By Jason Grant | April 12, 2023
The lawyer also faces a separate complaint lodged with a grievance committee by a client who claimed the attorney didn't contact him from 2016 to the time of the grievance complaint in June 2021, and that he discovered, via assistance of a different lawyer, that a personal-injury suit brought on his behalf was dismissed in 2019.
By Jane Wester | April 12, 2023
Trump attorney Joe Tacopina of Tacopina, Seigel & DeOreo argued that an adjournment until late May "is not merely consistent with justice, it is required by justice and President Trump's right to an impartial jury."
By Jane Wester | April 7, 2023
Carroll's attorney Roberta Kaplan of Kaplan Hecker & Fink signed the letter on behalf of both parties, arguing that "limited access" to the jurors' names would help the attorneys prepare for voir dire and allow them to monitor the jurors' social media use during the trial.
By ALM Staff | April 7, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
By Ellen Bardash | March 28, 2023
The District of Delaware decision allows the largest sexual abuse settlement in U.S. history to proceed with distribution, including $2.46 billion already available and potentially another $4 billion from BSA insurers who haven't settled and assets that haven't been liquidated.
By Jason Grant | March 21, 2023
The Appellate Division, First Department court ruled in favor of Manhattan-based law firms Flomenhaft & Cannata and Flomenhaft Law Firm, reversing a lower court that refused to unseal a guardianship proceeding's court record after the firms had a legal malpractice case brought against them.
By Jane Wester | March 20, 2023
U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan also ordered that the older trial, a defamation suit removed to federal court in 2020 and tentatively scheduled to begin April 10, should be adjourned.
By Emily Saul | March 15, 2023
Charlotte Bennett is asking a court to determine New York State violated NYSHRL in the wake of her complaints against the then-Gov.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jennifer M. Meyers | March 10, 2023
Plaintiffs are allowed to serve amended and supplemental bills of particulars throughout the course of discovery and defense attorneys will regularly use the bill of particulars as a tool directing their investigation. However, there comes a point in every case when it is too late to serve an amended bill of particulars.
By Kenneth E. Pitcoff and Andrea M. Alonso | March 10, 2023
The key word in any application of the 'assumption of risk' doctrine is the term "inherent." This article discusses how the Second Department's latest interpretation of inherency narrows the application of the doctrine.
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