By Zack Needles | July 15, 2021
Spoliation rulings in state and federal courts across the country over the past year demonstrate the harsh consequences for defendants who fail to preserve video evidence in slip-and-fall cases—and for plaintiffs who fail to properly raise the issue of spoliation prior to trial.
By Jasmine Floyd | July 15, 2021
"Both of his hands were blown open," plaintiffs counsel Mark Packo said.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jules Epstein | July 15, 2021
A violation occurs even if it happens only once during jury selection. Yet such practices persist and now the Pennsylvania Supreme Court will decide how such violations will be remedied if they are not corrected at trial.
By Jasmine Floyd | July 12, 2021
"I think sometimes lawyers shy away from trying cases," said plaintiffs counsel Adrienn Toth.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Michael W. Kessler | July 7, 2021
Thus, though it is fine to work toward a legislative solution to this problem, in the meantime it is also in the hands of every trial lawyer to change the rule by offering the literature, and making a proper record for judicial consideration.
By Michael A. Mora | July 1, 2021
The state appellate court took issue with plaintiffs counsel's closing argument in which the attorney read a passage from the George Orwell novel "1984," and compared the tobacco companies to the "totalitarian state" in the dystopian novel.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Brittany Francis, Anjali Pathmanathan and Arielle Reid | June 30, 2021
As rap music is increasingly introduced in criminal proceedings across the country, New York has a unique opportunity to develop a flagship standard: a rigorous test that protects the integrity of our court system against racial bias.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael J. Hutter | June 28, 2021
Reform of New York's learned treatise rules, unchanged since 1896 despite the advances in science and medicine since then, is in order.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | June 27, 2021
We think the most sensible interpretation of the "DNA evidence" exception is that the limitation period begins once the state has possession of the forensic sample itself.
By Jasmine Floyd | June 25, 2021
"If it weren't for the Florida Anti-SLAPP law, who knows if he would have dropped the case?" said Greenberg Traurig attorney Greg Herbert.
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