By Michael Booth | May 3, 2017
Gov. Chris Christie has signed legislation, spurred by a federal civil rights lawsuit, that will require insurance carriers contracting with the state to cover fertility treatments to women in same-sex relationships, and those in other nontraditional relationships.
By Michael Booth | May 3, 2017
A New Jersey judges is facing ethics charges for allegedly becoming involved in a family friend's child custody case.
By Michael Booth | May 2, 2017
The estates of a man and his mother who were killed when a tree fell on their car while they were traveling on the Garden State Parkway cannot sue the highway's operator, a state appeals court has ruled.
By Michael Booth | May 2, 2017
A New Jersey panel that resolves disputes over the cost of legislation between local governments and the state has rejected a complaint claiming the state's recently enacted bail-reform system is unconstitutional.
By Michael Booth | April 28, 2017
Top officials with NJ Transit and Amtrak on Friday told New Jersey legislators that aging infrastructure and tracks are largely to blame for recent derailments and delays at New York's Penn Station.
By Charles Toutant | April 27, 2017
Comments that might not create a hostile work environment may nonetheless violate the Law Against Discrimination in a public accommodation context, an appeals court said Thursday in a published decision reopening the case of a transgender man who says he was subjected to threats and demeaning comments by officers of the Jersey City Police Department.
By Michael Booth | April 27, 2017
A state ethics committee has dismissed complaints filed against two state legislators and an embattled state judge, Philip Maenza.
By Michael Booth | April 26, 2017
A New Jersey judge facing disciplinary action for allegedly intervening in a child custody matter defended herself at a judicial conduct hearing on Wednesday, saying she acted properly given the facts she had at the time.
By Michael Booth | April 25, 2017
The Supreme Court will decide whether a convicted sex offender may be prosecuted for violating his parole by volunteering with a "youth serving" organization.
By Charles Toutant | April 24, 2017
A state Superior Court judge from Ocean County claims in a lawsuit that he was removed from the bench after clashing with supervising judges over time he spent attending to the needs of his disabled son.
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