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 Cassandre Coyer | November 9, 2022
While some judges and court technologists have been pushing for broader technology implementation in courts, lingering challenges underscore that a technology revolution in courts could still be years away.
By Brad Kutner | November 9, 2022
A new database, called the Judiciary Electronic Filing System, or JEFS, went live Monday. launched by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, for the first time judges' financial disclosure reports will be centralized in a searchable format for the public—and lawyers—to access.
By Cassandre Coyer | November 4, 2022
Already experienced in creating virtual court processes, Louisiana Judge Scott U. Schlegel's latest program seeks to bring more civil cases online. But for that, he had to look beyond Zoom, and push lawyers to be more flexible.
By Alaina Lancaster | Zack Needles | October 14, 2022
In U.S. District Judge William Alsup's latest book, the judge aims to construct the best line of defense in an alternate universe where Lee Harvey Oswald had to stand trial for the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
By Alaina Lancaster | Zack Needles | September 9, 2022
In this week's episode, Federal Bar Council leaders discuss the dangers judges face, how those dangers threaten the fair administration of justice and, most importantly, what can be done about the problem.
By Michael A. Mora | September 1, 2022
Now, Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Alan Fine scheduled a final approval hearing for Oct. 27 to consider the proposed settlement over the Empires X Corp. platform scam.
By Avalon Zoppo | August 24, 2022
The Fifth Circuit found a trial judge failed to give the attorney enough notice or time to prepare a response to sanctions.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | August 16, 2022
"There is no way they should've ever be dropped in this document dump that happened in the Texas case," law professor Julia Simon-Kerr said. "It's a totally separate case, different lawyers. Very inappropriate."
By Cedra Mayfield | June 23, 2022
"The court determined that there was 'no reasonable probability' of harm, invoking the standard typically applicable to nonconstitutional errors, rather than applying the 'beyond a reasonable doubt' standard that applies to most constitutional errors, including errors arising from juror misconduct," read the Supreme Court of Georgia decision.
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