By Ellen Bardash | October 29, 2020
A legal data expert who has been tracking case causes in the Court of Chancery throughout the pandemic, said the year-over-year increase in filings can definitely be attributed to COVID-19.
By Vanessa Blum | Ross Todd | October 23, 2020
Fresh off a $650 million privacy settlement with Facebook, Chicago plaintiffs lawyer Jay Edelson says his firm is coping with pandemic malaise by "jumping into huge issues that really matter to people."
By Ellen Bardash | October 23, 2020
In Kent County, only one courtroom has been identified as large enough to hold a jury trial while allowing for social distancing measures to be taken.
By Ellen Bardash | October 5, 2020
Had state officials taken earlier efforts to quarantine inmates and provide them with face masks, the deaths of 12 inmates and 1 in 3 people at the Georgetown facility testing positive for the virus might have been avoided, plaintiffs said.
By Ellen Bardash | October 2, 2020
Chief Justice Collins J. Seitz Jr.'s Friday order to enter the second-to-last phase of the plan also extended the judicial state of emergency for a seventh time, through Nov. 4.
By Ellen Bardash | September 8, 2020
The League of Women Voters' complaint asks for a Chancery Court order that ballots postmarked on or before Nov. 3 be counted if they're received before Nov. 13, 10 days after Election Day.
By Ellen Bardash | September 4, 2020
The specific plan for holding jury trials beginning in October was developed by five subcommittees formed by the Courts Reopening Committee, each of which studied a stage of jury selection and presented their findings Aug. 25.
By Ellen Bardash | September 1, 2020
At the heart of the lawsuit is a claim different groups of students will get differing amounts of time with their teachers.
By Ellen Bardash | August 20, 2020
Amid the pandemic, the majority of states have made some accommodations to allow people to vote by mail in some capacity, and Delaware is not the only state to see pushback.
By Ellen Bardash | August 12, 2020
The court's limited practice privilege order follows its cancellation of the state's bar exam as a precaution against the spread of COVID-19, and those who planned to take the exam this year can apply to the Board of Bar Examiners to begin their legal careers prior to the 2021 testing date.
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