Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Allison Dunn | April 4, 2023
The Connecticut Appellate Court upheld an administrative appeal concluding that the Yale University Police Department properly denied a student's request to access certain body camera recordings created when officers were responding to "an uncorroborated allegation of a crime."
By Emily Saul | April 3, 2023
"This is not a guy who's an attention grabber, the kind of guy who's looking to be the face of anything," a former colleague said. "He's just interested in doing his job and doing it well and ruling on facts, not fiction."
By Ellen Bardash | March 31, 2023
The opinion marks another rarity among defamation cases against media entities, the large majority of which are decided in the defendant's favor well before a trial begins.
By Emily Saul | March 30, 2023
The charges on which the former president was indicted were not immediately clear, though the grand jury has been hearing evidence relating to hush-money payments made in 2016 during his first run for president.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | March 23, 2023
The litigation involved Connecticut and the alleged negligence of the Department of Children and Families.
By Emily Saul | March 23, 2023
A letter from the Manhattan DA's office to House Republicans called the request "unprecedented" and lacking in Congressional jurisdiction.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | March 9, 2023
"I am overwhelmed with gratitude that Gov. Lamont and his team have asked me to serve in this very important role as the claims commissioner," Robert F. Shea Jr. said. "I will work very hard to do this important responsibility."
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | March 7, 2023
"We think that prison debt laws across the board, particularly the amount Connecticut collects and the way in which it collects it, [are] unconstitutional," Elana Spungen Bildner of the ACLU Foundation of Connecticut said. "We're committed to sticking around for this fight for however long it takes."
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | March 6, 2023
"Where feasible, states should automatically reinstate coverage for individuals terminated after March 18, 2020 and should suspend any terminations already scheduled to occur during the emergency period," Chief U.S. District Judge Michael P. Shea said. "Coverage should be reinstated back to the date of termination."
By Allison Dunn | February 9, 2023
Finding courts in the First Circuit have yet to address the framework for determining whether online terms were sufficiently disclosed to provide a consent defense to a Telephone Consumer Protection Act, the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts relied on recent Ninth Circuit case law in allowing a putative class action to proceed.
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