New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Timothy Capowski, Jack Watkins, Sofya Uvaydov and Chris Theobalt | October 20, 2023
Publicity attacks carry far more weight than mere press conference allegations. This article offers proposals for initial steps toward cleaning up and eliminating the pleading-to-press, ("P2P") trend in litigation.
By Amanda Bronstad | Ross Todd | Ellen Bardash | October 19, 2023
At a Sept. 6 status hearing, lawyers on both sides of the talcum powder lawsuits against Johnson & Johnson debated the impact of the upcoming amendments to Federal Rule 702 of Evidence.
By ALM Staff | October 4, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
By Michael J. Hutter | October 4, 2023
The past judicial year produced numerous decisions resolving evidentiary disputes. While it is not feasible to discuss all of them, it is worthwhile to focus on several decisions that all practitioners should note and keep in their evidence toolkit, along with the "Guide to New York Evidence."
By Emily Saul | September 25, 2023
In a first-of-its-kind ruling for New York State that has already been cited by another judge, Acting Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Danny Chun found LCN and FST technologies meet the Frye standard and can be admitted at trial.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Sharon L. McCarthy and Daniel Cady Davidson | September 15, 2023
Since the Georgia elections case and the Trump classified documents case, the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege has become an issue. This article poses the question whether there is actually an erosion of the attorney-client privilege because of these recent cases.
By Brian Lee | September 14, 2023
The Appellate Division, Third Department reversed a decision to grant a subpoena against a reporter covering a murder investigation.
By Jimmy Hoover | September 7, 2023
Among the courts that have opined on cellphone searches is U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff of the Southern District of New York, who held that "phone searches at the border generally require warrants outside exigent circumstances."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Andrea M. Alonso and Kevin G. Faley | August 21, 2023
This article discusses the courts' increasing reliance on video surveillance for deciding motions, especially for those where the emergency doctrine was raised, and details several cases where video surveillance was used as key evidence.
By ALM Staff | August 9, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
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