New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Martin S. Krezalek | April 28, 2022
It is time for Congress to act. In December 2021, the Online Accessibility Act was introduced in the House of Representatives. Unlike the DOJ's largely useless Guidance, the proposed Act recognizes that a predictable regulatory environment is critical for businesses.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Cara Waldman | April 27, 2022
"The system is at a breaking point. Governor Hochul knows this, and she is doing nothing about it."
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Jae Oh | April 27, 2022
Deprivation of health information can have palpable, catastrophic consequences, especially when an inmate has objectively serious condition that is being ignored by the prison officials—which, by definition, is always the case when an inmate has a meritorious Eighth Amendment claim.
By Steven Goldman | April 26, 2022
"It's time to end the war Nixon began and move toward a more humane and sensible approach to dealing with this problem. It's time to legalize narcotics."
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Allison Kahl, Anjali Pathmanathan and Benjamin Wiener | April 26, 2022
"The law should do more to protect against race-based policing on our roadways. Far from imposing meaningful restraints on such discrimination, however, our laws actively encourage it."
By Alan R. Feigenbaum | April 25, 2022
New York seems to be on the precipice of making a choice when it comes to its divorce laws: fostering conflict resolution, or fostering conflict escalation.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Ioana Good | April 25, 2022
As cyber breaches rise, communication planning evolves.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Nicholas Rostow | April 22, 2022
Russia has not just violated the UN Charter; it has violated a solemn undertaking by Putin's predecessor as Russia's President.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Sherry Levin Wallach | April 21, 2022
The newly enacted state budget shortchanged some of the poorest and most marginalized New York residents by failing to provide adequate funding for assigned counsel in criminal and family courts.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Daniel Pollack and Helene M. Weiss | April 21, 2022
A small number of states have banned police from lying or being deceptive when interrogating minors. New York should follow suit.
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