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The Recorder

Chaudhry v. City of Los Angeles

7 minute read

The Recorder

Law Students Get Schooled in Mass Surveillance

IP lawyer turned civil liberties advocate Ahmed Ghappour is bringing his work in national security and technology law to UC-Hastings.
7 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

Judge Who Vacated Second Verdict in Favor of the First Is Reversed

A federal appeals court faulted a trial judge for playing musical chairs with verdicts in a multiple-trial police misconduct suit, even though he was trying to craft a creative solution.
5 minute read

New York Law Journal

Feder v. Sposato

Doctor's Prescription of Tylenol Over Morphine Did Not Rise to Deliberate Medical Indifference
2 minute read

New York Law Journal

Fedele v. Harris

Venue of Employees' Claims Against State's Tax Agency Properly Lies in Northern District
2 minute read

National Law Journal

Morning Wrap

A round-up of legal news from ALM affiliated publications and news outlets around the country: Where Idaho, Virginia and Arkansas stand after courts intervene on same-sex marriage bans and law firm Jones Day's prominence in bankruptcy cases.
1 minute read

Law.com

Circuit Upholds Polling Place Accessibility Order

A federal appeals panel has upheld an order requiring New York City's Board of Elections to enact a "comprehensive remedial plan" to make its polling places accessible to people with disabilities.
4 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

Public Documents Can't Be Redacted For Irrelevance, N.J. Court Rules

State officials responding to public records requests cannot excise information they deem out of bounds, a New Jersey appeals court holds.
5 minute read

Daily Report Online

Judge Michael Boggs Endures Grilling at Senate Judiciary Panel

Georgia Court of Appeals Judge Michael Boggs became the unwilling star of Tuesday's Senate confirmation hearing for Georgia's seven federal judicial nominees as he publicly disavowed his most conservative—and controversial—stances as a Georgia legislator.
9 minute read

New York Law Journal

Intervention is Denied Where Interest 'Remote'

Michael Trimarco, a former officer of patent holding company Data Treasury Corp., cannot intervene in a lawsuit against Data Treasury and Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice over an alleged "pay to prosecute" scheme.
2 minute read

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