By Cheryl Miller | December 6, 2022
Members of the Commission on Judicial Performance said they have authority to discipline judges who committed Brady violations during previous work as prosecutors. But Superior Court Judge Michael Murray, a former deputy district attorney, did not commit such misconduct, commissioners concluded.
By Cedra Mayfield | December 6, 2022
Ahead of a 2023 Judicial Qualifications Commission ethics hearing, defense counsel for Douglas County Probate Judge Christina Peterson has motioned to dismiss 42 of 50 counts of ethics charges filed.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 6, 2022
Chief Judge William Pryor said the allegations against Cannon lacked sufficient evidence.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 6, 2022
Chief Judge William Pryor said the allegations against Cannon lacked sufficient evidence.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 6, 2022
"Every student understands that no law school has a monopoly on information about judges but every school has a ceiling on the number they can keep track of," said Aliza Shatzman.
By Adolfo Pesquera | December 5, 2022
"Six Justices explicitly rejected the possibility that it would be constitutional for 'a litigant awaiting trial' to be 'asked by the presiding judge to rise for a Christian prayer,'" one judge wrote.
By Scott Graham | December 5, 2022
The justices let stand a Federal Circuit ruling ordering a retrial before a new judge, notwithstanding Centripetal Networks' and Paul Clement's pleas that the amount involved was trivial and that the judge did the right thing by divesting to a blind trust.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | December 2, 2022
Monroe County Magisterial District Judge John Caffese was arraigned Thursday on allegations that in the months leading up to his July appointment to magisterial district judge he falsely attested to living within the district where he would be serving.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 1, 2022
When Aliza Shatzman was applying to clerkships, she said she wishes, looking back, that there were resources for her to research the judges she was considering working for.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Joel Cohen | November 30, 2022
It would be foolish indeed for judges to lose their unique platform and typically more objective—non-party—status to ensure that wrongdoers are brought to justice if and when they fully warrant it.
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