Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | October 27, 2017
Disgraced Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein on Thursday sued The Weinstein Co. in the Delaware Court of Chancery, seeking to access records in order to defend against civil and criminal allegations and to possibly mount a wrongful termination case against the company he founded with his brother in 2005.
By MP McQueen | October 26, 2017
A plan to build a park that would extend on a platform into the Hudson River off Manhattan's West Side is back on again after mogul Barry Diller said in September that he was backing out after years of litigation.
By Jason Grant | October 26, 2017
Spota, who took office in 2002 and who was re-elected three times, was the longest-serving D.A. in Suffolk County history
By Jason Grant | October 26, 2017
“This news has really shaken the criminal justice system in Suffolk County, significantly,” said Anthony La Pinta, a 25-year criminal defense attorney.
By Cogan Schneier | October 26, 2017
In a speech at the Heritage Foundation, the attorney general said judges who have entered nationwide preliminary injunctions against President Donald Trump's policies are carrying out policy preferences, not the law.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion|News
By Jason Grant | October 25, 2017
Bronx Supreme Court Justice Howard Sherman “properly permitted” counsel for defendant Sally Abouel-Ela to cross-examine the witness about his chiropractic school suspension “for falsely reporting that he had seen patients.”
By Josefa Velasquez | October 24, 2017
A Schenectady County Court judge should have recused himself from an appeal taken from his own previous decision, the state's Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday.
By Jason Grant | October 23, 2017
The court said that while it has not kept track of sitting justices' ethnicities, court staff with “institutional knowledge” believed that this was a first for Asian-American jurists.
By Colby Hamilton | October 23, 2017
Mark Johnson, the former head of HSBC's global foreign exchange cash trading, was convicted on Monday on one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and eight counts of wire fraud after a four-week trial in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York.
By Colby Hamilton | October 23, 2017
The former Gabonese ambassador to the United Nations broke a long-term lease and owes the balance of that agreement, according to a suit filed in New York's Southern District on Monday.
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