By Michael A. Mora | June 20, 2024
"This decision will protect not only our clients' First Amendment rights but the First Amendment rights of all Floridians," said James Tysse, a Supreme Court and appellate partner at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld.
By Charles Toutant | June 20, 2024
While a municipality can impose an additional fine upon a person for a repeated violation of any municipal ordinance, it does not allow a municipality to repeatedly or continuously fine a person for each day a violation continues, under N.J.S.A. 40:49-5, the panel wrote.
By Cedra Mayfield | June 20, 2024
Challengers succeeded at unseating at least five incumbent judges on state, magistrate and probate court benches during the June 18 runoff election.
By Amy Guthrie | June 20, 2024
Lawyers and investors worry that judges will answer to political parties and that more dark money will influence the judicial system.
By Paul A. Rubin and Hanh V. Huynh | June 20, 2024
A recent decision from Chief Judge Glenn of the Southern District of New York Bankruptcy Court provides clarity to creditors and debtors alike in cases where the parties' settlement negotiations include an agreement requiring a creditor to support the debtor's Chapter 11 plan.
By Cedra Mayfield | June 20, 2024
Officers arrested Douglas County Probate Judge Christina J. Peterson on June 20.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Justin B. Shapiro | June 20, 2024
As the summer months yield their inevitable slew of injuries, prospective renters should be aware of the life-threatening dangers of jet skis, and their attorneys should be intimately familiar with the many regulations that were enacted to keep them safe.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward E. Neiger, Alexandra W. Robertson, David H. Stern and Tessa G. Cuneo | June 20, 2024
This installment of the Mass Torts Update highlights upcoming deadlines and resolution updates in mass tort litigation, focusing on four specific cases.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Edward T. Kang | June 20, 2024
Hypothetical questions can help facilitate conversations on judgments about the perceived likelihood or potential consequences of an event or an action. They can also help reveal hidden or flawed assumptions. Supreme Court justices, for instance, often use hypothetical questions to test the outer boundaries of what the advocate is asking the court to declare and of what the court may have to decide.
By Cedra Mayfield | June 20, 2024
"The preclusive effect of res judicata applies not only to matters that were 'put in issue' but also those that 'might have been put in issue,'" the Georgia Supreme Court ruled.
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