By Allison Dunn | March 15, 2023
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit rejected a defendant's claims that a judge in Massachusetts improperly relied on "personal observations about his own, private gun collection" during a probation violation hearing when determining that at least one weapon shown in a video was a real firearm.
By Quentin Brogdon | January 5, 2023
In the wake of In re Kararay, parties can no longer obtain broad, untargeted cell-phone data right out of the gate. Parties must first satisfy a two-step process before obtaining broad access to cell-phone data.
By Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack | December 27, 2022
Two cases that went before the the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas examine the Second Amendment right to bear arms for convicted felons.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 21, 2022
Laws regulating social media sites and anti-SLAPP statutes are among the issues to keep on eye next year.
By Adolfo Pesquera | November 14, 2022
"If the only thing limiting federal power is our ability to document (or merely speculate about) the provenance of a particular item, the Founders' assurance of a limited national government is nothing more than a parchment promise," said Fifth Circuit Judge James Ho.
By Marcia Coyle | October 19, 2022
"There is a person on death row where the totality of evidence questions the conviction and the state doesn't have faith in it. If those facts are not important enough to engage the Supreme Court, I don't know what is," said Travis County District Attorney Jose Garza.
By Adolfo Pesquera | October 11, 2022
Attorneys Jay Wright and Bob Mabry are vying to become a judge on the Ninth District Court of Appeals in Beaumont after the Republican incumbent, Justice Charles Kreger, opted not to run again.
By Adolfo Pesquera | September 29, 2022
"If we ruled that the legislature could give the Attorney General the unfettered power to prosecute all election cases, we would be giving every future Attorney General the power to bring possibly fabricated criminal charges against every candidate running for public office ... who disagrees with the Attorney General's political ideals," Judge Scott Walker said.
By Avalon Zoppo | August 30, 2022
At the heart of the case was whether Honeywell can be held liable for damages that were already paid by other companies that were also part of the supply chain.
By Avalon Zoppo | August 19, 2022
Illinois Appellate Court Justice David Ellis, who has written 18 crime fiction novels, talks about how judges can use storytelling techniques to enhance their opinion writing.
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