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New Law Approves Increase in Attorney Fee Cap for Workers' Comp Cases, Reflecting 25% Limit
"We are committed to protecting New Jersey's workers and ensuring fair wages," said New Jersey Senate President Nicholas P. Scutari, who served as the acting governor during Gov. Phil Murphy's absence this week. "Today's legislation makes a meaningful adjustment to the contingency attorney fee cap, ensuring fair compensation for attorneys and providing workers with the accessible, quality legal representation they deserve."9th Circuit Split Over 'Loper Bright' Impact on Challenge to Sentencing Guideline in Gun Case
"[T]he majority is mistaken to brush 'Loper Bright' aside and treat it as irrelevant to the interpretation of regulatory language," Judge Carlos Bea wrote in a concurrence.Spun Off From Deloitte, Moonlit Launches Legal Research Platform for EU Case Law
Developed internally by the artificial intelligence lead at Deloitte Netherlands, Moonlit looks to help users track, compare and contrast the interpretation of EU directives across individual member states.How Chris Morvillo Viewed the 'Thrilling' Acquittal of Client Mike Lynch
After the acquittal, Morvillo took to LinkedIn for the first time in his life.View more book results for the query "*"
SEC, Richard Heart Clash in Dueling Motions Over $1 Billion Unregistered Securities Litigation
"This case will go down in history as one of those cases that nobody saw coming, and it is very important," said Ishmael Green, a partner at Diaz, Reus & Targ who is not involved in the matter.'Plausible' Monopoly Allegations?: DC Appeals Court Revives Amazon Antitrust Complaint
"Viewed as a whole, the District's allegations about Amazon's market share and maintenance of its market power through the challenged agreements plausibly suggest that Amazon either already possesses monopoly power over online marketplaces or is close to a 'dangerous probability of achieving monopoly power,'" D.C. Court of Appeals Judge Corinne Beckwith wrote.'A Confounding Record' Results in Sanctions for Discovery Violations in NJ Fed Court
"The allegations present about as straightforward a breach of contract action as one could imagine: alleged duty, breach, and damages between two parties," U.S. Magistrate Judge Cathy Waldor said. "It is therefore surprising that this case is still active over six years after the filing of the complaint."State-Based Assault Weapons Bans: There's Room for Hope
Given courts' propensity to entertain these suits, it sometimes feels as if Justice Scalia's oft-cited caveat in Heller—that the Second Amendment "is not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose"—has been reduced to dicta.Justice Alan B. Handler, a Transformative Presence for New Jersey Courts
We mourn the recent passing of Justice Alan B. Handler, who served on the New Jersey Supreme Court from 1977 to 1999 and whose impact as a scholar and author was monumental.Trending Stories
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