The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Matthew T. Mangino | July 19, 2018
Did the commonwealth of Pennsylvania need a report, six and a half years in the making, to acknowledge that the state's death penalty has some problems?
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Timothy M. Tippins | July 18, 2018
In his column on Matrimonial Practice, Timothy M. Tippins explores the current controversy regarding the reliability of psychological testing in custody determinations.
By Michael Booth | July 18, 2018
"The res ipsa loquitor inference of negligence is applicable because common experience instructs that elevator doors—however complex their operation may be—ordinarily should not strike a person entering or exiting an elevator in the absence of negligence," Justice Barry Albin wrote in "McDaid v. Aztec West Condominium Association."
By Stephen Kramarsky | July 16, 2018
In his Intellectual Property column, Stephen Kramarsky discusses the 'Wayback Machine,' an “inconceivably large, entirely free archive that captures and preserves evidence of the contents of the Internet at a given time.”
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Tara Faenza | July 16, 2018
The first party property claims community is reeling from a recent Third DCA decision that slayed the Slayton argument routinely cited in defense motions for summary judgment over the last few years.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | July 13, 2018
Shari Redstone holds the controlling voting stake in CBS and Viacom Inc.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Carl J. Soranno and Mia V. Stollen | July 12, 2018
Carl J. Soranno and Mia V. Stollen look at three surveillance techniques in the context of family litigation, and analyze the risks and rewards of each.
By Dan Clark | July 11, 2018
A panel of the Second Circuit found on Tuesday that a lower court erred in demanding Cravath turn over a client's confidential documents as part of foreign litigation.
By Charles Kagay | July 10, 2018
At the simplest level, "Espy" appears to be at best an incomplete guide to the question of whether presidential testimony can be compelled, since the decision addressed only a document subpoena.
By Charles Toutant | July 6, 2018
A man who sued Bloomfield for false arrest after a violent traffic stop has accepted $1.6 million to settle his suit in federal court.
Presented by BigVoodoo
Join the industry's top owners, investors, developers, brokers & financiers at THE MULTIFAMILY EVENT OF THE YEAR!
Law.com celebrates the California law firms and legal departments driving the state's dynamic legal landscape.
The Texas Lawyer honors attorneys and judges who have made a remarkable difference in the legal profession in Texas.
CORE RESPONSIBILITIES AND TASKS: Reporting to the Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer &...
Yale New Haven Health seeks a dynamic and collaborative executive to serve as its Vice President, Labor Strategy and Senior Associate Genera...
Nestled in the heart of Northern California Wine Country, Sonoma County is the largest county in the North Bay region of the San Francisco B...