By Alaina Lancaster | November 5, 2020
The agency reports that the action involving proceeds from the illicit marketplace—which offered drugs and services such as hacking—is the largest cryptocurrency seizure in DOJ history.
By Phillip Bantz | November 4, 2020
Former eBay employees allegedly sent a bloody pig mask, pornography magazines, live roaches, fly larvae and spiders to the editor and publisher of a blog that was critical of the e-commerce firm.
By Greg Land | October 30, 2020
The Georgia Court of Appeals opinion agreed with a trial judge that a teen driver's use of Snapchat's Speed Filter to record herself driving more than 100 mph prior to a wreck does not expose the app maker to liability.
By Charles Toutant | October 13, 2020
The order puts a halt to disruption in a case that is central to the judiciary's effort to resolve any glitches with COVID-19-related procedures before restarting criminal and civil jury trials statewide.
By R. Robin McDonald | September 30, 2020
Cobb County Superior Court Judge Robert Leonard said he hopes to expand the court's use of technology to counter pervasive community spread of COVID-19.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | September 7, 2020
A three-judge Pennsylvania appellate panel ruled "there is no evidence the trooper acted in a way that would reasonably have coerced or pressured" the defendant.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 20, 2020
Federal prosecutors allege that former Uber executive Joseph Sullivan attempted to hide a 2016 data breach that compromised the personally identifiable information of about 57 million Uber users and drivers.
By Raychel Lean | August 12, 2020
The disbarred attorney allegedly spent four hours one day tagging another lawyer in disparaging social media posts.
By Charles Toutant | August 7, 2020
A lawsuit by New Jersey attorneys seeks a declaration that making attorneys appear for in-person proceedings in nondetained cases during the pandemic, without a videoconference option, is a violation of the Administrative Procedures Act and the Fifth Amendment's due process clause.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | August 4, 2020
Although the central questions in the cases differ slightly, both could provide guidance to attorneys on lingering questions about a person's reasonable expectation of privacy in their cellphone location data, and the level of court scrutiny that must be sought by prosecutors in order to obtain that information.
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