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By Avalon Zoppo | April 17, 2024
Sen. Mike Lee of Utah and his GOP colleagues on the Senate Judiciary Committee raised a case Kevin Gafford Ritz handled in which a public defender accused the then-assistant U.S. attorney of making misrepresentations to a defense attorney to elicit a guilty plea.
4 minute read
By Michael A. Mora | April 16, 2024
The finalists were largely comprised of prosecutors and public defenders, continuing a trend seen in nominations to Florida state courts.
3 minute read
By Cedra Mayfield | April 15, 2024
In addition to detailing how each contender would diminish the Douglas Judicial Circuit's backlogged cases, the trio provided individual insight on their views about alternative and innovative sentencing, jury nullification and judicial misconduct.
6 minute read
By Mason Lawlor | April 12, 2024
The decision is a "huge step" toward vindicating a man convicted and sentenced despite no physical evidence linking him to crimes, the Georgia Innocence Project said.
4 minute read
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Ellen Bardash | April 12, 2024
Carey was hailed as "one of the best bankruptcy judges in the history of the profession."
2 minute read
By Ellen Bardash | April 12, 2024
Carey was hailed as "one of the best bankruptcy judges in the history of the profession."
2 minute read
By Riley Brennan | April 12, 2024
The high court determined that Judge Robert P. Ruehlman, a retired judge sitting by assignment on the Jackson County Court of Common Pleas, General and Domestic Relations Division, was disqualified from presiding over "Jackson v. Ward," concluding that an objective observer would conclude that he was prejudiced against the litigant.
4 minute read
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.
3 minute read
By Alex Anteau | April 11, 2024
According to the defendant-appellees, if the intermediate court sides with the appellants, it "would throw the Workers' Compensation Board into chaos."
5 minute read
By Andrew Denney | April 11, 2024
Commercial Division was already hearing tech cases, and that litigants have long been allowed to have court-appointed referees preside over their commercial disputes, prior to the chief administrative judge's order. But the court's advisory council recommended adding specific language to its rules to better educate the bar on the court's offerings.
2 minute read
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