0 results for 'US Department of Justice'
Why the DOJ and FTC Are Wrong on Algorithms and Antitrust
"The DOJ and FTC's misguided suit against RealPage is not supported by antitrust jurisprudence, and $7 trillion in economic growth is on the line," writes Ediberto Roman, professor of law at Florida International University.Judicial Ethics Opinion 23-114
(1) A full-time judge may not serve as an officer or director of a not-for-profit community group organized to oppose a municipality's proposed changes to a public park by litigation and other means, and may not engage in community outreach or fund-raising on behalf of the group. However, the judge may make charitable donations to the group and may engage in certain public advocacy activities on the judge's own behalf where the judge has a clear and direct personal interest at stake.'Obviously Unconstitutional': TikTok Challenges Law That Could Ban the App in the US
"If upheld, (the statute) would allow the government to decide that a company may no longer own and publish the innovative and unique speech platform it created," the company's complaint states.$3.8M Settlement Reached After Deacon Dies in Atlanta Police Custody
"While this part of their struggle is coming to a close, this fight for justice will not end until criminal charges are levied," said plaintiff counsel Mawuli Mel Davis of the Davis Bozeman Johnson Law Firm in Decatur.Brooklyn Judge Targeted in Advocates' Campaign to Remove 'Unfit' Jurists
Court of Claims Judge Vincent Del Guidice is due for reappointment. But he was the leader in issuing sentences that appellate courts reduced in the interest of justice.View more book results for the query "US Department of Justice"
Amendment to Recent Appellate Practice Column
Elliott Scheinberg makes an amendment to his recent Appellate Practice column, "Weight of Evidence, Preservation, Third Department Joins Second, Fourth (and First)," which the New York Law Journal published on May 1, 2024.AI in the Practice of Law: Response and Procedures
What does it mean to operating a law firm. Law firms operate every day on the receipt of information from investigators, from commercial institutions, opinions by experts, and memos by partners and associates, and most importantly, briefs and memoranda from opposing counsel in active litigation. Given the growing use of AI, how do the firms deal with the information received on a practical basis?Judicial Ethics Opinion 23-113
Where a judge concludes that there is a substantial likelihood that an attorney made biased and harassing comments to court personnel and opposing counsel during a court appearance but outside the judge's presence, the judge must report this conduct to the appropriate attorney grievance committee.Connecticut Movers: Key Moves at Law Firms in Stamford, Hartford and New Haven
Recent appointments celebrated at Day Pitney, Barclay Damon, Jackson Lewis and Neubert, Pepe & Monteith.Trending Stories
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