By Michael A. Mora | Lisa Willis | February 17, 2023
"There will not be fairness in state courts unless the judiciary is consistently and intentionally educated about diversity, fairness, and inclusion," argued Ernest L. Chang, the president of the Florida Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
By Jeff Amy | The Associated Press | February 17, 2023
"We have unfortunately seen a dramatic increase in crime and we have a gang crisis, make no mistake about that," said Senate Public Safety Committee Chairman John Albers, R-Roswell, who unsuccessfully pushed a similar bill last year.
By Everett Catts | February 17, 2023
"The conference has always been designed to try to bring together in conversation a number of groups that are often adversarial in court, including the media, judges, lawyers and legislators," said Peter Canfield, who chairs the conference's planning committee and serves as of counsel with Jones Day.
By Ross Todd | February 17, 2023
Charles Weiss and Jonathan Potts of Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner were appointed special prosecutors in Lamar Johnson's case, harnessing a new Missouri law allowing prosecutors' offices to step in to intervene in cases of wrongful conviction.
By Emily Saul | February 16, 2023
The new unit will prosecute people and companies that steal wages, while also working to recoup stolen wages and exclude offending companies from future city contracts.
By Jane Wester | February 16, 2023
The government said its goal is to end the "whack-a-mole approach" of seeking new restrictions every time Bankman-Fried's use of another form of technology is detected.
By Rubin M. Sinins | February 16, 2023
No available New Jersey decision analyzes geofence warrants. 'U.S. v. Rhine', a decision issued two weeks ago by the federal district court for the District of Columbia, denying a January 6 defendant's motion to suppress geofence evidence, notes the limited number of federal authorities that have considered geofence warrants.
New York Law Journal | Profile
By Emily Saul | February 15, 2023
"I believe very strongly that the prosecutor, especially the head prosecutor, has to have skin in the game," said Gonzalez.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Cary Aronovitz | February 14, 2023
The Garland Memo serves as an important policy change to be carefully understood by prosecutors, the defense bar, and others who serve the federal justice system.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Cynthia Lee | February 13, 2023
Trial judges should be required to give the jury an initial-aggressor instruction whenever an individual charged with a crime of violence brings a firearm outside the home and displays it in a threatening manner, points it at another person, or shoots it and claims self-defense.
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