New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | October 27, 2019
No reasonable judicial system can tolerate the results of a trial by a judge who has been outed publicly as a raving anti-Semite and a virulent bigot.
By Dan Clark | October 25, 2019
Gene Levoff, 45, accused of insider trading, faces charges of securities fraud and wire fraud and a maximum of 20 years in prison.
By Charles Toutant | October 24, 2019
The objectivity of the proceedings were in doubt because the judge who accused the lawyer of contempt prosecuted the matter and presided over the hearing, the appeals court said.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Suzette Parmley | October 23, 2019
Within hours of pleading guilty to wire fraud, Mayor Frank M. Gilliam Jr. was served with a forfeiture order from the state. Since April 2013, roughly 56 public officials have been convicted in federal court for crimes related to their offices, triggering the New Jersey Forfeiture of Public Office statute.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Suzette Parmley | October 23, 2019
Each entry (culled from a list provided by the New Jersey Attorney General's Office) includes the name, date of conviction, date that the forfeiture order was signed, and a brief description of the charges.
By Suzette Parmley | October 23, 2019
The defendant used her position to issue fraudulent checks to herself or forged the signature of her manager on company checks, which she would later cash, prosecutors said.
By Suzette Parmley | October 22, 2019
U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito announced Tuesday that a Morris County man pleaded guilty to his role in a computer-hacking scheme that targeted two companies in New Jersey and stole employee and company data from both.
By Suzette Parmley | October 21, 2019
James Pfeiffer, a former state Superior Court judge and longtime private practitioner handling defense and municipal work, replaces Richard Burke, the Warren County prosecutor since March 2012.
By Suzette Parmley | October 16, 2019
"Watching pornography in public serves no legitimate purpose. ... [and] doing so with one's window's down, and at a restaurant's busy parking lot in full view of families, recklessly exposed pornography to young children," the Appellate Division ruled.
By Tom McParland | October 8, 2019
The ruling came as the latest development in the winding, decade-long saga of Sergey Aleynikov, a former Goldman Sachs computer programmer accused of stealing the bank's high-frequency trading code.
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