By Jim Turner, News Service of Florida | January 31, 2018
A controversial measure that would ban “sanctuary cities” in Florida stalled in the Senate but is already playing a role in the 2018 gubernatorial campaign.
By Tony Mauro | January 30, 2018
President Donald Trump boasted Tuesday night that he has appointed “more circuit judges than any new administration in the history of our country” and called Neil Gorsuch “a great new Supreme Court justice."
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Joe Martini, James Glasser and Judd Lindenfeld | January 30, 2018
The new FCPA policy provides the much-needed assurance that fulsome voluntary self-disclosure of FCPA violations will likely serve to avoid criminal prosecution. At the same time, the new FCPA policy signals that the government will continue to combat corporate misconduct by focusing on individual misconduct.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | January 30, 2018
The recent Connecticut Supreme Court education-funding decision is fascinating in many ways, including as a study of separation-of-power principles.
By Katheryn Tucker | January 29, 2018
Following a week of sexual abuse horrors revealed in a Michigan courtroom, the University of Georgia law school hosted an open discussion Saturday about taking legal action against predators and those who enable them.
By Dara Kam, News Service of Florida | January 29, 2018
State law-enforcement officials have found probable cause to open a criminal investigation into possible wrongdoing by former Sen. Jack Latvala, a Clearwater Republican who announced his resignation last month amid a probe into allegations of possible public corruption.
By Jim Turner, News Service of Florida | January 29, 2018
An effort to let voters decide if they want open primary elections advanced, but moving to such a “top-two” system continued to draw questions from members of the state Constitution Revision Commission.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Michael C. Zogby and Shane M. O'Connell | January 29, 2018
Courts have worked to construct rules for use before and during trial that ensure only true business records—that is, records of regularly conducted activity that carry an air of trustworthiness and reliability—are admitted into evidence, while avoiding admission of day-to-day communications and other documents that cannot be categorized as business records.
By New Jersey State Bar Association | January 29, 2018
Expansive birth certificate bill advances with NJSBA support
By Lloyd Dunkelberger, News Service of Florida | January 26, 2018
In a 4-3 vote, the Constitution Revision Commission's Declaration of Rights Committee agreed to a proposal that would say people have a right to be free from governmental intrusion “with respect to privacy of information and the disclosure thereof.”
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