By Lisa Willis | December 26, 2023
"I think there is going to be a significant amount of litigation surrounding this," said Edward "Ed" Mullins, a partner with Reed Smith in Miami.
By Charles Toutant | December 26, 2023
Yursil Kidwai learned about the monitoring of his calls when the prosecutor's office inadvertently produced a detective's memo during discovery in a criminal case, the suit claims.
By Michael A. Mora | December 26, 2023
"If anything, the judicial circuits need to be expanded and not contracted, as we did with the district courts of appeal," said Craig J. Trocino, the director of the University of Miami School of Law Innocence Clinic.
By Colleen Murphy | December 26, 2023
"We must ensure these workers are treated humanely and afforded the same respect as all workers are entitled to, especially given the essential and necessary care and support they provide to New Jersey families," bill sponsor Sen. Richard Codey said. "No one should be subject to the mistreatment that many domestic workers face on a daily basis, and this legislation will put the proper protections in place to prevent these abuses."
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | December 24, 2023
We understand that the attorney general may have referred the comptroller's recommendations to an internal commission, but we question whether that action deals with the matter with sufficient urgency.
By Jane Wester | December 21, 2023
Claims against Giuliani include a suit filed by his former attorney Robert Costello and Costello's firm Davidoff Hutcher & Citron for unpaid legal fees.
By Jane Wester | December 21, 2023
Claims against Giuliani include a suit filed by his former attorney Robert Costello and Costello's firm Davidoff Hutcher & Citron for unpaid legal fees.
By Jane Wester | December 21, 2023
White-collar defense attorneys doubted that high-profile criminal prosecutions such as those of the FTX and Binance founders would continue in 2024, but said they will keep a close eye on regulatory developments.
By Riley Brennan | December 21, 2023
"The statute simply does not provide clarity that truthful speech which generates an innocent or unreasonable listener mistake is outside of its scope. And this is sufficient to confer pre-enforcement standing," Justice Caleb Stegall said. "Thus, when the Legislature criminalizes speech and does not—within the elements and definitions of the crime—provide a high degree of specificity and clarity demonstrating that the only speech being criminalized is constitutionally unprotected speech, the law is sufficiently unclear to confer pre-enforcement standing on a plaintiff challenging the law."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jerry H. Goldfeder | December 21, 2023
The victorious plaintiffs in 'Hoffmann v. New York State Independent Redistricting Commission' are counting on new lines to help Democratic congressional candidates in next year's election to make Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) Speaker of the House of Representatives.
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