Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Editorial Board | January 18, 2018
In the spring of 2016 four Yale law students founded an organization to respond to the unmet legal needs of Central American refugee families fleeing…
By Jenna Greene | January 18, 2018
When ex-lovers fight over assets, it's often messy and ugly and mean. But in a pending California case, opposing counsel is accusing lawyers from Boies Schiller Flexner of going too far, with “loud, slut-shaming bells that cannot be unrung.”
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith | January 18, 2018
In their Appellate Division Review, Leo Milonas and Andrew C. Smith write: As we begin 2018, we look back on some of the highlights from the final quarter of 2017 below.
By Christina Jonathan and Terence E. Smolev | January 12, 2018
Christina Jonathan and Terence E. Smolev write: There is an old English saying, usually attributed to Benjamin Franklin, that "nothing in our lives is certain except death and taxes." Many wealthy individuals, politicians and corporations attempt to dodge one of these life certainties. However, if in attempting to avoid one of these certainties, violations are committed, the consequences are severe and will not be pardoned, not even in death.
By Sharon L. Klein | January 12, 2018
Sharon L. Klein writes: From new legislation, to important proposals, to instructive case law, 2017 saw some significant developments, lessons and reminders.
By Toni Ann Kruse and Chris Nason | January 12, 2018
Toni Ann Kruse and Chris Nason write: EPTL 10-6.6 requires many steps and practitioners advising trustees to implement a decanting under the statute should carefully document each step.
By Charles Toutant | January 11, 2018
"I regret that I have not completed my review of the pending motions, but I am not able to provide you with a date certain by which the decisions on the motions will be rendered," Jacobson wrote to Davis.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Alberto Yohananoff | January 11, 2018
Alberto Yohananoff reviews, from a psychological perspective, the decision in 'Weisberger v. Weisberger', in which the Appellate Division modified a religious observance provision arising out of a Stipulation of Settlement and subsequent motion practice.
By Tom McParland | January 10, 2018
In a 4-1 decision, the Connecticut Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that parents' refusal for three years to acknowledge their role in the abuse of their infant daughter justified the termination of their parental rights to the girl's younger sister, who was physically unharmed in the initial incident.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Martin E. Friedlander | January 10, 2018
Martin E. Friedlander reviews the decision in and legal context of 'Weisberger v. Weisberger', in which the Appellate Division modified a religious observance provision arising out of a Stipulation of Settlement and subsequent motion practice.
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