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New York Law Journal

Bertuglia v. City of New York

Court Explains Grant of Unopposed Motion To Unseal Wiretaps for Use in Civil Rights Case
2 minute read

New York Law Journal

Rubeor v. Town of Wright

Article 78 Action May Negate Need for Decision If Town's Assessor Has Property Interest in Job
2 minute read

New York Law Journal

Stop-and-Frisk Cases to Return to Lower Court

Over the opposition of police unions, the new city administration's request for remand of stop-and-frisk litigation against the NYPD to settle the cases was granted Friday by the Second Circuit.
2 minute read

Texas Lawyer

Will the Public Ever See Randy Travis' Naked Dashcam Arrest Video?

Randy Travis has lost his bid to stop the public disclosure of dashcam video that shows him naked during his 2012 arrest for driving while intoxicated.
4 minute read

Daily Business Review

Justice Watch: Judge Zabel Perfect Fit For High-Profile Gay Marriage Ban Case

Attorneys describe Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Sarah Zabel as a hard-working and thoughtful judge—and a good fit to oversee a challenge to Florida's ban on gay marriage.
7 minute read

National Law Journal

Appeals Court Rejects Cop's Unlawful Detention Claims

A Milwaukee police officer's constitutional rights were not violated when a supervisor refused to let him leave the scene of a search even though the officer said his need to use a restroom was particularly urgent, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled.
2 minute read

The Recorder

Sheehan v. City and County of San Francisco

By | February 21, 2014
7 minute read

The American Lawyer

MoFo Takes Role in New York Deal on Solitary Confinement

Under a settlement negotiated with lawyers from the New York Civil Liberties Union and pro bono counsel at Morrison & Foerster, the New York State Corrections Department agreed this week to change the way it uses solitary confinement to punish prisoners.
4 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

N.J. Legislative Committee Advances Measure To Shield Readers' Privacy

New Jersey lawmakers took a step forward Thursday towards keeping consumers' choices of reading material away from peeping public eyes.
4 minute read

Daily Report Online

Macon U.S. Attorney Calls on Appeals Judge to Explore Black History Month

Judge Herbert Phipps, chief of the Georgia Court of Appeals, spoke to the staff of the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Georgia today in commemoration of Black History Month, telling them stories of his experiences during the civil rights struggle in the South.
3 minute read

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