By Samantha Joseph | December 2, 2019
The Florida case turned on whether family court was the right venue to duke out a multimillion-dollar postjudgment fight, and if the ex-wife would have to turn to the civil court to file a claim over an alleged breach of an agreement that didn't spell out a formula for penalizing noncompliance.
By Tom McParland | December 2, 2019
A federal prosecutor in Manhattan said Monday that a new indictment was "likely" in the criminal campaign-finance case against two associates of Rudy Giuliani.
By Jim Saunders | December 2, 2019
Jabari Kemp had been convicted of vehicular manslaughter and sentenced to 30 years in prison because of a 2013 crash that killed five people in South Florida.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 26, 2019
The 120-page opinion drew on a variety of sources, including a significant number of citations from The Federalist Papers, and dropped in a reference to George Orwell's "Animal Farm."
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 25, 2019
U.S. District Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson criticized the Justice Department's stance that a court could not resolve the case.
By Nate Robson | November 25, 2019
Altshuler Berzon, Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll and the Matern Law Group are the three firms spearheading the lawsuit.
New Jersey Law Journal | Live Coverage
By Suzette Parmley | November 20, 2019
Defense attorney Sean Marotta of Hogan Lovells argued that the decision below "contravenes decades of precedent," while plaintiff attorney Christopher Placitella of Cohen, Placitella & Roth argued that "the policy reasons for imposing duty to warn here are significant."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By John L.A. Lyddane | November 18, 2019
In his Medical Malpractice Defense column, John L.A. Lyddane discusses the value of exploring a culpable conduct defense when faced with an informed consent claim from a patient who may share responsibility for an unsatisfactory medical procedure outcome.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jules Epstein | November 15, 2019
The testimony—putting aside the concern over remoteness—is permissible in Pennsylvania. The commonwealth's evidence rules specifically allow proof of acts—whether there was a conviction, the act was charged criminally or the incident as just alleged.
By Renee Griffin | November 14, 2019
Law school may be better at teaching us to talk like lawyers than it is at the loftier, near-mythical aspiration of teaching us to think like lawyers.
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