By Andrew Denney | January 25, 2018
As power inequities enabling sexual misconduct continue to grow in public awareness, the Manhattan District Attorney's Office has formed a dedicated unit aimed at serving survivors of workplace-related sexual violence and investigating their reports.
By Angela Morris | January 25, 2018
Big and small firms alike, as well as solo practitioners, are accepting cryptocurrency's risks in order to meet clients' needs and get paid.
By Colby Hamilton | January 24, 2018
The panel, hosted by ABA president Hilarie Bass, included representatives from the ACLU and the Innocence Project, as well as the Bronx DA.
By Charles Toutant | January 24, 2018
Citing insufficient evidence produced at trial, the judge who heard the bribery case of U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez and Florida ophthalmologist Salomon Melgen has tossed out seven of the 18 counts and has removed himself from the case.
By Katheryn Tucker | January 24, 2018
“Amazing that this all started with a motion to unseal records in a South Georgia state court, and ultimately led to literally hundreds of young women finding the courage to come forward and make their stories public,” S. Derek Bauer of Baker & Hostetler said.
By Andrew Denney | January 24, 2018
Overbroad search warrants for digital evidence are “all too common” in New York, are often green-lighted by busy judges who are focused on processing motions and are the product of a system based on outdated statutes, a Manhattan judge said in a ruling to suppress warrants for evidence in a murder case.
By Jason Grant | January 23, 2018
The three-judge panel made clear that the court system and government prosecutors from the Western District of New York, along with Joseph Tigano III's own court-appointed defense lawyer, had let him down at nearly every juncture of his seven-year wait for trial.
By The Associated Press | January 23, 2018
A federal prosecutor told a jury Tuesday that a former top aide to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo accepted more than $300,000 in bribes, but defense attorneys belittled the claim, saying the bulk of the money was his wife's salary at a legitimate job.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Jeffrey M. Winn | January 23, 2018
The statistics are alarming. Black men are 2.5 times more likely to be arrested than whites, 21 times more likely to be killed by police and twice as likely to be unarmed when killed by police.
By Andrew Denney | January 22, 2018
Jury selection began Monday in federal court in Manhattan for the public corruption trial for Joseph Percoco, a top aide and longtime friend to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, which is expected to put a microscope to the way state government does business.
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