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By Michael A. Mora | April 8, 2024
"What we found over time is that when something goes wrong, cruise ships don't have the ability to deal with it despite what they say in their advertisements," claimed Todd Michaels, a partner at the Haggard Law Firm.
4 minute read
By Mason Lawlor | April 8, 2024
The plaintiffs sued after the South Carolina Department of Employment and Workforce reportedly cut off their weekly benefits without notifying them of a new provision requiring them to conduct at least one job search per week using the SC Works Online System (SCWOS).
5 minute read
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | April 5, 2024
We urge lawyers who have not "surfed" the judicial website to do so and attorneys who use it regularly to explore the portions they have not yet seen.
3 minute read
By Emily Saul | April 4, 2024
Prosecutors told jurors she abused her position at the Appellate Division, First Department to obtain a financial benefit for her husband.
3 minute read
By Emily Saul | April 4, 2024
"It defies common sense and logic," defense attorney Daniel Horwitz said of the notion that Melissa Ringel would jeopardize her standing and position to net her husband $55,000. "Sometimes people make honest mistakes."
4 minute read
By Cheryl Miller | April 4, 2024
Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan partner John Bash says one of the keys to persuading Florida Supreme Court justices to allow a cannabis legalization measure on the November ballot was "speaking on their terms."
11 minute read
By Marianna Wharry | April 4, 2024
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar, ALM's source for immediate alerting on just-filed cases in state and federal courts. Law.com Radar now offers state court coverage nationwide. Sign up today and be among the first to know about new suits in your region, practice area or client sector.
2 minute read
By Joseph W. Bellacosa | April 4, 2024
When powerful prosecutors instead act, or are reasonably perceived to act, out of vaulting ambition, political aggrandizement, ideological zealotry, or bulging-muscle-flexing exertions by creatively interpretive expansions beyond defined limited portfolios of responsibility, they woefully fail the Jackson test.
5 minute read
By Michael A. Mora | April 3, 2024
"That pressure led them to decide that they should resolve the case for their insurance policy limits," said Robert Fiore, an attorney for the estate.
3 minute read
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | April 3, 2024
If the CHRO is unable or unwilling to meet its statutory deadlines, and the early release provision is rendered meaningless, parties should not be saddled with additional costs and delays.
4 minute read
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