Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Joette Katz | July 28, 2022
When sentencing convicted defendants to what probably seemed like life sentences to younger defendants, the opportunity for redemption factored prominently. The Board of Pardons and Parole helped me to sleep at night.
By Mark Dubois | July 15, 2022
An inability or unwillingness to do thorough historical analysis may open the nation's highest court to ridicule for being misinformed, or serve as a ruse to allow the court to pick and choose justifications for majority decisions.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Joette Katz | July 7, 2022
The danger may not be that more individual rights will be overturned, but that there will be more tolerance of things that interfere with or hinder access to those rights.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | June 29, 2022
The Nonhuman Rights Project has not yet been able to convince courts to extend the protection the law provides animals from paternalistic anti-cruelty statutes and regulations to legal rights protectable by judicial remedy such as habeas corpus.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Joette Katz | June 22, 2022
Gun safety provisions that apply to spouses should also apply to dating partners
Connecticut Law Tribune | Analysis
By Frank J. Silvestri, Jr. and Kristen G. Rossetti | June 10, 2022
A state's procedural rules under its own choice-of-law principles can be substantive for purposes of federal diversity jurisdiction.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | May 17, 2022
It seems that while we continue to pretend that we're all knights on white horses, immune to pain and free of doubt, many of us are willing to admit that we struggle, as do lesser mortals.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Joette Katz | May 4, 2022
Just as the United States Supreme Court is poised to issue a ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization (draft opinion just leaked),…
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | April 25, 2022
As people of limited means continue to move away from using lawyers who will carry their water in our justice system?
Connecticut Law Tribune | Analysis
By James H. Rotondo and Jason E. Rusche | April 19, 2022
The litigation privilege arises from a concern about the chilling effect of retaliatory litigation against lawyers, parties and witnesses for their statements and actions in judicial proceedings.
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