By Max Mitchell | June 30, 2021
Because an ex-district attorney publicly agreed not to prosecute the case, the high court wiped out Cosby's sexual assault conviction and barred any future charges.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael C. Miller and Michael G. Scavelli | June 30, 2021
Ten considerations that are key to a winning trial strategy for a party taking the Fifth.
By Tom McParland | June 28, 2021
The move, announced by Chief Judge Debra Ann Livingston, retains one innovation of pandemic-era appellate advocacy that has proved popular to litigators.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | June 27, 2021
We think the most sensible interpretation of the "DNA evidence" exception is that the limitation period begins once the state has possession of the forensic sample itself.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | June 24, 2021
In a precedential decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has ruled that because a warrant for a man suspected of child molestation—which included an assumption that he likely possessed child pornography—was executed in good faith, the nearly 70,000 illegal images obtained by a police search should be admissible as evidence.
Daily Report Online | Commentary|News
By Andrew Fleischman | June 22, 2021
"If we want to be a state where justice is done, we must do more than simply release the wrongfully convicted," an appellate lawyer writes.
By Cedra Mayfield | June 21, 2021
"If the court had interpreted the statute differently, it could have criminalized a lot of innocuous behavior—behavior that many of us engage in regularly, like forwarding emails," said appellate attorney Leigh Ann Webster of Strickland Webster in Atlanta.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Peter A. Crusco | June 21, 2021
In this edition of his Cyber Crime column, Peter A. Crusco explores a recent Supreme Court decision in 'Van Buren' authored by Justice Barrett, which resoundingly rejected the "contract theory" of prosecution under the CFAA, and an expansion of federal criminal law that would have led to potentially a myriad of arbitrary interpretations of computer access agreements as the basis for federal prosecutions.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Louis Locascio | June 21, 2021
COURT WATCH: In this case, neither had a complaint been filed nor had an arrest warrant been issued when the defendant was given his Miranda warnings.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Elliott Scheinberg | June 17, 2021
This article explores a doctrine that has also been applied by appellate courts in criminal cases to dismiss an appeal by defendant who is a fugitive from justice during the pendency of his or her appeal.
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