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New Jersey Law Journal

State v. Cole

Admission of Video of Defendant Alone in Interrogation Room, Without Limiting Instruction, Not Plain Error
3 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

State v. Tringali

State Had Jurisdiction for Out-of-State Computer Crimes Where Purpose and Result of Activity Was to Harm In-State Entity
3 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

State v. Scott

Admission of Prior Bad Acts Evidence to Establish Witness' Bias Erroneous and Harmful Where Testimony Central to Defense
3 minute read

Daily Business Review

Governor Schedules Execution of Asay, First in 18 Months

Signaling a potential end to an 18-month hiatus for the state's embattled death penalty, Gov. Rick Scott rescheduled the execution date of convicted killer Mark James Asay for Aug. 27.
5 minute read

The Recorder

United States v. Ochoa

9th Cir.; 15-10354 The court of appeals reversed a judgment of conviction. The court held that the defendant’s prior conviction for conspiracy…
2 minute read

The Recorder

United States v. Zapien

9th Cir.; 14-10224 The court of appeals affirmed a judgment of conviction. The court held that biographical questions posed to a suspect in custody did…
3 minute read

The Recorder

People v. Resendez

C.A. 2nd; B269608 The Second Appellate District affirmed a judgment. The court held that the evidence presented at trial clearly established the requisite…
3 minute read

The Recorder

Godoy v. Spearman

9th Cir.; 13-56024 The court of appeals reversed a district court judgment denying a petition for writ of habeas corpus. The court held that the state…
6 minute read

The Recorder

In re I.F.

C.A. 1st; A146979 The First Appellate District reversed juvenile court orders and remanded. The court held that the juvenile court, in deciding petitions…
5 minute read

New York Law Journal

DOJ's Increasing Involvement in Internal Investigations

In his Corporate Crime column, William F. Johnson writes: Corporations and individuals cooperating in government investigations must be sharply focused on finding out the essential facts of the historical conduct at issue—what happened and why it happened. For its part, the government is also sharply focused on what happened and why. In the last few years, however, the interest of the DOJ, in particular, has expanded beyond just the what and why and it is now significantly involved in how companies actually conduct internal investigations.
16 minute read

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