By Emily Saul | March 7, 2023
Raised in Canarsie, Mitchel was motivated to become a prosecutor while a teenager at Canarsie High School who spent his time defending bullied classmates.
By Jane Wester | March 3, 2023
While they appeared in court for his initial presentment after he was "unexpectedly arrested," they are not working as his defense team.
By Emily Saul | March 3, 2023
Attrition of legal staff and discovery reform were named as key challenges by every single DA, who said a variety of reasons—legislative changes, negative perceptions of law enforcement, low pay, the pandemic—have made the already demanding job of a prosecutor more difficult.
New York Law Journal | Profile
By Emily Saul | March 2, 2023
Rocah declined to say if she intended to pursue reelection in two years, when her term ends.
By Jane Wester | March 1, 2023
Maxwell's lawyers faulted Judge Alison Nathan, saying she engaged in a "creative reading" of a non-prosecution agreement with Jeffrey Epstein.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Joel Cohen | March 1, 2023
Unless remedial steps are taken to patch the hole in grand jury secrecy chiseled open by Emily Kohrs, the forewoman for a grand jury in the Trump election hoax case before a Georgia court, great risk exists that grand jurors around the country will conclude that if she did it, they too can wherever in America they might be impaneled, our columnist writes.
By Emily Saul | February 28, 2023
The pro-border wall group has essentially become one that attorney Justin Weddle cannot counsel, he told a judge.
By Emily Saul | February 28, 2023
Prosecutors said the court worker allegedly processing filings and their associated fees or making the requested copies and then voiding the transactions in the court's record system.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Cary London | February 27, 2023
Those of us with the power to defend individuals—or to change laws—should vehemently support the full decriminalization of consensual adult prostitution, a Manhattan civil rights attorney writes.
By Brian Lee | February 27, 2023
A Long Island lawyer said Long Island, said the reduction to .05 would cast the net wide enough so as to prosecute a person for driving after consuming a small amount of alcohol that did not impair his or her ability to drive.
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