By Tony Mauro | January 30, 2018
President Donald Trump boasted Tuesday night that he has appointed “more circuit judges than any new administration in the history of our country” and called Neil Gorsuch “a great new Supreme Court justice."
By Colby Hamilton | January 30, 2018
In a sprawling hearing to address competing motions for an injunction by plaintiffs and dismissal by DOJ over the DACA wind-down, U.S. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis once again took aim at statements made by the Trump administration.
By Josefa Velasquez | January 30, 2018
At a joint legislative budget hearing on public protection, Chief Administrative Judge Lawrence Marks called the governor's proposal to require judges to certify they're at work eight hours a day in return for a bigger budget increase "unusual" and "unnecessary." Also during the hearing, Robert Tembeckjian, the administrator and counsel on the Commission of Judicial Conduct, asked the Legislature for a budget increase of $312,00.
By Cogan Schneier | January 30, 2018
If the president authorizes the release of a House memo about the FBI, some plaintiffs suing for Justice Department records could get a boost.
By Greg Land | January 30, 2018
The majority opinion said that, even though the girls child's parents paid to see the football game, the fact that she got in free means Garden City is shielded from liability for her injuries under Georgia's Recreational Property Act.
By Vivia Chen | January 30, 2018
The White House counsel has taken a page out of his boss's playbook: It's all about me.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Joe Martini, James Glasser and Judd Lindenfeld | January 30, 2018
The new FCPA policy provides the much-needed assurance that fulsome voluntary self-disclosure of FCPA violations will likely serve to avoid criminal prosecution. At the same time, the new FCPA policy signals that the government will continue to combat corporate misconduct by focusing on individual misconduct.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | January 30, 2018
The recent Connecticut Supreme Court education-funding decision is fascinating in many ways, including as a study of separation-of-power principles.
By Ben Hancock | January 30, 2018
Cardozo Law's Aaron Wright talks about the school's Blockchain Project and how technology will change the way lawyers structure commercial deals.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Larry Coben | January 30, 2018
After the Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued its decision in Tincher v. Omega Flex, the committee appointed by the court to prepare jury instructions issued “suggested standard products liability instructions” (published by the PBI) in an effort to provide guidance to the bench and bar.
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