By Cheryl Miller | June 6, 2018
As California's notoriously long ballot-counting process continued Wednesday, here are six results the legal community is talking about.
By R. Robin McDonald | June 6, 2018
The panel verbally brawled in concurring opinions over the credibility of state witnesses.
By Cheryl Miller | June 6, 2018
The election results close the book on a divisive campaign that raised difficult questions about how the judicial system handles violence against women, how the public views judicial decision-making and independence and how judges under political fire should respond.
By Jim Turner, News Service of Florida | June 5, 2018
And all five announced attorney general candidates, from both parties, object in some fashion to a wide-ranging law approved by the Legislature and Gov. Rick Scott after the Feb. 14 mass shooting at Parkland's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that killed 17 people.
By Ellis Kim | June 4, 2018
President Donald Trump tweeted Monday that legal scholars are on his side. Here's a review of the mixed opinions on this idea.
By Cheryl Miller | June 1, 2018
Five judge—including Aaron Persky, the target of a recall campaign—could lose their jobs on Tuesday. Here's what to know.
By Dara Kam, News Service of Florida | June 1, 2018
Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum, Winter Park entrepreneur Chris King and former Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine back an across-the-board legalization of pot in Florida, where voters two years ago overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment that broadly legalized medical marijuana.
By The Associated Press | May 31, 2018
After a jury deadlocked following nine days of deliberations, a judge Thursday declared a mistrial in a federal corruption trial that accused former Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano of accepting bribes, kickbacks and a $100,000-a-year no-show job for his wife.
By C. Ryan Barber | May 31, 2018
“Discovery also threatens to prejudice individuals who have been or will be indicted, by potentially requiring them to sit for civil depositions despite their privilege against self-incrimination,” Jones Day partner Michael Carvin said in a new filing in Washington's federal trial court.
By C. Ryan Barber | May 30, 2018
“These defensive actions may very well have adverse consequences for some third parties. But that does not make them unconstitutional,” U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly in Washington said in her ruling Wednesday against Kaspersky Lab Inc.
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