By ALM Staff | July 12, 2023
U.S. citizen Ashraf Omar Eldarir often travels to Egypt and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security probed his sales of Egyptian antiques of suspicious…
By Amanda Bronstad | July 7, 2023
Johnson & Johnson subsidiary LTL Management filed a second fraud lawsuit on Friday against three plaintiffs' experts who authored a 2020 report linking its talcum powder products to mesothelioma.
By Alex Anteau | June 29, 2023
"We're not saying we're entitled to win, we're just saying we're entitled to a new trial under the correct statute," plaintiff-appellant attorney Michael Arndt said.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Alan B. Morrison and Stephen A. Saltzburg | June 27, 2023
Focusing on Trump's willful refusal to return the documents can shorten the trial and serve to undercut his claim of selective prosecution—because no one else kept classified documents once the government asked for them back.
By Riley Brennan | June 23, 2023
The Iowa Court of Appeals reversed a jury's verdict granting the estate of a woman who died in a nursing home $6 million, concluding the lower court had allowed hearsay regarding alleged abuse at the facility into evidence at trial.
By Avalon Zoppo | June 14, 2023
Eight Circuit Judge James Loken wonders aloud if there is "any limit" on what investigators can look for on the My Pillow CEO's device.
By Michael A. Mora | June 13, 2023
"She used to be a champion, but now she is riding OK," said Michael Haggard, the managing partner at the Haggard Law Firm.
By Scott Mollen | June 13, 2023
Scott Mollen discusses "Fuks v. Rakia Assoc." where the court held the plaintiff engaged in active misconduct and confirmed an award for breach of fiduciary duties. The court opined that the case "rivals the long running dispute in Charles Dickens' novel, Bleak House, and will end no better."
By Riley Brennan | June 13, 2023
"The defendants here are not immune from suit under the Eleventh Amendment because Johnson seeks prospective declaratory and injunction relief and has alleged a sufficient connection between the defendants and Act 1780's enforcement," Judge Jane Kelly wrote on behalf of the court. "The Sevier County Prosecuting Attorney and the Director of the State Crime Lab have a sufficient connection because they possess and control evidence that Johnson seeks to test, and they have refused to provide it to him."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael J. Hutter | May 31, 2023
This column will discuss New York's rule of completeness as presently applied. The discussion is timely in view of a proposed amendment to Federal Rule of Evidence (FRE) 106, which codifies the federal version of the common law rule of completeness.
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