By Emily Saul | April 13, 2023
The Bronx District Attorney Office's Digital Forensics Laboratory is the first to be accredited in New York State, and only the fourth nationwide. It's led by ADA Peter Kennedy and Lab Director Selena Ley.
By Jason Grant | April 13, 2023
The lawyer for Stormy Daniels is trying to get Donald Trump's co-lead defense lawyer pushed off the "hush-payments" case, and Trump's attorney is firing back, telling the New York Law Journal late Wednesday that he's written to the judge to complain that Daniels' lawyer has engaged in the unauthorized practice of law.
By Brian Lee | April 12, 2023
According to public defender groups, the proposed change amounts to an 11th-hour budget measure that would turn back the clock on reforms that included requirements for district attorneys to share discovery material in a more timely manner.
By Jane Wester | April 11, 2023
Vanessa Avery, U.S. attorney for the District of Connecticut, said she hopes the policy will help incentivize companies to "talk to us early and often."
By Jane Wester | Emily Saul | April 11, 2023
The complaint, which was filed by Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher partner Ted Boutrous, described Jordan's efforts as a "transparent campaign to intimidate and attack District Attorney Bragg."
By ALM Staff | April 10, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
By Emily Saul | April 7, 2023
The letter formally invites Manhattan District Attorney Senior Counsel Matthew Colangelo, a member of the prosecution team, to sit for a transcribed interview.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Jerry H. Goldfeder | April 7, 2023
Various supporters and detractors of Trump have already opined that this is a weak case, or unprecedented, or that the connection between falsifying business records and campaign finance violations is a stretch. An elections lawyer who is a regular Law Journal contributor thinks they are wrong.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joel Cohen | April 7, 2023
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis might have actually raised the conundrum whether a prosecutor can ethically create a policy that his or her office decline, across-the-board, to prosecute certain crimes on the books—without exercising discretion in the individual case whether or not to charge?
By Emily Saul | April 6, 2023
Data shows 9,794 cases involving state penal law 175.10, or falsifying business records in the first degree, have been arraigned in both local and superior New York state courts since 2015.
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