By Gisela Salomon and Claudia Torrens | September 24, 2018
The drama of parents being separated from their children at the border dominated the headlines this year, but thousands of immigrant families are experiencing a similar frustration: the increasing hurdles they must surmount to take custody of sons, daughters and relatives who crossed the border on their own.
Daily Business Review | Profile
By Raychel Lean | September 21, 2018
Behold the voyages of noted Miami Beach attorney Cynthia Greene. Her lifelong mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new solutions in family disputes, and boldly go where no appellate lawyer has gone before.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By David S. Carton and Lynne Strober | September 20, 2018
The legislature added the language “with neither party having a greater entitlement to that standard of living than the other.” What does that change, in fact, mean?
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | September 18, 2018
The state Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in several closely watched cases starting Tuesday, but a dispute stemming from the high-profile grand jury report outlining decades of sex abuse at Catholic dioceses across Pennsylvania is expected to highlight the two-day session.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | September 17, 2018
We hope that the Department of Human Services takes the Appellate Division's suggestions to heart and works to translate the court's common law duty ruling into standard practices.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Aaron D. Weems | September 13, 2018
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court recently issued new parent coordination rules designed to reinvent coordinators and reintroduce them into the custody process, while cutting out the ambiguity and ad hoc application that plagued the system in its previous incarnation.
By Dan M. Clark | September 12, 2018
The hearings will be the first opportunity for the Commission on Parental Legal Representation to hear from stakeholders on how to improve the state court system to ensure legal representation in family court.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | September 6, 2018
A lawyer's legal malpractice suit against her divorce attorneys alleging breach of contract actually sounded in tort and therefore was not timely filed, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has ruled, upholding a Philadelphia trial judge's decision that had expressly anticipated the possibility of reversal on appeal.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Timothy M. Tippins | September 5, 2018
In his column on Matrimonial Practice, Timothy M. Tippins explores some of the evidentiary issues presented when computer-based test interpretations are used by expert witnesses.
By Michael Booth | September 4, 2018
A New Jersey appeals court ruled that a Riverdale law firm and one of its partners cannot be sued for malpractice based on a former client's claim that she was shortchanged in a divorce settlement because of mental incapacity.
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