Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | July 5, 2023
Mark D. Sherman, an experienced Title IX defense attorney, said this opinion allows for more transparency and due process, and offers guidelines for universities.
By Charles Toutant | July 5, 2023
The settlement comes five years after the lawyer filed a suit claiming the Office of Attorney Ethics was run like a "boys club."
By Colleen Murphy | July 5, 2023
"The right to an attorney should be a universal right for those who are navigating our criminal justice system," Gov. Phil Murphy said. "For too long, we have witnessed many residents suffer from the steep prices of a public defender, many times causing them to go into debt just to cover their legal fees, and disproportionately affecting people of color."
By Michael A. Mora | July 5, 2023
"It's incredibly disturbing to see an attorney involved in these types of issues," said Michelle R. Suskauer, a partner at Dimond Kaplan & Rothstein. "But mental health hits everyone, whether you're an attorney or a doctor. It's blind to professions."
By Hugo Guzman | July 3, 2023
A watchdog group is seeking an investigation of Lorielle Pankey, who owned Meta stock when she recommended that FTC Chair Lina Khan recuse herself from an antitrust inquiry involving the company.
By Mason Lawlor | July 2, 2023
"It is undisputed that protecting prenatal life falls within the State's broad authority... to protect the public's health, welfare and safety."
By Adolfo Pesquera | June 30, 2023
Judge Daniella DeSeta Lyttle's order requires the Texas Department of Public Safety to produce by Aug. 31 a proposed log of redactions it wants to make to the public records.
By Allison Dunn | June 30, 2023
"Despite the conclusory bombast employed by Fenstermaker in his written submissions with this Court accusing state officials of wrongdoing, those submissions fail to lay out a credible foundation from which wrongdoing might be found," U.S. District Judge Jon D. Levy wrote in a disciplinary order.
By Allison Dunn | June 30, 2023
In a 2-1 opinion, the Massachusetts Court of Appeals majority ruled against a state nonprofit organization's efforts seeking immediate relief from two public school districts' policies that required students to be vaccinated in order to participate in extracurricular activities, finding it failed to show that any of its members' children were harmed or at risk of harm.
By Ross Todd | June 30, 2023
Katyal, who crossed the 50-argument threshold at the U.S. Supreme Court earlier this year, scored major wins for cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase and the watchdog group Common Cause.
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