By Christine Simmons | December 22, 2017
Jurors in two big white-collar trials won't have a lot of time to bask in Christmas cheer this year.
By Cogan Schneier | December 22, 2017
A look at some of this year's most-read litigation stories out of the nation's Capitol.
By Colby Hamilton | December 21, 2017
A multimillion deal was cemented with a bribery agreement between a Saudi energy company official and the executive with the Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer.
By NYLJ Staff | December 21, 2017
The Fortune Society's Reentry Debate Team was joined by members of the New York State Legislature, The City Council, and the Mayor's Office, for a parliamentary debate held on Dec. 19 at the Ford Foundation on ending pretrial detention and the cash bail system in New York state.
By Andrew Denney | December 20, 2017
A former journalist who pleaded guilty in June to a cyberstalking charge for making bomb threats to Jewish Community Centers as a means of creating chaos in his ex-girlfriend's life has been sentenced to five years in prison.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward M. Spiro and Judith L. Mogul | December 20, 2017
Southern District Civil Practice Roundup columnists Edward M. Spiro and Judith L. Mogul discuss a recent decision in which the court's particularized analysis of the Fifth Amendment in the specific context presented, as well as its procedural considerations, provide useful guidance for counsel whose clients seek to invoke or limit the invocation of the privilege in civil litigation.
By Josefa Velasquez | December 18, 2017
The state Court of Appeals on Dec. 14 issued an uncorrected opinion, "People v. Boone," No. 55, stating that during final instructions a trial court is required to give, upon request, a jury charge on cross-race effect.
New York Law Journal | In Brief
By Colby Hamilton | December 15, 2017
Jack Vitayanon was arrested in February in Washington, D.C., on charges he conspired with people in Arizona and Long Island to distribute meth over a number of years.
By Colby Hamilton | December 15, 2017
Federal authorities allege Luthmann and his co-conspirators concocted a fraudulent mob-connected scrap metal scheme that bilked victims of more than $500,000, before things turned violent.
By Colby Hamilton | December 14, 2017
Randy Wang is alleged to have purchased more than $2 million in electronics on the company card, while a civil suit in state Civil Court alleges he may have tricked the company into wiring him $600,000 owed to an outside vendor.
Presented by BigVoodoo
Join the industry's top owners, investors, developers, brokers & financiers at THE MULTIFAMILY EVENT OF THE YEAR!
Law.com celebrates the California law firms and legal departments driving the state's dynamic legal landscape.
The Texas Lawyer honors attorneys and judges who have made a remarkable difference in the legal profession in Texas.
Mid sized NYC Personal Injury Defense Firm seeking to immediately hire several attorneys to join our firm. Preferred candidates are those w...
Mid-size Parsippany based law firm with a statewide practice is searching for a full-time motivated associate litigation attorney with 3-5 y...
Description: Fox Rothschild has an opening in Princeton, NJ for an associate in the Litigation Department. The ideal candidate will have tw...