By Brian Lee | April 24, 2024
The courts will have a hand in directing about a third of $33 million earmarked to treat people with mental illness who are justice-involved.
By Brian Lee | April 23, 2024
The Empire State's attorney countered by painting the New York Civil Liberties Union's request for 20 years' of state troopers' disciplinary records as "unduly burdensome," while estimating that it would take a full-time employee working on nothing else about 22 years to respond, and a part-time employee more than 40 years.
By Brian Lee | April 23, 2024
One lawyer said of lawmakers including new standards to combat discrimination in the provision of insurance to affordable housing that it's "an extremely important statement for the state of New York to be making, that we're not going to tolerate this, and I believe that we're the first in the nation to take action like that. It's 100% a national issue; not a New York State-specific issue."
By Jane Wester | April 22, 2024
The accord involved five points, including that Donald Trump's collateral would remain in cash in a money market account.
By Jane Wester | April 19, 2024
The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York consented to the one-week adjournment.
By Jane Wester | April 18, 2024
One co-defendant's waiver of their right to call another co-defendant's lawyer means that the embattled New Jersey Democrat still has a May 6 trial date.
By Jane Wester | April 17, 2024
U.S. District Judge Sidney Stein of the Southern District of New York summoned all the parties' lawyers to a conference this week after the attorneys indicated they were struggling to reach agreement on a stipulation to be signed by Hana's lead attorney Lawrence Lustberg of Gibbons PC.
By Jane Wester | April 11, 2024
Nadine Menendez's trial date would be pushed back because of her treatment for a serious medical condition, U.S. District Judge Sidney Stein decided.
By Jane Wester | April 10, 2024
Prosecutors agreed to delay trial until July or August, but are holding fast to their position that the co-defendants' matters not be severed.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Robert J. Anello and Richard F. Albert | April 10, 2024
'Fischer' presents an interesting test of whether SCOTUS will continue its "unmistakable" message that courts should not assign federal criminal statutes a potentially wide-ranging scope "when a narrower reading is reasonable." To court watchers, the odds appear to be against affirmance. The case's potential impact on the Trump prosecution makes it all the more intriguing.
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