New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Mitchell E. Ignatoff | April 30, 2018
OP-ED: In "State v. Zalcberg," decided on March 27, the New Jersey Supreme Court seems to have created a “good faith” extension to the exigency exception to the warrant requirement.
By Susan DeSantis | April 30, 2018
While the Parole Board acknowledged Judith Clark's favorable risk assessment, It said it was persuaded by statements of survivors and public sentiment opposing the release of the former Weather Underground revolutionary.
By Scott Graham | April 30, 2018
Some 9,000 misdemeanor arrestees were set free, while U.S. District Judge Lee Rosenthal's April 2017 injunction added further momentum to national money-bail reform efforts.
By Susan DeSantis | April 28, 2018
The driver of the getaway vehicle in the 1981 robbery that resulted in the deaths of a Brinks security guard and two Nyack police officers is entitled…
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis
By Lizzy McLellan | April 27, 2018
Cosby's lawyers tried to attack the credibility of his accusers. That strategy may not work so well anymore, other attorneys said.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | April 27, 2018
Connecticut was the first state in the nation to pass a law to allow police to obtain a court order to seize guns from anyone who presents an imminent risk of harming himself or someone else.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | April 27, 2018
Attorneys, court watchers and former justices who spoke with The Legal agreed that the King's Bench power is reserved for very select and significant cases that must be handled extremely quickly. And at least one former member of the high court did not think the latest use of the powers met that high threshold.
The Legal Intelligencer | Slideshow
By Zack Needles | April 27, 2018
Cozen O'Connor continues its hiring tear in Pennsylvania, Bill Cosby's retrial ends in a guilty verdict and more.
By R. Robin McDonald | April 27, 2018
Lawyers took to social media to decry the verdict as inconsistent in acquitting former Fisher & Phillips partner Tex McIver of malice murder but convicting him of felony murder.
By C. Ryan Barber | April 27, 2018
U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson in Washington, turning down Paul Manafort's civil suit against Robert Mueller, declined to reach the merits of the legitimacy of his appointment order leading the Russia investigation.
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