By Charles Toutant | March 3, 2020
The judge said removing her from the bench would be an excessive punishment given the circumstances of her case.
By Sue Reisinger | March 2, 2020
Fifty top legal officers of U.S. corporations sent a letter Monday urging the federal courts system to clarify a rule that sets standards for the use of expert testimony. The in-house counsel say courts too often are allowing juries to hear expert opinions. not based on scientific evidence.
By C. Ryan Barber | March 2, 2020
"At a minimum, by Wednesday, I think you can get an affidavit from a corporate representative," U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich of the District of Columbia in Washington told lawyers from Reed Smith, representing Concord Management and Consulting in a Mueller-related case.
By C. Ryan Barber | February 28, 2020
As trial approaches in a legacy Mueller case, prosecutors and Reed Smith defense lawyers are feuding over subpoenas—and a Washington federal judge on Monday will hear arguments over whether to hold the law firm's client in civil contempt.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | February 28, 2020
In their Feb. 24 order granting Maureen Faulkner's request for a probe into whether the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office is conflicted out of handling the appeal of convicted cop killer Mumia Abu-Jamal, the justices denied the office's attempt to withdraw from evidence a page from its website that was altered after Faulkner's petition was filed.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Arthur M. Diamond | February 28, 2020
The jury should have the option of seeing the actual testimony as they had it during the trial.
By Victoria Hudgins | February 28, 2020
A speaker at this year's ABA TechShow highlighted the benefits and potential evidentiary issues of using 3D and computer-generated images as evidence.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Investigation|News|Product Review
By Robert Storace | February 25, 2020
In July 2019, Connecticut began a narrow investigation looking into whether Juul's marketing and sales practices were proper. Late Tuesday, 38 more states joined Connecticut in a broader investigation of the company that will also look at the alleged marketing of the product to teens.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp | February 25, 2020
In their Second Circuit Review column, Martin Flumenbaum and Brad Karp discuss 'United States v. Silver,' a decision they write "limits significantly the Second Circuit's longstanding bribery precedent, raising the bar for what the government must prove to establish the existence of a quid pro quo in public corruption cases."
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | February 20, 2020
A federal lawsuit targeting school bus company DATTCO Inc. claims the company allowed numerous buses to stay idle for more than three minutes, in violation of state and federal law.
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