By Tom McParland | November 18, 2019
A spokesman for the state courts said appeals court leadership "must balance the time that the court hears oral arguments with conference and chambers time for the associate justices."
By Dan M. Clark | November 1, 2019
The five new justices, which add ranks to the state's current panel of judges in each appellate court, are not subject to confirmation by the State Senate.
By Tom McParland | October 31, 2019
"I think we are facing a crisis," Justice Neil Gorsuch said in a live-streamed discussion broadcast to a packed courtroom in the Thurgood Marshall Courthouse at Foley Square. "We have lost the art of how to talk to one another."
By Dan M. Clark | October 30, 2019
It's estimated that fewer than 2% of applicants even answer affirmatively to the question about mental health. But statistics indicate that the population of law school students who actually deal with challenges to their mental health is much greater, according to the report.
New York Law Journal | In Brief|News
By Dan M. Clark | October 30, 2019
A new executive director has been named for the Franklin H. Williams Judicial Commission, a statewide panel of judges and attorneys that seeks to educate and advise court officials on issues that affect both employees and litigants of color.
By Jason Grant | October 23, 2019
During his 23 years of guiding the nonprofit, Greg Berman has watched the center grow from having 12 staffers and a $1 million budget to having 520 staffers and a $65 million budget.
New York Law Journal | In Brief|News
By Dan M. Clark | October 21, 2019
The Franklin H. Williams Judicial Commission, a statewide panel tasked with promoting racial and and ethnic fairness in state courts, expects the event to be the first of many.
By Dan M. Clark | October 8, 2019
The proposal is intended to simplify the state's trial court system, which some have said is difficult to navigate for litigants, particularly when more than one venue is involved in a particular case. But critics focused on the "unbridled discretion" court administrators would have to shuffle judges around the state.
By Dan M. Clark | September 27, 2019
State court officials have been waiting for the Legislature to take a hard look at the state's trial courts for decades, since former Chief Judge Judith Kaye breathed new life into the idea during her tenure.
By Alan D. Scheinkman | September 9, 2019
The larger point remains. The Appellate Division of today is dealing with a volume of business that would have been unimaginable when the court was created in 1896.
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