By Tony Mauro | December 4, 2017
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who has fought for years to overturn the federal law, watched the argument from the front row of the Supreme Court bar section.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Stephen A. Miller and Leigh Ann Benson | November 9, 2017
The Supreme Court is preparing to make a ruling that could effectively open the doors to legalized sports gambling. In Christie v. NCAA, the court will decide whether a federal statute that requires states to prohibit sports gambling violates the anti-commandeering doctrine of the Tenth Amendment.
By Michael Booth | November 1, 2017
The Professional Golfers Association of America cannot be held liable for injuries sustained by a 5-year-old girl who was attending a summer golf camp…
By Charles Toutant | October 31, 2017
The New York Jets are accused in a disability discrimination suit pending in federal court of cutting former linebacker Erin Henderson from the team…
By Michael Booth | October 30, 2017
A New Jersey woman who sustained severe teeth and mouth injuries as a teenage softball player will be allowed to sue her coach and the league for…
By Leigh Jones | October 23, 2017
Cliff Woodards, 55, engaged in “discourteous conduct” during a probation hearing in Wayne County Circuit Court, the Michigan Attorney Discipline Board found.
By Erin Mulvaney | September 25, 2017
Employment attorneys say terminating a professional football player would come with a host of challenges.
By Andrew Denney | September 12, 2017
The forcible ejection of former New York Knick Charles Oakley from Madison Square Garden on Feb. 8, which led to his arrest by New York City police, was the culmination of a longrunning feud between the ex-power forward and team owner James Dolan, Oakley alleges in a suit filed Tuesday.
By Charles Toutant | September 11, 2017
Atlantic City has agreed to a $3 million settlement in an excessive-force suit by a man who was beaten by five police officers and mauled by a police dog in an incident captured on video.
By Charles Toutant | September 5, 2017
A New Jersey appeals court has upheld a $2 million malpractice verdict against an insurance broker for underestimating the replacement cost of a bowling alley. The appeals court rejected a challenge to the verdict by Brouwer Hansen and Izdebski Insurance Associates of Toms River. BHI's claims on appeal were without merit, the panel said in Loyle Lanes Bowling Center v. Greater New York Mutual.
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