New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | May 25, 2018
This is how law and social science are meant to intersect. The case reminds us that, as our knowledge of human behavior evolves, our approach to legal issues will evolve as well.
By Charles Toutant | May 18, 2018
The case stems from the December 2015 death of a 5-month-old boy at the defendant's home day care business.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Edward M. Neafsey | May 14, 2018
OP-ED: Veterans arrested for certain crimes can be diverted from the criminal justice system for appropriate case management and mental health services.
By Charles Toutant | May 11, 2018
Alleged misconduct by a New Jersey crime lab technician has prompted charges against 1,160 criminal defendants to be marked for dismissal because purported drug evidence in those cases was destroyed, according to a judge supervising cases impacted by the lab's problems.
By Marcia Coyle | May 11, 2018
A "spoofing" challenge under Dodd-Frank. GM fights a damages-only retrial. Guns are back. These are some of the cases and issues we're watching for any action at the Supreme Court from its latest conference.
By Colby Hamilton | May 8, 2018
Defense attorneys outlined the various misdemeanor and felony charges Schneiderman could be exposed to—if someone were to press charges.
By Charles Toutant | May 8, 2018
The Supreme Court will have the final say, but the 218-page report by retired Appellate Division Judge Joseph Lisa, the product of a month of hearings with six expert witnesses, is expected to carry a lot of weight.
By Charles Toutant | May 4, 2018
The study was prompted by the discovery that a state police sergeant performed calibrations of Alcotest devices over the course of seven years with a thermometer that was not the NIST-traceable type specified in "State v. Chun."
By Andrew Denney | May 3, 2018
Sergey Aleynikov's loss at the Court of Appeals is the latest development in a legal odyssey that began in 2009, when the computer engineer left Goldman Sachs to work for a startup that offered to triple Aleynikov's salary at Goldman to $1.2 million.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Edward S. Kahn | April 30, 2018
OP-ED: I am dismayed at the lack of respect for individual rights in the dispensing of justice displayed in the recent decision of "State v. Zalcberg."
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