By P.J. D'Annunzio | April 28, 2017
Over the objections of the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office, the federal judge presiding over embattled District Attorney Seth Williams' corruption case has ordered the office to provide federal prosecutors with search terms to filter out the contents of Williams' emails, so that confidential material can be identified and protected.
By John Council | April 28, 2017
Richard "Racehorse" Haynes, the famed Houston lawyer whose dramatic courtroom style made him one of the most famous criminal defense attorneys in the nation, died today at the age of 90.
By Scott Flaherty | April 27, 2017
A lawyer for former Dewey & LeBoeuf CFO Joel Sanders on Thursday sought to undermine testimony by cooperating witnesses in the Manhattan district attorney's fraud case against Sanders and former Dewey executive director Stephen DiCarmine, saying those witnesses changed their stories under the threat of criminal indictment.
By Ben Hancock | April 27, 2017
Despite a legal victory for tech companies last year in the Second Circuit, a series of decisions has gone against Google.
By Tom McParland | April 27, 2017
The court ruled former Mobile County License Commissioner Kimberly Hastie broke the law by turning over a list of drivers' email addresses.
By Cogan Schneier | April 26, 2017
Rod Rosenstein has his work cut out for him now that he's officially U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions' right-hand man. Attorneys are looking to Rosenstein, a lifelong public servant, to bring a dose of stability to the U.S. Department of Justice after the U.S. Senate confirmed him as the deputy attorney general.
By Michael Booth | April 25, 2017
The Supreme Court will decide whether a convicted sex offender may be prosecuted for violating his parole by volunteering with a "youth serving" organization.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | April 21, 2017
A federal judge in Pittsburgh has denied former Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice Joan Orie Melvin's habeas corpus petition.
By Andrew Denney | April 21, 2017
A disbarred Staten Island attorney who previously served time for larceny is going back to prison for up to 22 years for running real estate schemes in which he stole more than $1 million while posing as a practicing attorney.
By Andrew Denney | April 20, 2017
A Queens attorney convicted of stealing more than $587,000 from the estate of the late John Phillips Jr., a Brooklyn Civil Court judge who once held $10 million worth of properties in the borough, has been sentenced to one to three years in prison.
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