By Jenna Greene | October 25, 2018
Editing is hard, but there's no way a court of appeals wants to read a 17,258-word brief about a prisoner and his kidney stones.
By Dan M. Clark | October 9, 2018
A group of law professors who argued two decades ago that former President Bill Clinton should not be immune to a civil lawsuit in federal court are now asking to make the same argument against President Donald Trump in New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood's lawsuit against the Trump Foundation.
By Jenna Greene | September 19, 2018
My pet peeve is that courts are far too willing to seal documents or dockets--but a judge in Maryland took a strong stand for transparency in a case involving a real estate nightmare.
By Andrew Denney | September 17, 2018
President Donald Trump is pushing back against an effort by a woman suing him for defamation for the president to produce information about other women who have accused him of sexual harassment, deriding it as a means to harass and distract him from his official duties.
By Mike Scarcella | September 13, 2018
U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions: "This kind of judicial activism did not happen a single time in our first 175 years as a nation, but it has become common in recent years. It has happened to the Trump administration 25 times in less than two years."
Litigation Daily | Expert Opinion
By Myron Moskovitz | September 13, 2018
Recently, I was brought in by an appellant's attorney to review his draft opening brief. I noticed that the precise language of a settlement agreement would play a very important role in how the appellate court decided the case.
By Jenna Greene | August 20, 2018
Thirty hours is an awfully long time for White House Counsel Donald McGahn to be interviewed by Robert Mueller III's team and not reveal anything—intentionally or not—that could damage Donald Trump.
By Mike Scarcella | August 14, 2018
The Manafort judge's interventionist style prompted discussions in legal circles and on cable talk shows about whether he had gone too far, with some observers arguing the judge's hands-on approach and regular rebukes against prosecutors would have been fodder for a mistrial if the defense had been on the receiving end.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | June 27, 2018
What began with a fatal explosion inside a North Philadelphia food truck has ended with a resolution that several attorneys involved called the largest global pretrial personal injury settlement in Pennsylvania history.
By Greg Land | June 25, 2018
Fulton County Superior Court Chief Judge Robert McBurney commiserated with the plaintiffs, whose child suffers from "actual, present struggles," but said Georgia law currently does not allow such claims.
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