By The New Jersey Law Journal | April 26, 2024
SCOTUS and many others have debated for years how long affirmative action can be justified. What is the end point? We do not have an answer either, but we believe the end point is emphatically not now.
By The New Jersey Law Journal | April 26, 2024
We have advocated for cameras in courtrooms in many editorials over many years. That need has now become urgent.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | April 19, 2024
A fictitious pricing claim is not about actual value, it is about what the retailer represented the value to be to induce the purchase.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | April 19, 2024
The danger to Apple's future success comes from the DOJ's challenge to Apple's business model: something called the "walled garden" of software features in which Apple products exist but from which others allegedly are excluded.
By Nicholas Caruso | April 17, 2024
Although emails and remote communications have lessened pressures and the burdens of travel, sterility and alienation are leading us to a new norm.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | April 12, 2024
Slandered with the tar brush of association with causes he opposes, his nomination regrettably appears to be doomed.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | April 5, 2024
There is no reason to treat out-of-state attorneys differently than in-state attorneys if we want only the more qualified attorneys to receive referrals in specialized areas of work.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | April 5, 2024
We urge lawyers who have not "surfed" the judicial website to do so and attorneys who use it regularly to explore the portions they have not yet seen.
By Christopher M. Placitella | April 2, 2024
The path forward must involve a concerted effort to reinforce OPRA's foundations, ensuring that the act is a bulwark against the erosion of transparency.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | March 29, 2024
Often an opinion serves as an important reminder to litigants, their counsel and even lower courts, of important principles that must be honored for the case to proceed. FBI v. Fikre is such a case.
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