By Avalon Zoppo | March 13, 2024
Some attorneys expect work-life balance benefits while others aren't quite sold on the earlier deadline but are getting used to it.
By Ellen Bardash | November 15, 2023
The charges brought against McGuiness centered on her hiring her daughter and structuring payments to a contractor in a way that avoided financial oversight.
By Avalon Zoppo | June 13, 2022
A 2013 amendment to a federal cyberstalking law was at the heart of the appeal.
By Avalon Zoppo | November 9, 2021
Judge Stephanos Bibas wrote a concurrence last year saying courts shouldn't automatically defer to U.S. Sentencing Commission commentary when sentencing guidelines are ambiguous and that the "rule of lenity" should be applied. On Monday, after the case took a trip to the U.S. Supreme Court, five more judges joined Bibas' opinion.
By Ellen Bardash | September 17, 2021
Cannabis law reform advocates said the decision was likely the first from any state's supreme court to weigh in on whether the smell of marijuana alone can justify a warrantless arrest for possession.
By Ellen Bardash | September 10, 2021
In a reversal of a Superior Court decision, the panel ruled that the mandatory minimum sentence for a person with two prior felony convictions can't be enforced once one of those offenses is no longer considered a violent crime.
By Aleeza Furman | July 12, 2021
The executives were found guilty of failing to report the amount of Wilmington Trust's toxic and past-due loans, but the Third Circuit reversed those convictions and vacated fraud convictions.
By Ellen Bardash | January 14, 2021
The panel found the federal government's regulations for reporting past-due loans were too ambiguous for a single interpretation to prove the way the executives falsely reported the loans a decade ago.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | December 15, 2020
A man sent to prison for robbery successfully appealed his conviction, arguing that fingerprint evidence alone was not enough to prove that he committed the crime.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | May 23, 2019
The Commonwealth Court has ruled that a man pardoned by the governor of Delaware for a 20-year-old drug conviction in that state has the right to carry firearms in Pennsylvania.
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