New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Angad Singh | February 13, 2019
It is not just people who are here without status whose ability to avoid deportation may be affected by a criminal conviction. Crucially, many people with status, including Lawful Permanent Residents, may be rendered deportable by certain misdemeanor convictions.
By Zach Schlein | February 12, 2019
A complaint in Miami-Dade Circuit Court alleges Mario Abad, the CEO of AeroThrust Holdings, willfully concealed the presence of harmful mold in a condo he'd leased out for rent. Aerothurst Holdings is situated at Miami International Airport.
By Zach Schlein | February 11, 2019
With the help of attorney Zachary Bodenheimer, the brotherly duo of Brett and Judd Rosen fought an uphill battle to argue for an unlikely client in litigation over a life-altering accident.
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis
By Zack Needles | February 11, 2019
The Legal Intelligencer's 11th annual survey of 33 plaintiffs firms with more than four lawyers showed that, between 2017 and 2018, the combined overall number of attorneys at those firms grew from 550 to 573, but the number of diverse attorneys grew by only five and the number of women lawyers grew by only three.
By Raychel Lean | February 11, 2019
Tweeters and non-tweeters render their verdict on Twitter, which has heralded the dawn of chatty lawyers who weigh in on Supreme Court decisions, current events — and sometimes, each other.
By Raychel Lean | February 11, 2019
Tweeters and non-tweeters render their verdict on Twitter, which has heralded the dawn of chatty lawyers who weigh in on Supreme Court decisions, current events—and sometimes, each other.
By Raychel Lean | February 11, 2019
Tweeters and nontweeters render their verdict on Twitter, which has heralded the dawn of chatty lawyers who weigh in on Supreme Court decisions, current events — and sometimes each other.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joseph D. Nohavicka | February 11, 2019
On Nov. 27, 2018, the New York Court of Appeals handed down a decision that fashions a new rule when the criminal justice system is processing a non-citizen: No matter what level crime the non-citizen is charged with, if the possible consequence is deportation he or she is entitled to a jury trial. The distilled holding is that immigration consequences transform a state “petty” offense into a “serious” offense.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Charles F. Forer | February 11, 2019
Bob is not currently representing any clients in arbitration proceedings. In view of his past mistakes, described in my past articles, Bob's “withdrawal” from appearing in arbitration proceedings may be a good thing—at least for his clients.
By Robert N. Zausmer | February 8, 2019
There is no such thing as the “science” of jury selection. Any who tells you that is full of “Bull.”
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