By Charles Toutant | August 16, 2023
"Whatever the trial court's ruling in these cases, there is no question the law will remain unsettled until the issue is resolved by our appellate courts," education attorney David Rubin said.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Riley Brennan | August 15, 2023
Former students are seeking partial refunds of tuition and fees on the grounds that they received a materially different educational experience than they were promised and paid fees for facilities and services they were denied access to.
By Colleen Murphy | August 14, 2023
"We reject the Appellate Division's novel suggestion that Crisitello's firing was evidence of pretext simply because St. Theresa's did not 'survey' its employees to discover other transgressions of the faith," Justice Lee A. Solomon said. "Neither the LAD nor our case law requires such an investigation, and we decline to impose this burden."
By Charles Toutant | August 14, 2023
"We are confident that our clients would have prevailed had the substantive issues been examined by the courts," Ronald Berutti, the plaintiffs' lawyer, said.
By Charles Toutant | August 2, 2023
"I still do think that jurors are going to be surprised when they walk into a case and that's what the case is," said Peter Frattarelli of Archer & Greiner.
By Charles Toutant | July 26, 2023
"When the harassment is during school hours, and after school hours, and it involves a student, that student has to be protected. Then it's the school's responsibility to stop it," plaintiffs lawyer Bruce Nagel said.
By Christine Charnosky | July 26, 2023
The move follows—but doesn't appear related to—the institution's $1 million fraud investigation at its law school.
By Colleen Murphy | July 24, 2023
Two court opinions, released just days apart, came to differing conclusions on whether a particular Title IX proceeding can be considered "quasi-judicial" for purposes of determining absolute immunity for accusers. But observers said the two rulings may actually be deceptively consistent with one another.
By Charles Toutant | July 11, 2023
"We are in a position where we now are in the driver's seat, legally," said Bruce Afran, the Princeton attorney representing students, faculty and others who support Westminster. "Rider is gonna have to prove that it had a financial need to close Westminster, which it did not and it can't show."
By Christine Charnosky | June 29, 2023
"In the market for legal talent, major American law firms are clamoring for diversity, for a variety of good reasons, but also because their Fortune 500 clients are demanding that their cases be staffed with attorneys from diverse backgrounds," said Kevin K. Washburn, N. William Hines dean and professor of law at the University of Iowa College of Law. "This market demand remains strong, [so] law schools will find lawful ways to meet that demand."
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