By Angela Morris | April 3, 2019
Justice Chari Kelly, in a concurring opinion, likened the case to Alice in Wonderland, saying we're "through a looking glass" if a law meant to protect free speech, association and petitioning the government is now being used as a barrier in attorney discipline cases.
By Jim Saunders | April 3, 2019
A House panel approved a bill that would create a new process that would allow utilities to pass along costs to customers for storm-protection projects, including installing underground power lines.
By Dan M. Clark | April 3, 2019
The Office of Court Administration acknowledged the report's findings and confirmed that such a problem exists in some town and village courts. A spokesman said they're currently working on a way to track data to develop further training on the issue.
By Ross Todd | April 2, 2019
A California appellate court has nixed the state legislature's efforts to work around a prior ruling, forcing the state to return about $330 million from its General Fund to a settlement fund created to help distressed homeowners in the wake of the foreclosure crisis.
By Angela Morris | April 2, 2019
If a governmental entity didn't follow the right procedures as laid out in the bill, then any legal services contract it improperly entered would be void.
By Dan M. Clark | April 2, 2019
The funding boost for the judicial watchdog is especially significant; the commission has rarely received a spending increase over the past decade and lawmakers were split in early March on whether to approve their request.
By Karen Sloan | April 2, 2019
Georgetown law professor Shon Hopwood discusses how he got involved in the Trump administration's criminal justice reform efforts and how his fellow legal academics feel about his working alongside the White House.
By Jim Turner | April 2, 2019
The Senate Banking and Insurance Committee voted 5-3 to approve the Senate bill, which sponsor Tom Lee expects to be worked into any broader insurance package that emerges in the second half of the session.
By Dan M. Clark | April 2, 2019
Associate Judge Jenny Rivera wrote in the dissent that it was the first time the Court of Appeals has addressed such a question of what standards should apply to a plea agreement that the defendant claimed to not have completely understood.
By Angela Morris | April 1, 2019
Two bills making their way through the legislature could change the state's anti-SLAPP law and give judges discretion to award fees and costs to litigants who succeed on motions to dismiss.
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