By Dan M. Clark | March 27, 2019
"Despite my desire for a bill strong-suited for the legal challenges that it will surely confront, my commitment to the creation of this Commission and the promise that it brings for a more transparent and just criminal justice system remains unshaken," Cuomo wrote.
By Angela Morris | March 27, 2019
Texas Assistant Solicitor General Andrew Davis wrote in his letter that he was leaving because he's accepted another job.
By Dan M. Clark | March 27, 2019
Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, D-Westchester, said Wednesday after meeting behind closed doors with Gov. Andrew Cuomo that members of her conference are “concerned” about including the measure as part of bail reform legislation.
By Ana Ceballos | March 27, 2019
After emotional testimony and debate that lasted nearly two hours, the Senate Infrastructure and Security Committee approved the proposal with added language that would make it a third-degree felony to impersonate a school guardian.
By Dan M. Clark | March 26, 2019
The bill is about more than eliminating robocalls as a matter of inconvenience. It's also a measure to protect consumers from those callers, who often use robocalls in an attempt to defraud or harass individuals by trying to lure them into a scam or collect a debt, Hoylman said.
By Dan M. Clark | March 26, 2019
"A tightly defined measure says there's something beyond just flight risk, there's some consideration if a judge has real hard evidence that someone could pose a danger to community," NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio said.
By Dan M. Clark | March 26, 2019
Gov. Cuomo has until the end of the day on Wednesday to make a decision on the legislation, which is almost certain to be challenged in court by the District Attorneys Association of the State of New York over its constitutionality.
By Anthony S. Guardino | March 26, 2019
A major feature of the governor's original budget proposal for fiscal year 2020 is a bill to legalize recreational marijuana in the state—subject to the ability of counties and large cities to opt out. Here, columnist Anthony Guardino suggests that local governments also should be able to opt out of the law.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Darren LaVerne and Jessica Weigel | March 26, 2019
The claim that early production of witness statements threatens to engender perjury and obstruction is based on the notion—inimical to our system of justice—that every person charged with a crime is guilty and likely to flout the law in order to escape punishment. A statute that rests on this presumption is, in 2019, long overdue for reform.
By Dan M. Clark | March 26, 2019
“DOL's interpretation of the wage order not only enables this mistreatment of home health care aides, it directly affects their livelihood," the dissenting judge wrote.
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