By Colby Hamilton | January 16, 2018
The nation's highest court rejected the former Assembly speaker's petition without comment Tuesday.
By Tony Mauro | January 16, 2018
Writing expert Bryan Garner doesn't pull punches in a new book about his partnership with the late Antonin Scalia. The result is a fascinating and three-dimensional portrayal.
By Tony Mauro | January 12, 2018
The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday granted review in a case that could imperil thousands of commission proceedings and affect the status of administrative law judges in other federal agencies.
By Marcia Coyle | January 12, 2018
A victory for the state could open a potential multibillion-dollar source of revenue for the states.
By Colby Hamilton | January 8, 2018
Despite expressing concerns on the timing of the petition, U.S. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis said the question about the district court's ability to review the immigration program rescission decision was a critical one.
By Susan DeSantis | January 5, 2018
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg will be interviewed by New York Law School professor Nadine Strossen as part of the Sidney Shainwald Public Interest Lecture Feb. 6.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Marc I. Gross and Jeremy A. Lieberman | January 5, 2018
Marc I. Gross and Jeremy A. Lieberman focus on the lead-up to 'Petrobras' and "Barclays' and demonstrate that the linkage of event studies to class certification motions was, in fact, an after-thought to the court's early embrace of a more general “fraud on the market” presumption of reliance.
By Colby Hamilton | January 4, 2018
The Wandering Dago's state and federal free speech rights were violated when state officials blocked it from participating in a vendor program solely because it used ethnic slurs in its branding, the appellate panel ruled.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Skidelsky | January 3, 2018
Barry Skidelsky writes: The legal issue of “net neutrality” or an open Internet has been a point of contention between Internet access providers and network users since the mid-1990s. Most recently, this issue has become a serious matter of larger public interest that warrants some brief legal history to better understand the issue, where we are right now, and where we are all headed in this country.
By Cogan Schneier | January 2, 2018
With 148 judicial vacancies as of Jan. 2 and an increasingly aging federal bench, President Donald Trump could remake the federal judiciary on a scale that hasn't been possible in decades.
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