New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Jerry H. Goldfeder | December 12, 2018
Daniel J. Kornstein's excellent article reviews how voter disenfranchisement subverts our constitutional democracy (What to the Disenfranchised Voter…
By John Council | December 11, 2018
Emboldened by their party's 2018 general election victory in which candidates took eight seats away the from the GOP on the all-Republican Fifth Court of Appeals, three sitting Dallas Democratic state district judges are already announcing planned runs for the appellate court in 2020.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Daniel J. Kornstein | December 10, 2018
But is our Democracy so ideal? Is it worth exporting? Is it even real? Is it endangered? What do we even mean by Democracy?.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | December 10, 2018
A lawyer for the firm said the failure to register as lobbyists was "a mistake."
By Vaishali Rao | December 10, 2018
State AGs have their work cut out for them. Besides suing the federal government in record numbers (as they have done in the last two years), and continuing to hold businesses accountable for the opioids epidemic, the following trends are ones to follow.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Ellen C. Brotman | December 7, 2018
What is a JDA? What protections does it provide to its members? What Rules of Professional Conduct govern it? How is the JDA affected by the subsequent cooperation of one of its members?
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Christopher Dunn | December 5, 2018
In his Civil Rights and Civil Liberties column, Christopher Dunn writes: Precious little law—including no meaningful Supreme Court precedent—addresses the deployment of American troops domestically. The ongoing presence of the military in the southwest United States provides a useful opportunity to examine the little authority that exists.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karl J. Sleight and Joan P. Sullivan | December 5, 2018
For the first time in the more than 40-year history of state-regulated lobbying, the Joint Commission on Public Ethics has promulgated expansive regulations. The new regulations are effective on Jan. 1, 2019 and are the product of a two-year effort by JCOPE designed to provide greater clarity for the lobbying industry. The new regulations also strengthen JCOPE's enforcement hand. The impact of these regulations is expected to be significant among lobbyists and clients of lobbyists in New York.
By Dara Kam | December 5, 2018
Amendment 4, approved by nearly 65 percent of voters last month, “automatically” restores voting rights for convicted felons who have completed their sentences, paid restitution and court costs and fulfilled probation requirements.
By Tamara Lush | December 4, 2018
In their estimation, the November election went as it should have.
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