Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | August 17, 2022
"Attorney Pattis sent me a text saying, 'I or my office may have violated the order of protection,'" lawyer Christopher Mattei said.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | August 16, 2022
"There is no way they should've ever be dropped in this document dump that happened in the Texas case," law professor Julia Simon-Kerr said. "It's a totally separate case, different lawyers. Very inappropriate."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood | August 15, 2022
The ruling in 'Pilkington' bespeaks caution to parties considering sharing work product with a party who may later become an adversary.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jessica Copeland and Riane Lafferty | August 12, 2022
This column explores three cases dealing with important procedural issues: personal jurisdiction for corporations, the local controversy exception to the Class Action Fairness Act, and required expert disclosures.
By Allison Dunn | August 11, 2022
"We conclude, as a matter of first impression, that a defendant may be convicted of human trafficking under G. L. c. 265, §50(a), so long as the jury find that the defendant knowingly trafficked another person, regardless of whether that person is specifically identified," Justice Frank M. Gaziano wrote on behalf of the unanimous court. "Because the trafficking offenses at issue here were charged as ongoing criminal schemes, rather than as discrete instances of trafficking, we conclude that such an instruction was not warranted, and the trial judge did not err in declining to provide one."
Legaltech News | Best Practices
By Cassandre Coyer | August 11, 2022
From authenticating data to establishing efficient processes, e-discovery experts offer tips on the best practices attorneys need to keep up with modern types of data.
By Nate Robson | August 9, 2022
"If they can do it to a former president, imagine what they can do to you," Republicans said, criticizing the raid.
By Andrew Goudsward | August 5, 2022
Bannon's lawyers are asking the judge to dismiss the contempt case after he was convicted, because Bannon was not allowed to call members of Congress as witnesses at his trial.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joel R. Brandes | August 5, 2022
It appears that the reason why perjury is not prosecuted in divorce and custody cases is that it is difficult to prove, and it occurs so frequently that prosecution would impose a burden on the justice system.
By Colleen Murphy | August 5, 2022
"Unfortunately, although no doubt well-intentioned, the majority violates the judicial norms listed above," Judge Wesley G. Russell Jr. wrote in the dissent. "As explained below, I believe the majority's departures from these norms lead the majority to an incorrect conclusion: that a defendant may invoke the protections of the overdose statute without actually experiencing an overdose."
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