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.
By Jasmine Floyd | March 10, 2022
"The homeowner never authorized the work, and People's Trust told her that she was in breach of the insurance contract," according to the ruling.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan | March 10, 2022
In this edition of their Eastern District Roundup, Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan report on several significant representative decisions handed down recently, including: a decision declining to suppress a gun and evidence of marijuana possession; a holding that claims relating to sexual abuse of a minor were time-barred and an extension of time for filing did not apply; and a decision granting a college's motion for judgment on the pleadings in a suit over the suspension of in-person classes.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | March 9, 2022
Wednesday's order does not address the crime-fraud exception claim that unveiled the committee's criminal narrative against President Donald Trump, but the judge said a more extensive analysis is forthcoming.
By Andrew Goudsward | March 8, 2022
Guy Reffitt, a Texas man with ties to an anti-government militia, was found guilty on all five counts. The verdict is a significant milestone in the U.S. Justice Department's investigation of the Capitol riot.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | March 8, 2022
A federal judge in California is set to consider the attorney-client privilege claims to Eastman's Chapman University emails in a hearing Tuesday morning.
Texas Lawyer | Analysis|Conversation|Expert Opinion|News
By Brett S. Venn | March 7, 2022
The court held that the Wayback Machine's archived webpages are not a proper subject of judicial notice "because a private internet archive falls short of being a source whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned as required by [Federal Rule of Evidence] Rule 201."
By Andrew Goudsward | March 7, 2022
"Guy Reffitt challenged the police at the head of a vigilante mob determined to break into the U.S. Capitol," a prosecutor told the jury during closing arguments. "He did this because he wanted to take out Congress and an angry, energized crowd gave him his best chance."
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