By Colby Hamilton | April 19, 2018
Days after appearing in federal court over material seized in a federal raid, Cohen's attorney confirmed he's dropping suits in state and federal court against Buzzfeed, which published the dossier, and the political research group that commissioned it, Fusion GPS.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Terry Mutchler | April 19, 2018
Transparency Law, a specialized practice designed to pry open government records, wasn't a coined phrase until recent years. But despite the newness of those words, the Founding Fathers knew all too well the concept—and frustrations—of attempting to access public records from government. They even wrote about it right here in Philadelphia in the 1700s.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News|Update
By Robert Storace | April 16, 2018
Thomas Ullmann died Friday, April13, from a fall while hiking the Adirondack Mountains in New York.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Analysis
By Ron Houde | April 13, 2018
Governmental immunity is alive and well on Connecticut school grounds this year.
By Cheryl Miller | April 10, 2018
"The public has a right to know how the judicial branch spends taxpayer funds," Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye said Tuesday.
By Greg Land | April 5, 2018
The city of Decatur, which is the target of a complaint filed by Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, claims the board set up to handle complaints is a repeat violator of the Open Records and Open Meetings acts.
By Mike Scarcella | April 4, 2018
"The public interest in disclosure of the information outweighs the weak privacy interests at issue," U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras said in his ruling.
By Mike Scarcella | March 31, 2018
"The court rejects the parties' polar opposite views of the statute, and finds the defendant liable for certain costs that post-date the passage of the E-Government Act, even though these expenses involve dissemination of information via the Internet," Huvelle wrote.
By C. Ryan Barber | March 30, 2018
Here's a snapshot of some of what the financial industry has told the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau about its civil investigative demands, long a target of criticism.
By Michael Booth | March 29, 2018
New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal on Thursday filed Freedom of Information Act requests with the federal government following the Trump administration's announcement that it would be transferring the provision of medical services to 9/11 responders away from the World Trade Center Health Program.
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