The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Matthew T. Mangino | January 26, 2024
For Pennsylvania, it is an opportunity to move on from the dubious distinction of being one of only two states, South Dakota is the other, providing zero state funding for indigent defense. For Pennsylvania counties the burden of providing counsel to indigent defendants was previously paid for without state assistance.
By Colleen Murphy | January 25, 2024
"My actions have cost me my law practice, my reputation, my family's trust and respect, and have ruined me financially," Martin Martin David Eagan said at a hearing last week before the New Jersey Supreme Court.
By Kate Brumback | The Associated Press | January 25, 2024
Defense attorneys Steve Sadow and Jennifer Little filed a motion Thursday joining an earlier effort by co-defendant Michael Roman to have Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, special prosecutor Nathan Wade and their offices thrown off the case.
By Joshua Goodman and Jim Mustian | Associated Press | January 24, 2024
Federal prosecutors have turned their attention to two Miami defense attorneys suspected of profiting from repeated leaks of confidential DEA information.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Barbara Jaffe and David H. Ostwald | January 22, 2024
Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron's cheerful demeanor during Donald Trump's civil fraud trial frequently de-escalated potentially explosive confrontations, a retired Manhattan justice writes. His justified self-confidence permitted him to be himself on the bench, not take himself too seriously,
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | January 22, 2024
Temin declined to share the reason for her departure and said she is unsure exactly what she'll be doing next. But at age 89, she said, she is not ready to retire.
By Michael Heller | January 22, 2024
The pace of change combined with the unpredictability of updates from major regulators has increased pressure on legal and compliance professionals to keep pace.
By Colleen Murphy | January 18, 2024
Criminal matters seem to sew the most discord among the typically aligned justices, with rulings in criminal appeals making up four of the five decisions that have attracted dissents in recent months.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Joel Cohen | January 17, 2024
A criminal defendant exposing himself as having suffered life-altering problems resulting from his wrongdoing can accomplish "general deterrence" more effectively than might any prosecutor or judge who merely gives a lecture largely telling her audience the potential penalties for similar conduct.
By James Pollard | The Associated Press | January 17, 2024
The South Carolina judge's narrow rules were tougher than those sought by Murdaugh's lawyers during the Tuesday hearing, held to determine the scope of the three-day evidentiary hearing later this month.
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