By Meghann M. Cuniff | December 31, 2021
Prosecutors say they can safely proceed amid the spread of the omicron COVID-19 variant, through the nearby District of New Jersey has halted all in-person proceedings through Jan. 31.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | December 28, 2021
Avenatti's cooperation in the lawsuit against Geragos comes amid marked optimism about his fate with two criminal appeals, pending a second wire fraud trial scheduled next month in New York.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Allison Dunn | December 23, 2021
The Supreme Court majority said nothing about the question defense counsel posed to its musculoskeletal radiology expert—asking whether he was aware that the plaintiff "couldn't find" an expert of his own in that field—warranted a new trial.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Peter A. Crusco | December 23, 2021
A "Notice of Requested Information From Your Account" advises the account holder that certain of their account records have been disclosed to a prosecutor's office. In this edition of his Cyber Crime column, Peter A. Crusco addresses this notice, its meaning, and potential responses to it.
By Allison Dunn | December 21, 2021
On Dec. 16, the high court issued its opinion in State of New Mexico v. Adams, one of six cases with similar fact patterns.
By Jasmine Floyd | December 20, 2021
"We gave Angels Senior Living every opportunity to resolve this case fairly, even after the award, yet they persisted in trying to vacate it. Now that the award has been confirmed by the court, my clients look forward to the closure they deserve," plaintiffs counsel said.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | December 19, 2021
We hope that it does not become common practice for law enforcement officers to be called to the stand to give opinion testimony, even if procedurally qualified as an expert, in order to give a running commentary on what the officer thinks a criminal defendant subjectively intended by using certain words.
By Allison Dunn | December 17, 2021
A Florida Fourth District Court of Appeals panel reversed an award for a woman who slipped and fell in a Speedway gas station parking lot, finding that a jury would have to speculate about how long a gasoline spill existed and whether the company failed to address an apparent slippery buildup on the concrete.
By Jasmine Floyd | December 16, 2021
"The jury understood the testimony of our urology expert that at 71 years of age and with a low grade and low aggression cancer a guy who had a lot of medical issues going on was a bad candidate to take into surgery where more than the usual amount of bleeding was expected,'' Mariano Garcia said.
By John M. Baker and Katherine M. Swenson | December 16, 2021
In 'LeMay v. Mays', the court provided guidance regarding the role of videorecordings and police reports as evidence at the Rule 12 stage, holding that a police officer who shot two dogs during a residential security check was not entitled to qualified immunity.
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