By Dan M. Clark | July 18, 2019
The website, designed to connect crime victims with eight major categories of civil legal services, has expanded to offer services for residents in 26 counties.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Evan T. Barr | June 24, 2019
Should fingerprints and facial recognition be treated more like passcodes and passwords in the smartphone context? Two recent cases reflect a split of authority on that question.
By Angela Morris | June 24, 2019
Steve Pursley originally alleged that the government told a court reporter to make changes in the transcript without telling defense counsel or the court, but his attorney later found the transcript in her spam folder.
By Terry Spencer | June 20, 2019
The Riviera Beach City Council voted unanimously this week to pay the hackers' demands, the latest in thousands of attacks worldwide aimed at extorting money from governments and businesses.
By Victoria Hudgins | June 19, 2019
Algorithms are coming to the San Francisco District Attorney's Office. In a bid to combat implicit bias, artificial intelligence-backed software will redact race information from police incident reports before prosecutors make their initial charging decision.
By Raychel Lean | June 4, 2019
Chief Judge K. Michael Moore's name is incorrectly attributed to the mug shot of a Canadian defendant whose trial Moore oversaw.
By Dan M. Clark | April 26, 2019
'It is time Facebook is held accountable for how it handles consumers' personal information,' New York Attorney General Letitia James said.
By Angela Morris | April 25, 2019
The e-filing mistakes might have been what caused a judge inadvertently to sign a proposed findings and recommendations to release a convicted murderer on bond pending the finalization of his requested post-conviction habeas relief.
By Victoria Hudgins | April 22, 2019
While the federal government ponders its next steps after the Supreme Court's Carpenter ruling, multiple states are moving to restrict how law enforcement can access and handle their citizen's digital data.
By Victoria Hudgins | April 12, 2019
Securing extradition, connecting communications with actions and challenging freedom of speech are some of the hurdles prosecutors will face in the Julian Assange case.
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