By Allison Dunn | March 29, 2022
The dispute involved an agreement for the sale of a painting.
National Law Journal | Conversation
By Christine Schiffner | March 29, 2022
The Advisory Committee on Rules of Evidence has reviewed testimony on a suggested amendment to Federal Evidence Rule 702: an overdue clarification amid rising mass torts, according to the defense bar; detrimental to the civil clients, according to the plaintiffs bar.
By Allison Dunn | March 28, 2022
"Under all of the circumstances, we think it better that the matter be heard before a different judge," the appeals panel wrote in remanding the matter.
By Tom McParland | March 24, 2022
The ruling, which spelled out the reasonable efforts of Lemon's Armstrong Teasdale defense counsel, approved less than the more than $106,000 Lemon had sought against the plaintiff, Dustin Hice.
By Tom McParland | March 24, 2022
The ruling, which spelled out the reasonable efforts of Lemon's Armstrong Teasdale defense counsel, approved less than the more than $106,000 Lemon had sought against the plaintiff, Dustin Hice.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jules Epstein | March 24, 2022
We have all seen it or read it in a transcript—the self-satisfied if not smirking delivery of the lines "were you lying then or are you lying now" after a witness has been impeached. And what follows is all too often an explanation that defeats the juxtaposition of the two differing versions of events—they get reconciled or justified.
By Jasmine Floyd | March 21, 2022
"Through it all, we put together the pieces of the puzzle from a wide array of sources, ranging from the Australian court system to the world of cryptocurrency podcasts and message boards," attorney Andrew Brenner said.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Andrew Larson | March 17, 2022
The cases include 'State v. Smith,' in which the high court will decide whether a trial court should have granted the defendant's motion to suppress evidence of cellphone contents and cell site location information.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By John L.A. Lyddane | March 14, 2022
The realities of discovery in complex cases create situations in which access to vital information is foreclosed simply because there is insufficient data to allow for an evidence-based decision.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | March 10, 2022
Two judges indicated the trial court's error may not have been in rejecting the double jeopardy bid but in declaring an evidentiary violation by prosecutors in the first place.
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