By Angela Morris | January 22, 2021
Litigants who sued Infowars and Alex Jones will now be able to move forward to discovery in litigation over Jones' claim that the Sandy Hook mass school shooting was a hoax, and the publishing of the wrong man's photo as the Parkland, Florida, school shooter.
By Kenneth Artz | December 15, 2020
In 2021, expect all stakeholders in the legal system—firms, lawyers, judges, clients—to increasingly use technology to become more efficient and effective, says Graham Smith-Bernal, CEO of Opus 2.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 15, 2020
Thirteen federal district courts will start offering audio livestreams of hearings in civil cases "of public interest" by February.
By Nate Robson | December 1, 2020
The judge sidestepped the crime-fraud exception to attorney-client privilege in clearing the way for federal investigators to read several emails seized during their investigation.
By Michael A. Mora | November 20, 2020
"This very unique case could end up making law," said Leslie Zigel, a partner at Greenspoon Marder in Miami.
By Aron Solomon | October 27, 2020
The FTC's Rules of the Road were designed to "help maintain the credibility of the internet as an advertising medium," which is impossible to do when online political advertisement internationally straddles the line between deception and reality.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | September 15, 2020
The Open Courts Act of 2020, introduced by Reps. Hank Johnson and Doug Collins, would give the federal judiciary two to three years to update and modernize its electronic public access program before making PACER free for the public.
By Angela Morris | August 4, 2020
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and Hunton Andrews Kurth are among the law firms that Facebook has hired for a Texas Supreme Court appeal seeking to toss out lawsuits by three sex trafficking victims who have sued over sex trafficking on Facebook and Instagram.
By Charles "Chuck" Bennett | July 23, 2020
Oftentimes, people tell stories haphazardly, just for the fun of it. But as trial lawyers, we have to purposefully tell our clients' stories to the jury or the judge so they can understand the truth about what happened, writes Charles "Chuck" Bennett, a consultant with Trial Structure.
By Jane Wester | July 13, 2020
Robert Trump failed to meet the burden of demonstrating "imminent, irreparable harm to him," Dutchess County Supreme Court Justice Hal Greenwald found, using bold type to emphasize the final two words.
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