By Jacqueline Thomsen | May 20, 2021
The approvals came despite varying degrees of Republican opposition.
By Katheryn Tucker | May 18, 2021
"Daker is an extraordinarily litigious defendant whose shenanigans can be frustrating for courts to deal with," Justice David Nahmias said. "Nevertheless, Daker's rights under the Constitution and laws must be upheld when properly asserted."
By Mike Scarcella | May 18, 2021
"All the prosecutor has to do is disclose. These prosecutors didn't do that. Their violation caused the potential loss of liberty of the defendant in this case," D.C. disciplinary counse, Hamilton P. Fox III said in his opening remarks Tuesday.
By Katheryn Tucker | May 18, 2021
"I talked to the DA and walked him through. He said, 'That sounds messed up.' Every time we talked, he'd go, 'It sounds messed up,'" said Andrew Fleischman of Ross & Pines.
By Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack | May 14, 2021
Social workers must have a basic knowledge of how legal proceedings work, especially if they are called to be an outcry witness.
By Ryan Tarinelli | May 14, 2021
A bar group noted that none of the candidates to succeed the late Judge Paul Feinman on the New York Court of Appeals had experiencing defending criminal cases. Meanwhile, at the end of business Friday the legal community awaited Gov. Andrew Cuomo's choice to fill the seat of retiring Judge Leslie Stein.
By Marcia Coyle | May 14, 2021
Over the years, scholars have looked closely at the justices' questioning habits, trying to decipher what it might mean for one side or the other to get more, or fewer, questions.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Anthony J. Mahajan | May 13, 2021
A more comprehensive solution, one that unites disparate stakeholders and data sets in a committed public-private partnership, is necessary to stem the ongoing opioid epidemic.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Ellen L. Koblitz and Kim D. Ringler | May 7, 2021
The absence of advisory opinions or disciplinary sanctions despite judicial determinations of reversible error suggests that the attorney regulatory process is underutilized with respect to prosecutorial misconduct.
By Ryan Tarinelli | May 7, 2021
A mid-level appeals court had found a certificate of translation was needed to cure a hearsay defect, but the Court of Appeals ruled that a police officer's translation of the employee's narrative "did not create a level of hearsay for pleading purposes."
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