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Law.com

Attorney Pleads Not Guilty to Criminal Charges

Bankruptcy attorney's criminal lawyer dubs indictment "absurd."
3 minute read

National Law Journal

The Morning Wrap

A round-up of legal news from ALM affiliated publications and news outlets around the country: Credit Suisse's chief executive hits back; regulators eye Bitcoin; Pfizer legal department shake-up continues.
2 minute read

New York Law Journal

Thompson v. City of New York

DNA Linking Rights Claimant to Apartment's Burglary Provided Probable Cause for Arrest
2 minute read

New York Law Journal

Finding Driveway Part of Home, Court Kills Case

After scrutinizing the layout of a home and its surroundings, a Brooklyn appellate court has suppressed evidence of a gun and marijuana that a detective found when happening upon a car parked in a driveway.
2 minute read

The Recorder

Hilton v. Superior Court (People)

By | February 26, 2014
3 minute read

The Recorder

People v. Harris

By | February 26, 2014
3 minute read

The Recorder

United States v. Apel

By | February 26, 2014
4 minute read

Delaware Law Weekly

Biden Asks JFC to Increase Child Predator Task Force Allocation

Attorney General Beau Biden asked the Joint Finance Committee to increase funding for the Child Predator Task Force, a unit that investigates online child exploitation. Biden told the committee that such funding was critical to help combat crimes against children.
3 minute read

New York Law Journal

Slay Verdict Survives Use of PowerPoint by Prosecutor

The Court of Appeals Tuesday upheld a woman's conviction for smothering her stepdaughter over the stringent objections of two dissenters who said the prosecution's PowerPoint presentation to the jury was "flagrantly inappropriate" and prejudicial to the defendant.
8 minute read

New York Law Journal

'Brady'-Based Section 1983 Claims After Guilty Plea

In their Second Circuit Review, Paul Weiss members Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp discuss 'Poventud v. City of New York,' in which the court, sitting en banc, considered whether a plaintiff whose initial conviction was tainted by disclosure violations under 'Brady v. Maryland' could pursue a 42 U.S.C. §1983 claim despite having pleaded guilty to lesser offenses in a second trial.
11 minute read

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