By Jane Wester | January 29, 2021
The change will affect about 1,100 warrants, Gonzalez's office said, and an initial group of 262 warrants were vacated this week and their underlying cases were dismissed.
By Jane Wester | January 28, 2021
The lawyer—who has pleaded not guilty—allegedly claimed he would use the money to buy and resell or "flip" properties at a higher price, but he instead spent some of the money on personal investments, according to the Brooklyn U.S. attorney.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | C. Ryan Barber | January 28, 2021
Chief U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell said the charges for the man who sat in Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office are, "in some ways, too benign sounding to fairly describe what happened."
By Jane Wester | January 27, 2021
The debate organizers asked several candidates about systemic racism in law enforcement and the criminal justice system, noting that their event was originally scheduled for the night of Jan. 6 and was postponed after a mob stormed the U.S. Capitol.
By C. Ryan Barber | January 27, 2021
For the U.S. attorney's office in Washington, it has required an all-hands effort, pulling in prosecutors with varied expertise and backgrounds bringing cases over everything from bank robbery and sanctions violations to espionage and murder.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Cyrus Vance Jr. | January 27, 2021
Domestic terrorism is terrorism, period. It should be labeled as such and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
By Tom McParland | January 25, 2021
Seven justices of the high court voted to deny certiorari in the case, which argued that Silver's conviction was the result of bad case law governing extortion by "force, violence or fear."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lori S. Kornblum, Daniel Pollack and Bruce Semon | January 25, 2021
This article continues our exploration of whether we can determine a principled approach to age-gap laws based on information about adolescent development.
By Tom McParland | January 22, 2021
Attorneys told the Law Journal that potential charges could include possible tax or campaign-finance violations, failing to register as a foreign lobbyist or taking bribes from foreign officials.
By Jason Grant | January 22, 2021
"To find that the defendant's act amounted to a terroristic threat would trivialize the definition of terrorism by applying it loosely in situations that do not match our collective understanding of what constitutes a terrorist act," the Appellate Division, First Department said.
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