By Charles Toutant | April 8, 2024
"The favoritism granted the corporate casinos violates a very clear provision of the New Jersey constitution," the suit alleges.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | March 29, 2024
Often an opinion serves as an important reminder to litigants, their counsel and even lower courts, of important principles that must be honored for the case to proceed. FBI v. Fikre is such a case.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | March 29, 2024
Broad, open-ended constitutional language is a grant of authority to the courts that have the final decision about what it includes, what it prohibits, and what it requires. In our system, that includes the power to override the will of the two elected branches of the state government.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | March 22, 2024
Politicians who supported fetal personhood legislation are now nervously proclaiming their support for IVF. But it turns out that Alabama is not out of the political woods.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | March 22, 2024
Our attorney general is not the governor's lawyer.
By Charles Toutant | March 19, 2024
"The reason the attorneys don't like it is because attorneys don't want to be put into a situation where they stand up in front of a judge and they don't know what they're doing," said Edward Zohn, the attorney for the plaintiffs.
By Colleen Murphy | March 6, 2024
"The Appellate Division's decision is wrong, and if allowed to stand, sets a dangerous precedent. It invites more and more of New Jersey's government to operate in the shadows—collecting taxes and fees and spending that revenue outside a transparent annual appropriation process," Cargill's petition said.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | March 1, 2024
The enactment of S-3011 presented a direct challenge to the Supreme Court's rule-making authority.
By Colleen Murphy | February 26, 2024
"The words 'the people' in the Second Amendment presumptively encompass all adult Americans, including 18- to 20-year-olds, and we are aware of no founding-era law that supports disarming people in that age group," Third Circuit Judge Kent A. Jordan wrote.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | February 16, 2024
Long an opponent of Vladimir Putin and the ruling United Russia Party, Navalny organized huge anti-government protests, ran for office, and worked tirelessly to expose corruption at every level of the political hierarchy.
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