By Jason Grant | August 3, 2017
Alan Honorof, known for his evenhanded and principled approach on the bench, and for his fervor for sailing off of it, has died.
By Nick Perry | July 26, 2017
"There are devices now that can allow law enforcement to see through walls. Heat imaging and all this kind of thing," U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts said at an event at the Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand. "Well, what does that do to a body of law that's developed from common law days in England about when you can search a house?"
By Rebecca Baker and Christine Simmons | July 24, 2017
Three partners at large Manhattan law firms have been named as magistrate judges in the Southern District of New York.
By Ben Hancock | July 24, 2017
In another sign that the business of investing in lawsuits is booming, Woodsford is expanding its operations in the United States.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | July 19, 2017
The Committee on Judicial Ethics responds to written inquiries from New York state's approximately 3,600 judges and justices, as well as hundreds of…
By Michael Booth | July 19, 2017
A trio of New Jersey lawyer-lawmakers are sponsoring legislation that would prohibit anyone from publishing or posting certain contact information for judges, both active and retired, or prosecutors.
By Tony Mauro | July 18, 2017
Five protesters who disrupted a U.S. Supreme Court session with shouts and songs in 2015 should be sentenced to prison time and barred from the grounds of the court for a year, government lawyers said in court filings Monday.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | July 18, 2017
The Advisory Council for the Housing Part of New York City's Civil Court is soliciting applications for Housing Court judges.
By John G. Koeltl | July 18, 2017
Mandatory minimums, by definition, deprive us of discretion. It does not help for us to tell a defendant that we think the sentence we are imposing is too high. That provides little comfort to a defendant as the defendant spends years in prison.
By David Handschuh, Photographer | July 14, 2017
Eastern District Judge Jack Weinstein received a unique honor on Thursday to mark his 50th year on a federal bench—a ceremonial courtroom in the Brooklyn federal courthouse was named in his honor.
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