By David Kalat, Berkeley Research Group | February 5, 2018
'Nervous System,' which approaches issues of data privacy and cybersecurity from the context of history, kicks off with a look at Milo Arthur Bennett's 1960s computer escapades.
By Andrew Denney | February 2, 2018
A former Brooklyn prosecutor who admitted to forging judicial orders to run illegal wiretaps on a fellow prosecutor and a New York City police detective has been sentenced to one year in prison.
By The Associated Press | February 2, 2018
A judge said Thursday that the retrial of New York's former assembly speaker will proceed on schedule after his "Hail Mary" appeal to the Supreme Court failed.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | February 2, 2018
The Connecticut Supreme Court sided with the state in a voyeurism case in which a man taped three separate consensual sexual encounters with three different women.
By Colby Hamilton | February 2, 2018
In a letter reviewed by the New York Law Journal, organizations are asked to sign on as supporters of the criminal justice reforms announced during Cuomo's State of the State speech.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Kamins | February 2, 2018
Criminal Law and Procedure columnist Barry Kamins writes: Several recent decisions clearly signal the DiFiore court's continuing commitment to protecting defendants from wrongful convictions and protecting constitutional rights in criminal cases.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. Dannunzio | February 2, 2018
Comedian Bill Cosby has hired a new local lawyer to represent him as his retrial on sexual assault charges nears.
By Jason Grant | February 1, 2018
An appeals panel has decided that Mohamed Albanna's 2006 federal conviction amounted to a crime of moral turpitude and that, therefore, under the Lackawanna City Charter, he is ineligible to hold the City Council seat.
By Greg Land | February 1, 2018
Attorney Richard Merritt was disbarred Monday for pocketing a client's $75,000 settlement and jailed Wednesday on multiple felonies.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | February 1, 2018
Embattled Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Judge Genece Brinkley has hired attorney A. Charles Peruto Jr. to help her fight criticism that has been mounting since she sentenced hip-hop star Meek Mill to a lengthy prison term for a probation violation.
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