By Brian Lee | November 28, 2023
The plaintiffs' revocation of the state lawsuit would allow New York to open more than 400 storefronts to provisional licensees with past marijuana convictions, after the August lawsuit ground the industry to a halt for more than three months.
By Brian Lee | November 27, 2023
The 4-3 majority opinion in People v. (Lance) Rodriguez by Judge Jenny Rivera overturned a gun conviction, suppressed the loaded weapon and held New York City police violated both the federal and state constitutions when it stopped the cyclist in 2014.
By Brian Lee | November 27, 2023
The judge is the first person of Dominican descent to preside over the appellate bench.
By Emily Saul | November 22, 2023
The threats were made public in an affidavit filed Wednesday as part of ongoing litigation involving a limited gag order Engoron issued regarding comments by defendants in the case about his staff.
By Brian Lee | November 22, 2023
Dissenting judges, however, called the high court's ruling a "degradation of the protections afforded" by the law.
By Emily Saul | November 21, 2023
Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals Rowan Wilson addressed the crowd, who gathered at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian for NYSTLA's Fall Judicial Gala.
New York Law Journal | In Brief
By Patricia Kane | November 20, 2023
The oral arguments will be heard by a historic bench consisting of all First Department Justices of Color elected in the Bronx.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Katryna L. Kristoferson and David Paul Horowitz | November 20, 2023
Does anyone doubt the existence of bias? Likely not, but recognizing bias is not always easy. When overt, it is hard to miss. When covert, it can be difficult, if not impossible, to discern. Yet there are many cleverly designed, scientifically sound studies that can reveal the existence of bias, even when the subject consciously or unconsciously attempts to prevent its revelation.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Joseph W. Bellacosa | November 16, 2023
The better policy of wait-and-see, with diligent continuing deliberations among the permanent members, is a virtue well worth practicing because it affords the opportunity to pursue common-ground solutions inter sese for the decisions where recusals or absences occur, and the few where a vouch-in is unavoidably needed.
By Brian Lee | November 15, 2023
Will Hochul's move—to have her appointees to the compensation commission push for a raise—open the door for a long-awaited salary bump?
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