New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Sondra J. Miller | March 22, 2023
Conflict exists between the rights of the child to be heard and the due process rights of the parties in a custodial proceeding, but an in camera interview may provide information to the judge relevant to the proceedings, a former state Supreme Court justice writes.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Karen Freedman and Glenn Metsch-Ampel | March 14, 2023
The author of a recent Law Journal column concludes by asking, in part, "How far away are we from allowing children to participate fully in the determination of what is in their best interest?" Thankfully, we are even closer than he may think.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Peter J. Galasso | March 13, 2023
When a child is the victim of parental alienation, the child's rights and voice may be insidiously muted by the time of trial, which urgently necessitates a judge's preemptive intervention at an in-camera conference, a longtime matrimonial attorney writes.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Joseph W. Bellacosa | March 13, 2023
Aaudacious few senators have succeeded in sidelining the Assembly and the governor who serve as indispensable joint actors to enact a legitimate amendment, a former chief judge of the Court of Appeals writes.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Robert Z. Dobrish, Lee Rosenberg, Adam John Wolff and Eric I. Wrubel | March 2, 2023
Editor's note: This letter was submitted in response to Fink & Katz partner Phillp Katz's column "Praemonitus Praemunitus: The Importance of the…
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Sandra Elena Roper | March 2, 2023
Someone of Black race or white race should not be required to deny their race for their cultural traditional ethnicity as Latino or Hispanic, a Brooklyn judge writes.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Darryl M. Vernon | February 28, 2023
As we now know, remote court appearances, depositions and the like have helped the courts and litigants attend to matters more easily, efficiently, and at times when people simply can't attend personally. Congress could learn from this, one attorney writes.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Karen Simmons and Louise Feld | February 27, 2023
In highly sensitive custody or visitation cases, children can be profoundly harmed when they are exposed to even selected portions of forensic reports, representatives from The Children's Law Center write.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Lewis Rosenberg | February 23, 2023
One remedy to help curb abuses would be to require mandated disclosure of evidence by a DA be timed before a plea offer may be made, an attorney writes.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Thomas R. Newman | February 22, 2023
Looking beyond criminal appeals, Cannataro has brought about a welcome consensus among the judges that had been lacking, with many more signed majority opinions, a Duane Morris attorney writes.
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