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By Katheryn Tucker | October 30, 2017
An attorney who filed an amicus brief in the case will serve on the election campaign committee for Peterson.
1 minute read
By Samuel C. Stretton | October 26, 2017
The Smart Start-ignition interlock device is apparently advertising heavily in Pennsylvania due to the new changes of the rules for ignition interlock.
1 minute read
By Cogan Schneier | October 26, 2017
In a speech at the Heritage Foundation, the attorney general said judges who have entered nationwide preliminary injunctions against President Donald Trump's policies are carrying out policy preferences, not the law.
1 minute read
By Richard Emery | October 26, 2017
In his Judicial Conduct column, Richard Emery concludes his discussion of discipline imposed upon judges who attempt to further private interests by invoking their judicial office. Here, he focuses on Court of Appeals' precedents in this category of judicial discipline and reviews the basis for holding judges accountable for their off-bench actions.
1 minute read
By Katheryn Tucker | October 23, 2017
In an article the ABA Journal published Friday, the Georgia Court of Appeals' chief judge offered a guide for judges to use his favorite platform, Twitter, in a way that engages the public without crossing lines of professional boundaries and decorum.
1 minute read
By Richard Emery | October 23, 2017
In his Judicial Conduct column, Richard Emery addresses the issue of using judicial influence which furthers private interests. He reviews three cases recently decided by the New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct, which cast a harsh light on the persistent problem of judges using their office to benefit themselves or others.
1 minute read
By Jason Grant | New York Law Journal | October 19, 2017
Justice Anthony Ferrara, who is slated to retire at year's end, will only be doing “chambers work” for the remainder of his judicial career, and he has been demoted to a city criminal court judge position.
1 minute read
By Samuel C. Stretton | October 19, 2017
Payment to witnesses who are not experts is very limited and governed to a large extent by the Rules of Professional Conduct. Under Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 3.4(b), a lawyer cannot pay or offer payment to a witness contingent upon the content of the witness' testimony or the outcome of the case.
1 minute read
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | Texas Lawyer | October 18, 2017
U.S. District Judge Ed Kinkeade of Dallas said he's seen witness tampering allegation frequently in criminal cases, but never before in civil suits.
1 minute read
By Cogan Schneier | National Law Journal | October 17, 2017
Katsas, a judicial nominee for the D.C. Circuit, told senators some of the issues he worked on in the past nine months, including the travel ban and the Mueller investigation.
1 minute read
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