder | The Recorder | September 5, 2017
9th Cir.; 17-35018 The court of appeals reversed a district court order and remanded. The court held that an ambiguous sentencing record had to be construed…
By Miriam Rozen | September 1, 2017
Neal Manne a managing partner, Susman Godfrey, Houston In Harris County, as of this June, no money is longer required up front for release of any misdemeanor…
By Max Mitchell and Lizzy McLellan | September 1, 2017
Disciplinary proceedings involving Centre County officials have recently cast light on alleged ex parte communication between prosecutors and judges. Some of the cases cited have already been through the appellate courts, and the newest revelations may bring about more appeals as defense attorneys question the fairness of the county's criminal proceedings in recent years.
By Josefa Velasquez | September 1, 2017
After Schenectady County Court Judge Matthew Sypniewski was elected to the position in November 2014, he was assigned an appeal for which he had found the defendant, Brian Novak, guilty of all charges when he served as a Schenectady City Court judge. In his capacity as a county court judge, Sypniewski affirmed Novak's conviction.
By thelegalintelligencer | The Legal Intelligencer | September 1, 2017
The court could not determine if the trial court erred in finding that defendant's consent to a blood draw was involuntary where it failed to make factual findings regarding whether defendant consented to the blood draw before or after being improperly warned of the criminal consequences of refusal. The court reversed a trial court suppression order and remanded.
By thelegalintelligencer | The Legal Intelligencer | September 1, 2017
The trial court's erroneous evidentiary rules, including its decision to bar defendant from offering testimony to rebut the Commonwealth's evidence of prior bad acts, were significant and deprived defendant of a fair trial. The court reversed and remanded for a new trial.
By B. Colby Hamilton | August 31, 2017
The Second Circuit found Thursday that the New York high court's narrowing of state criminal impersonation and fraud statutes required the dismissal of some convictions in 'Golb v. Attorney General of the State of New York'. But that wasn't enough to get a Dead Sea scrolls scholar entirely off the hook for impersonating other scholars in an attempt to embarrass or do their reputations harm for disagreeing with his father's interpretation of the ancient texts.
By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | August 31, 2017
A crowd gathered in the rain Thursday morning to break ground for the $122 million Georgia Judicial Complex near the State Capitol.
By Michael Booth | August 31, 2017
A New Jersey appeals court—dispensing with a criminal defendant's efforts to parse statutory language—has given an expansive interpretation to a state law that criminalizes the practice of "upskirting."
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