By Andrew Denney | March 6, 2018
Jury deliberations in the corruption trial of Joseph Percoco—a former top aide to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo—appeared to have run aground Tuesday on their fourth day.
By Andrew Denney | February 28, 2018
In closing arguments on Wednesday in the corruption trial for Joseph Percoco, a former aide to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Percoco's attorney made a final effort to impeach the government's star witness in the case while portraying his client's alleged quid pro quo as attempts to help out friends.
By Andrew Denney | February 27, 2018
Prosecutors in the corruption trial for Joseph Percoco, a former top aide to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, wrapped up their case on Tuesday by portraying Percoco as willing to abuse the powers of his office in exchange for bribes.
By Josefa Velasquez | February 20, 2018
Lawsuits accusing the Long Island Power Authority, LILCO and National Grid Electrical Services of negligence over fires that destroyed dozens of homes in Breezy Point, Queens, during Superstorm Sandy in 2012 can go forward, New York's highest court ruled Tuesday.
By Christine Simmons | January 26, 2018
With a merger between Hunton & Williams and Andrews Kurth possible by early spring, some firms are capitalizing on a dynamic Texas market.
By Josefa Velasquez | January 24, 2018
Acting Albany Supreme Court Justice Roger D. McDonough issued a decision Monday denying five of six objections raised by the New York Public Service Commission and the nuclear power plant owners who sought to dismiss a lawsuit by environmentalist and consumer groups over subsidies for aging nuclear plants in western New York.
By Sue Reisinger | January 11, 2018
Although it's important to address climate change, said Linda Kelly, general counsel of the National Association of Manufacturers, lawsuits against energy companies around the issue aren't the answer.
By Christine Simmons | November 2, 2017
The Northeast regional firm acquired a Syracuse boutique Wednesday and is pursuing two similar deals, as smaller firms feel pressure to join forces with larger rivals.
By MP McQueen | October 26, 2017
Gov. Andrew Cuomo has signed legislation allowing the state to establish guidelines for tanker avoidance zones after the Coast Guard last year proposed designating 10 new areas in the Hudson River where commercial oil vessels could anchor.
By Charlotte A. Biblow | September 27, 2017
State Environmental Regulation columnist Charlotte A. Biblow writes: The decision issued at the end of August by the state Department of Environmental Conservation denying certain approvals in connection with a proposed natural gas pipeline that would fuel a major new power plant in Orange County may have been seen by environmental activists as a mechanism for local and state regulators to control greenhouse gases in place of a recalcitrant federal government. The euphoria of environmental activists statewide, however, may have been tempered by a subsequent order of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
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