By Christine Charnosky | October 17, 2023
Workman's speech is "wholly protected even if other students found them offensive or even hateful," and the law school doesn't need to do more than to conduct a "cursory, internal review," Alex Morey, director of FIRE's Campus Rights Advocacy, wrote in a letter to Troy A. McKenzie, dean of NYU Law.
By Andrew Denney | October 11, 2023
The name change comes as the 15-attorney firm prepares to hang its sign at a different address. Next spring, it will move from its longtime home in Manhattan's Tribeca to a new office in the West Village at 200 Varick St.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Bennett L. Gershman | October 5, 2023
As the Supreme Court begins a new term, one focus will be on several decisions from the Fifth Circuit—a court that was once was the refuge for minorities, the poor, and the condemned that today is considered the most reactionary court in the country.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Christopher Dunn | October 4, 2023
A recent surge of high-speed police chases in New York City provides an important—and sobering—example of how much constitutional license the Supreme Court has granted law-enforcement officials to use deadly physical force.
By Brian Lee | October 3, 2023
Adam Katz, president of the Northern District of New York Federal Court Bar Association, said it's hoped that the trial training advocacy program can help unravel a problem observed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York.
By Jimmy Hoover | September 26, 2023
The certs from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit include an appeal by the NRA, which claims that state leaders strongarmed companies into to cutting ties with the guns group.
By Jeffrey M. Winn | September 20, 2023
In the 1960s, Martin Luther King Jr. was a radical who was feared, hated, and considered dangerous. But in the years since King's 1968 assassination, he has become saintly and mythological. Pondering this dichotomy, a biographer set out to write a book about King, the man, focusing on his humanity, hopes, flaws, and anxieties.
By ALM Staff | September 15, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Bennett L. Gershman | September 5, 2023
Although even big news stories tend to recede quickly from the public's consciousness, the account of this appalling police operation in August should not be forgotten, a Law Journal columnist writes.
By Dan Roe | August 14, 2023
The legal activist behind the lawsuit, and Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, said he plans to continue challenging private companies' "race-based policies."
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