By Michael A. Mora | July 12, 2023
"A year from now, we will be looking back at this data and thinking about the good ol' days when only 33 cases per month were considered low,'" said Franklin Zemel, who co-chairs the first U.S. standing committee on cybersecurity and privacy law for the Florida Bar.
By Charles Toutant | July 12, 2023
The judge told a defendant that a police officer who had issued a summons to the defendant "is a buddy of mine, a great guy," New Jersey's Advisory Committee on Judicial Conduct said.
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 Amanda Bronstad | July 7, 2023
Johnson & Johnson subsidiary LTL Management filed a second fraud lawsuit on Friday against three plaintiffs' experts who authored a 2020 report linking its talcum powder products to mesothelioma.
By Charles Toutant | July 7, 2023
"[T]his next period is still going to be uncertain in terms of how the transition is going to work out," Vineland attorney Daniel Rosner said.
By Charles Toutant | July 6, 2023
"I'm sympathetic, but to have sympathy is one thing and to change the rule and thereby run the risk of further violations is a step backwards," Michael Ambrosio of Seton Hall University School of Law said.
By Charles Toutant | July 5, 2023
The settlement comes five years after the lawyer filed a suit claiming the Office of Attorney Ethics was run like a "boys club."
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | June 25, 2023
We take this opportunity to suggest that it is almost always helpful to all concerned to move right to the issues and assume that the court knows well the facts involved in the appeal.
By Charles Toutant | June 22, 2023
The decision to release boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter was met with intense and long-lasting opposition from many, said Bruce Rosen, an attorney at Pashman Stein Walder Hayden who was hired as a law clerk for the judge to help on the Carter case.
By Charles Toutant | June 22, 2023
The court will also consider whether the defendants waived the attorney-client privilege for certain communications, and whether certain statements by plaintiffs' counsel during summation were improper or misleading.
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