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January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

Staying On Top of Tax Law Changes and Guidance

Philip Wagman, chair of the Tax Section, writes: The Tax Section provides members with opportunities to research and learn more about these tax issues and a host of other current developments in the tax law.
3 minute read
January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

A New Collaborative Approach to Leadership at the Unified Court System

Chief Administrative Judge Joseph Zayas writes, with a new leadership team atop New York's court system, officials are working on a "course correction" from a top-down approach to directing court operations.
8 minute read
January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

Managing Courts in an Increasingly Adversarial Society

The presiding justice of the Appellate Division, Fourth Department writes that, although it is essential that judges reach the correct decision at the end of a case, equitable and impartial justice requires more than just a correct result.
4 minute read
January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

A Vision for Comprehensive Justice in the New York State Courts

First Deputy Chief Administrative Judge Norman St. George of the New York Unified Court System provides a comprehensive look at efforts to improve court functions, increase public safety and bring facilities up to date.
9 minute read
January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

Lawyers Learning to Lead

Many law schools now treat leadership as a trainable skill, rather than an inherent quality, and many of our recently graduated colleagues have received a formal education in leadership that will benefit our profession and our society, writes the presiding justice of the Appellate Division, Third Department
4 minute read
January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

A Long Way . . . and a Long Time Coming

While New York's court system has made strides to improve diversity on the bench, there is still work to do to ensure that the racial makeup of the judiciary better reflects the people it serves, the presiding justice of the Appellate Division, First Department writes.
7 minute read
January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

Energizing Civic Engagement in New York

Failure in civics education has serious consequences--it imperils our democracy, Chief Judge Rowan Wilson writes.
9 minute read
January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

Implied Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing in Public Construction Projects: This Week in Scott Mollen's Realty Law Digest

Scott Mollen discusses "SCE Environmental Group v. Murnane Bldg. Contrs. Inc." involving three litigations arising from a public construction project commenced by the NYS Office of General Services.
14 minute read
January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

Davis Polk Brings Back Former White House Lawyer, Morgan Stanley Compliance Head

Raul Yanes, the latest lawyer to move between a bank and Big Law, will again lead Davis Polk's white-collar defense and investigations practice.
3 minute read
January 16, 2024 | New York Law Journal

Use of Police Dogs Constitutes Search Implicating Fourth Amendment Protections

In 'People v. Butler', the Court of Appeals recently decided an issue of first impression concerning the use of police dogs to detect the presence of illegal drugs on a suspect's body. In a unanimous opinion, it ruled that the use of a narcotics-detecting dog to sniff a suspect's body for evidence of a crime constitutes a search for purposes of the Fourth Amendment.
7 minute read

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