By Andrew Goudsward | June 27, 2022
"We are incredibly busy across a range of industries, issues and committees in a way that hasn't been the case in years past," one leading congressional investigations lawyer said.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Sarah A. Tirgary | June 27, 2022
Despite the fact that our state government is clearly responsible for making sure constitutional protections are afforded to all of its citizens, remarkably our state government has found a way to dodge this obligation.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | June 26, 2022
We agree with the Appellate Division and support upholding the legislation.
By Scott Graham | June 24, 2022
Hughes Hubbard life sciences chief Patrice Jean says that, given the complexity that goes into some pharmaceuticals, it's "understandable that you would have dozens of patents that potentially cover what the outcome is."
By Ryan Dailey | June 24, 2022
The law could carry a hefty price tag for universities that violate it. A "substantiated violation" of restrictions in the law would make institutions ineligible for what is known as performance funding.
By David A. Carrillo and Stephen M. Duvernay | June 23, 2022
"There's blame all around for those who either created or mishandled the Third District situation. Our point is that making this into a public spectacle makes matters worse in two ways: by delaying a fix for the acute docket delay problem, and inhibiting the judiciary's ability to seek longer-term remedies for the chronic funding problem," says David Carrillo and Stephen Duvernay of California Constitution Center at Berkeley Law.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Paul Greene | June 23, 2022
This article provides a discussion of Connecticut's recently enacted Senate Bill, SB6, which is one of a number of comprehensive state-law data protection regimes passed in recent years, led by the California Consumer Privacy Act. The bill marks a trend toward uniformity in state-law privacy regimes.
By Jim Saunders | June 23, 2022
Attorney Bruce Rogow said emergency rules "should not be used in this manner or enacted with broad sweeping changes and little evaluation or consideration of the impacts."
By Jim Saunders | June 23, 2022
The law make it illegal to compel people in workplace training to believe that an "individual, by virtue of his or her race, color, sex, or national origin, bears personal responsibility for and must feel guilt, anguish, or other forms of psychological distress because of actions, in which the individual played no part, committed in the past by other members of the same race, color, sex, or national origin."
By Colleen Murphy | June 22, 2022
The proposed legislation would increase medical expense coverage, remove the limitation on lawsuit option for victims of drunken drivers, and raise the minimum liability coverage for commercial vehicles, among other changes.
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