By Colleen Murphy | October 29, 2024
"The cases prosecuted by the Corruption Bureau tend to be high-profile, high-stakes, and complex," Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin said. "The prosecution team frequently finds itself in the spotlight as it holds powerful individuals and institutions accountable."
By Daniel Conviser | October 29, 2024
The legislature has made dramatic reforms to our criminal justice system over the past several years—limiting monetary bail, increasing the discovery…
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | October 24, 2024
Since Project Second Chance was launched by former U.S. Attorney Erin Nealy Cox, Kirkland lawyers have represented 73 women and expunged 232 charges.
By Russ Bynum | The Associated Press | October 24, 2024
Seeking a new trial marks a first step by the three defendants in challenging their murder convictions.
By Eli Northrup | October 23, 2024
There is a bill currently pending, the Marvin Mayfield Act, which would eliminate mandatory minimum sentences in New York.
By Emily Saul | October 23, 2024
"This Court observes that defendant's claim that he will be unfairly prejudiced by consolidation even with a limiting instruction is belied by the case history," Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Curtis Farber wrote in his decision.
By Martin A. Schwartz | October 23, 2024
Martin Schwartz discusses the legal landscape for individuals challenging the constitutionality of what they believe to be a retaliatory arrest.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman | October 22, 2024
"The theory of the case for Trump has an element that focuses on the creation of false evidence—namely, the false slates of electors—for use in Congress's certification process on Jan. 6," said Payvand Ahdout, an associate law professor at the University of Virginia. "From the perspective of the defense, it makes sense to attempt to lump together [Joseph] Fischer's case with Donald Trump's."
New Jersey Law Journal | Live Coverage
By Colleen Murphy | October 22, 2024
"Has any court ever found that particular scientific studies have to be generally accepted, or just the diagnosis as a whole has to be generally accepted by the relevant medical community?" Associate Justice Rachel Wainer Apter asked.
By Avalon Zoppo | October 22, 2024
The law prohibits a person from knowingly entering restricted areas that are posted, cordoned off or "otherwise restricted," the latter of which is defined as places where people protected by the Secret Service will be visiting.
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