By Colby Hamilton | May 28, 2019
Managers at the international drug company allegedly fired the seven-year veteran a month after learning she was pregnant, for reasons the plaintiff claims were pretextual.
By Jennifer Varadi | May 23, 2019
More and more jurisdictions are requiring parties to attend mediation at least once, and sometimes twice, before walking into court for trial. In family…
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Peggy E. Rubin | May 22, 2019
On July 30, 2018, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court amended Rule 7.3(b)(4) of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct to provide that no communication of solicitation be made to a party who has been named the defendant or respondent in a domestic relations action until the proof of service appears on the docket.
By Colby Hamilton | May 21, 2019
In the absence of rules created following the passage of a 2012 law, city officials relied for years on internal rules for how to handle the revoking of parole for those in the juvenile justice system.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | May 16, 2019
Tempers flared at a crowded Philadelphia City Council meeting Thursday when the majority of its members voted against creating a committee to investigate the rate and methods of child removal from family homes to foster care.
By Colby Hamilton | May 16, 2019
Federal immigration officials now believe that more than 6,500 young, at-risk immigrants were denied special protected status after 2018 because of a policy change in how the Department of Homeland Security interpreted orders from New York State family courts when evaluating individual cases.
By Angela Morris | May 16, 2019
Plaintiffs Fatma Marouf and her wife Bryn Esplin alleged the government and its subcontractor, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, are using taxpayer dollars to unlawfully fund the Catholic nonprofits for services for unaccompanied refugee children, in a way that unlawfully discriminates against same-sex couples.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joel R. Brandes | May 16, 2019
In exercising its discretion on an application for a counsel fee award the court may consider the merits of the case and a spouse's conduct in the litigation. There are many different types of conduct that fit in this category which courts have considered in determining such applications.
By Jason Grant | May 14, 2019
Among the honorees is retired Family Court Judge Paula Hepner.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Alexis L. Cirel | May 13, 2019
The CPSA would finally allow New Yorkers the opportunity to exercise the same reproductive rights and family building opportunities that are endowed to the citizens of 48 other states.
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