By Andrew Denney | March 14, 2024
Marie Mark's appointment as head of the Immigrant Defense Project comes as Mayor Eric Adams and other elected officials have called for law enforcement agencies to increase cooperation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials.
By Andrew Denney | March 13, 2024
Gov. Kathy Hochul is NYCLA's first honorary member since 2015, when the title was bestowed upon then-Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman.
By Marianna Wharry | March 13, 2024
Two former employees of the now-defunct news website The Messenger filed an employment action against the site's parent company and its former owner this week alleging breaches of their employment contracts and violations of labor law after the company refused to issue their pair's severance payments.
By Brian Lee | March 13, 2024
The request would increase funding for immigration counsel from $74 million to $150 million.
New York Law Journal | Photo|Slideshow
By Emily Saul | March 13, 2024
The Bronx native began working as a court officer at the age of 24, in 1962. He has a deep appreciation for the courthouse and for years has given tours to anyone from area school children to foreign dignitaries.
By Brian Lee | March 11, 2024
The requested boost, they said, is needed to provide competitive salaries in order to guarantee equal access to justice for children.
By Brian Lee | March 11, 2024
A Syracuse lawyer whose appointment to the panel was spurned by a body of law school deans is challenging the process on constitutional grounds.
By Emily Saul | March 8, 2024
A unanimous three-judge panel reinstated the charges, ruling that the indictment did sufficiently demonstrate a quid pro quo between Benjamin and his late alleged co-conspirator, the real estate developer Gerald Migdol.
By Andrew Denney | March 6, 2024
The Appellate Division, Second Department handles about two-thirds of all cases filed in the state's four midlevel appeals courts.
By Colleen Murphy | March 5, 2024
"Today, I again voiced New Jersey's concerns with [the] MTA's plans for congestion pricing in New York City," Gov. Phil Murphy said in a new release. "[The] MTA continues to cut corners on the legal and procedural requirements to establish congestion pricing in an effort to ignore the chorus of voices rising up in opposition to [the] MTA's plans. Enough is enough. It's time for [the] MTA to abandon its proposal and rethink congestion pricing in a way that makes sense."
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