By Angela Morris | April 9, 2019
Harris County Civil Court-at-Law No. 4 Judge William “Bill” McLeod is off the bench, after accidentally resigning by declaring his interest in running for the Texas Supreme Court. His replacement is Lesley Briones, a 2007 Yale Law School graduate formerly of Vinson & Elkins.
By Colby Hamilton | March 26, 2019
The government sought to make distinctions between Trump's official and private actions on Twitter, while the blocked Twitter users argued the fine lines were obliterated when the President blocked them over their policy viewpoints.
By R. Robin McDonald | March 12, 2019
The Supreme Court of Georgia said police and prosecutors waited too long to obtain search warrants for data on electronic devices they had held in custody for more than a year.
By Vanessa Blum | March 7, 2019
USC law professor Orin Kerr says the Supreme Court's 2018 decision in Carpenter v. U.S. raises more questions than it answers.
By Vanessa Blum | February 14, 2019
A Q&A with Marcia Hofmann of Zeitgeist Law on Fourth Amendment protections, insurance considerations and other legal questions that arise when companies control genetic data.
By Charles Toutant | February 14, 2019
Grewal's office said in a letter, which was made public on Wednesday, that the alleged takedown letter 'appears to have been issued by some entity impersonating the Attorney General's office.'
By Jason Grant | January 15, 2019
“Terrorism-related concerns cannot be used to justify the use of a Glomar response in every FOIL context,” Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arlene Bluth wrote in her decision. She said that “the petitioners here are protestors, engaging in First-Amendment protected activity."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Ellen Murphy, Scott Morvillo, Wendy Butler Curtis and Kelly Cullen | January 14, 2019
While Technology Assisted Review is a common and beneficial tool in civil litigations, it is improper and potentially unconstitutional as the sole arbiter for privilege review in criminal cases, particularly if required by courts.
By John Council | December 5, 2018
After the plaintiff and defendant exchanged several profanity-laced emails, a Texas lawyer has decided to dismiss his $100 million defamation suit against an online critic.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Jonathan Bick | November 30, 2018
Internet reputation repair law results in protecting keywords, ameliorating adverse search engine results, and decreasing the likelihood of adverse content becoming ranked.
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