0 results for 'Bronx Defenders'
First Department Reverses Injunction Barring NYPD Use of Sealed Arrest Records
The decision from the Appellate Division, First Department gutted a March 2023 order in which Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Lyle Frank ruled the NYPD must overhaul its software so sealed records were no longer available to officers and predictive policing technology.Column Casting Todd Blanche as Making 'Faustian' Bargain in Representing Trump Misses the Mark
No serious person would suggest that a lawyer who represents someone accused of a terrible crime is themself a bad person by dint of that representation, a contributor writes in response to a column that the New York Law Journal published last week.Family Court Appeals—Traps and Tips
A discussion of the common threshold pitfalls to avoid under the Family Court Act, as well as under CPLR provisions that apply to Family Court cases and appeals pursuant to Family Ct Act §§165 (a) and 1118. It suggests seven questions counsel should consider upon entry of an adverse order in Family Court.Reform Groups to Lawmakers: Give Judicial Misconduct Watchdog Greater Budgeting Independence
The measure would also allow the judicial misconduct watchdog, up to 120 days to continue investigating complaints against judges who have resigned or retired while under scrutiny.View more book results for the query "Bronx Defenders"
Bipartisan Support Emerges for Loan Forgiveness Program for Public-Sector Lawyers
The amended bill, S4511B/A1568C, aims to expand the cap on what public defense lawyers, attorneys who work for civil legal services organizations, and district attorneys can receive in student loan forgiveness: up to $8,000 annually, for up to eight years, or $64,000Alan Dershowitz and the Thought Police
An idea recently that Alan Dershowitz recently proposed in an article published in the Law Journal is as treacherous and deceitful as it is unworkable--and is McCarthyism revisited, Ellen Yaroshefsky writes.An Open Letter to Law Firms That Hire Hamas Supporters
Law firms that hire such supporters of Hamas barbarism have an ethical obligation to disclose the decision they have made to their clients, and to not assign such lawyers to any client without getting their informed consent, writes Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz.Trending Stories
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