By Ross Todd | February 8, 2021
Top judges from Nevada, Texas, Michigan and California detailed how the pandemic has forced them to make courts more accessible and service-oriented.
By Ross Todd | January 21, 2021
Pardon the allusion to Tina Turner, but two leading lights in the judicial training are making a compelling case that kindness should be a core competency of candidates for the bench.
By Jonathan Lippman | December 22, 2020
A massive $300 million budget cut to New York's court system has forced Chief Judge Janet DiFiore and state court leaders to make hard choices, including that of declining to extend the judicial service of 46 retired trial and appellate judges. I believe they chose wisely in the interest of delivering equal justice in our courts.
By Angela Morris | December 22, 2020
The judge, who is Black, will bring diversity to the court where all current jurists are white.
Litigation Daily | Quick Takes
By Ross Todd | December 21, 2020
A look back at the dozen conversations The Litigation Daily has had with trial judges this year about how they've managed their dockets during the pandemic.
By Charles Toutant | December 16, 2020
"It's their reaction to losing. How they handle that is going to make the difference," said John Muffler, a former U.S. marshal who ran the agency's National Center for Judicial Security.
By Ross Todd | December 10, 2020
"This fall we really engaged in a substantial post-pandemic planning project," said Martin Hoshino, administrative director of the state's Judicial Council, in the chief justice's annual pre-holiday roundtable with the press. "The problem is that we're having a little bit of a problem getting to the 'post-' part given what's transpiring in real time right now."
By Ross Todd | December 9, 2020
On criminal hearings via videoconference: "Sometimes I wonder and I worry whether a defendant that I just informed of his rights has a good understanding of what's going on."
Litigation Daily | Best Practices
By Ross Todd | December 3, 2020
"It's basically like your cognitive resources are a precious commodity and this is chomping away at them," said Vanderbilt Law professor Terry Maroney in her third presentation on judicial temperament at the Berkeley Judicial Institute.
By Ross Todd | November 19, 2020
"The reality is that race, unfortunately, in America still matters. I wish it were not an issue, but it is," said U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton, speaking as part of a National Judicial College panel.
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