By Ross Todd | May 24, 2023
"I think we have to plan for the contingencies that we know are a virtual certainty that we will [face] in the future," said New York Supreme Court Justice Craig Doran, chair of the committee tasked with building on the court system's pandemic innovations.
By Ross Todd | March 20, 2023
The chief judges of California's four federal districts discussed the adjustment period on the horizon—including the possible loss of some popular remote proceedings—during a panel discussion last week.
Litigation Daily | Best Practices
By Ross Todd | February 23, 2023
Minnesota Senior Judge Kathryn Messerich is heading up the state's effort to develop a uniform process for determining when a court proceeding is heard remotely or in person.
By Ross Todd | May 2, 2022
The pandemic fueled an unprecedented surge of cooperation between state courts. Federal court officials, meanwhile, have been deliberating how to address future emergencies.
By Ross Todd | March 8, 2022
"The quality of justice, I would propose to you, may be significantly better on remote than it was in the good old days of the cattle calls," said Bailey during a forum sponsored by the Legal Services Corporation.
By Ross Todd | September 15, 2021
"We felt that with an analysis of the types of things that were contributing to the decline, that we might actually have an opportunity to reverse it," says Cornell Law School Professor Valerie Hans, the lead author of a new white paper aimed at rejuvenating civil jury trials in the U.S.
By Jane Wester | September 7, 2021
Chief Judge Janet DiFiore noted that many other employers, both public and private, have also started requiring the COVID-19 vaccine or announced that they will.
Litigation Daily | Best Practices
By Ross Todd | August 3, 2021
Orange County Superior Court mandated that lawyers and jurors wear masks just as a Latham & Watkins team was set to put their defense on in a novel, multiweek securities case.
By Jane Wester | July 27, 2021
Recent pronouncements from New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio left observers asking whether the New York state court system might issue a vaccine mandate of its own.
By Cedra Mayfield | July 27, 2021
"I always tell people to request oral argument," said Court of Appeals of Georgia Chief Judge Brian Rickman. "You've just gotten a judge additional time to look at your case."
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