By Josefa Velasquez | September 6, 2017
Chief Judge Janet DiFiore has announced the formation of a task force to help Hurricane Harvey victims in Texas and assist Houston-area courts in their recovery.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | September 6, 2017
Approximately 235 applicants for the bar will be interviewed by the Committee on Character and Fitness of the Appellate Division, First Department, on Tuesday, September 12.
By Marcia Coyle | September 6, 2017
The federal judiciary's fee-based access to its public online database, known as PACER, is not just anachronistic and counter to history but harms the structural integrity of the modern judiciary, a new research article claims.
By Samantha Joseph | September 6, 2017
State courts in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties will be closed Sept. 11 due to Hurricane Irma.
By Samantha Joseph | September 5, 2017
State courts in Miami-Dade and Monroe counties and the St. Thomas University law school announce closures as Hurricane Irma barrels toward the region.
By Greg Land | September 1, 2017
The court's Ordinance Division will convene the special hearings once a month to address "abandoned, dilapidated and burned-out properties" that have been cited multiple times without any corrective measures being taken.
By David B. Saxe | August 30, 2017
Despite the separation of time and space, these slower days of August prompt me to think about what must be going on at the Appellate Division courthouse as preparations for a new year begin.
By Andrew Denney | August 28, 2017
Court officials are taking a deeper look at the conduct of former communications director David Bookstaver, who was fired on Aug. 17 after inadvertently dialing a New York Post reporter and admitting he hasn't been showing up for work, for possible criminal charges, according to a statement of the New York courts' inspector general.
By Cheryl Miller | August 28, 2017
As California lawmakers moved Monday to shield the immigration statuses of litigants and witnesses in open court, debate continued to swirl over President Donald Trump's pardon of former Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio. Several former federal judges offered their thoughts on the president's grant of clemency.
By Angela Morris | August 28, 2017
Federal and state courts along the Texas Gulf Coast have closed their doors and suspended all operations, grinding to a near halt one of the busiest jurisdictions in the country.
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