By Avalon Zoppo | April 10, 2024
The panel will also examine how U.S. district courts respond to the suggestion that they randomly assign among all judges in a district any lawsuit where a plaintiff seeks national relief.
By Allison Dunn | April 10, 2024
"Why did you extend all this legal work to the financial detriment of your client?" Ohio Justice Melody J. Stewart asked.
By Emily Saul | April 10, 2024
The sentence followed a plea deal with the Manhattan District Attorney's Office.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | April 10, 2024
The question of when it is and when it is not ok to share case information has raised a firestorm in the national lawyer ethics bar.
By ALM Staff | April 10, 2024
"I believe that an effective leader is someone who has the ability to shape the culture of a team and a firm in a positive way."
By Greg Moreman | April 10, 2024
GAI platforms like ChatGPT and OpenAI often require very little human input, shattering this legal landscape's framework by posing a simple question: Who authored the material? We'll explore how two countries are answering this question in different ways.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Adam Finkel and Madeline Yedo | April 10, 2024
The high incidence of sexual assaults onboard cruise ships, especially as compared to other vacation sites, such as hotels, is clear evidence that cruise ships uniquely provide an environment that contributes to these attacks.
By Michelle Kao and Nate Garhart | April 10, 2024
The court's ruling in California Privacy Protection Agency v. The Superior Court of Sacramento County overturned the lower court's June 2023 decision to temporarily strip the CPPA of its enforcement capabilities, thereby enabling the CPPA to immediately resume enforcement activities and, further, impacting future CPPA rulemaking and enforcement practices.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | April 10, 2024
Polling places are historically protected sensitive places where laws forbidding guns remain presumptively lawful.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Alan Nochumson and Alex Hamilton | April 10, 2024
In a recently published opinion, the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court in RDM Group v. Pittston Township Zoning Hearing Board found that a local zoning hearing board and the corresponding trial court abused its discretion by failing to properly evaluate the merits of zoning variance requests of a property owner that sought to build a warehouse in Pittstown Township.
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