By Andrew Denney | January 6, 2022
Court officials have given judges the discretion to conduct some courtroom business virtually but said that trials and some other proceedings should be held in-person.
By Avalon Zoppo | January 5, 2022
Most federal appeals courts and some district courts have responded to the surge in coronavirus cases by postponing in-person hearings and updating mitigation measures.
By Tom McParland | January 5, 2022
U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman said he would revisit the issue of the embattled lawyer's trial date if conditions change.
By Jason Grant | January 4, 2022
The court clerk and peace officer, Maribel Reveron, had asked a court to declare that the state court system violated her rights under a union collective-bargaining agreement and the U.S. Constitution's Second Amendment. She also requested an order mandating she be repaid for salary missed during her suspension.
By Jason Grant | December 29, 2021
Silvera "has enthusiastically stepped up to the plate throughout the various phases of the pandemic," said state Chief Administrative Judge Lawrence Marks. In his new role to begin Jan. 22, Silvera will "oversee the management and day-to-day operations of one the State's busiest courts of civil jurisdiction," said Marks.
By Andrew Denney | December 23, 2021
DeStefano got his start in law working as a principal appellate court attorney for the Appellate Division, Second Department.
New York Law Journal | In Brief
By Patricia Kane | December 23, 2021
Amid the surge in COVID-19 cases, virtual oral arguments will resume the week of January 3.
By ALM Staff | December 22, 2021
The Law Journal's Ryland West and our Washington, D.C.-based ALM photographer Diego M. Radzinschi were on the ground for some of the year's biggest stories.
By Jane Wester | Tom McParland | December 22, 2021
In the Southern District of New York, Chief Judge Laura Taylor Swain said late Wednesday that remote access would be allowed for some criminal proceedings, in light of the new "highly transmissible" form of the virus.
By Andrew Denney | December 17, 2021
The removal of cases before Surrogate's Judge Harriet Thompson comes as the trust and estates bar in Brooklyn has expressed concerns over a mounting caseload in her court.
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