By Peter Strozniak | April 20, 2022
Ash, the former board chair for New York City's Municipal Credit Union, was convicted of obstructing a federal investigation.
By ALM Staff | April 19, 2022
The ruling and a summary by the Law Journal's decisions editors can be found here.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Linton Mann III and William T. Russell Jr. | April 19, 2022
In 'Ferreira v. City of Binghamton', the New York Court of Appeals answered a certified question from the Second Circuit concerning the showing that a plaintiff must make in order to hold a municipality liable when its police force negligently plans and executes a no-knock search warrant.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood | April 18, 2022
In this edition of their Southern District Civil Practice Roundup, Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood analyze the holding in 'United States v. Ray', in which Judge Liman recently addressed the application of the psychotherapist privilege to nonverbal communications. Although 'Ray' is a criminal case, its holdings apply equally to civil actions.
By Jane Wester | April 18, 2022
Berke, chair of litigation for Kramer Levin, and James, co-chair of white-collar defense and investigations for the firm, replace James Gatta and William Harrington of Goodwin Procter, who filed a motion to withdraw.
By Jane Wester | April 14, 2022
Barrack's lead counsel told a judge that the firm is handling 'two small matters' for DigitalBridge, the real estate investment firm Barrack founded and ran under the name Colony Capital.
By Jane Wester | April 14, 2022
Unit Chief Terri Rosenblatt reports directly to DA Alvin Bragg, partly as a way to ensure that the unit's work is separate from anyone who may have been involved in the original case.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Lawrence Hsieh | April 14, 2022
Paired with bail policies that make all violent crimes bail eligible, reforming substantive criminal law to rightsize the scope of felonious assaults may help to alleviate these concerns by making dangerousness standards superfluous.
By Andrew Denney | April 13, 2022
The 25-year-old defendant is accused of killing Jim Li, who was a key figure in the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests in Beijing, after he refused to take her asylum case.
By Brian Lee | April 13, 2022
The criminal case—and Benjamin's subsequent resignation—creates a knotty political problem since he remains on the June 28 primary ballot as a candidate for lieutenant governor.
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