By Charles Toutant | February 14, 2019
Grewal's office said in a letter, which was made public on Wednesday, that the alleged takedown letter 'appears to have been issued by some entity impersonating the Attorney General's office.'
By Charles Toutant | February 13, 2019
The New Jersey Attorney General's Office claimed in a court filing Wednesday that a key document filed by the plaintiffs in a suit over blueprints for making 3-D guns was falsified.
By Robert Storace | February 12, 2019
The Connecticut Supreme Court unanimously sided with the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles in a case involving a flawed police report used as the basis of a three-month driver's license suspension for a woman accused of drunken driving.
By Vanessa Blum | February 8, 2019
Santa Clara University law professor Eric Goldman discusses the ways that emojis are creeping into court cases and how judges and litigants are dealing with them.
By Vanessa Blum | February 7, 2019
Santa Clara University law professor Eric Goldman discusses how emojis are complicating litigation.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Daniel E. Cummins | February 7, 2019
Over the past year, the Pennsylvania state trial and appellate courts have continued to grapple with issues pertaining to social media discovery as well as the admissibility of social media evidence at trial.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael J. Hutter | February 6, 2019
Evidence columnist Michael J. Hutter discusses two statutory provisions enacted by the Legislature in 2018 which address the authentication process concerning a certain type and category of offered evidence with the express intent to make the process easier as to that evidence.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | February 4, 2019
While a student disciplinary proceeding does not have the consequences of a criminal trial in which guilt must be established beyond a reasonable doubt, neither is it the same as an ordinary civil dispute between two private parties over money.
By Amanda Bronstad | February 1, 2019
The April 8 trial was to feature claims by 24 women that Johnson & Johnson's talcum powder products caused them to get ovarian cancer.
By Amanda Bronstad | February 1, 2019
The April 8 trial was to feature claims by 24 women that Johnson & Johnson's talcum powder products caused them to get ovarian cancer.
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