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Access to Justice
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									March 21, 2025
									Nonlawyer Migrant Aides See Clear Mission But Murky Future"Accredited representatives," a little-known and underutilized role that allows nonlawyers to represent immigrants with the federal government's authorization, are facing unprecedented demand but also an uncertain future under the Trump administration. 
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									March 21, 2025
									La.'s First Nitrogen Execution Reflects Broader Method ShiftAt a time when many states are reassessing the use of lethal injections in capital punishment, Louisiana's recent use of nitrogen gas to execute a death row prisoner points to a shift in states' exploration of alternative methods, with even death by firing squad on the table. 
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									March 21, 2025
									How King & Spalding Helped LGBTQ+ Vets Win Back BenefitsMore than a decade after the U.S. Department of Defense repealed its "don't ask, don't tell" policy, which kept LGBTQ+ troops in the closet, veterans who were kicked out for their sexual orientation have continued to suffer the effects of a scarlet letter placed on their discharge papers. 
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									March 20, 2025
									Conn. Murder Exoneree Seeks Extra $2M From Cop's EstateA Connecticut felony murder exoneree on Thursday asked a judge to heap an extra $2 million onto a $5.7 million federal jury verdict issued Wednesday against the estate of a now-deceased town police officer who failed to raise red flags about a key witness's interview. 
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									March 19, 2025
									Law360 Announces The Members Of Its 2025 Editorial BoardsLaw360 is pleased to announce the formation of its 2025 Editorial Advisory Boards. 
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									March 19, 2025
									Connecticut Jury Awards $5.7M To Murder ExonereeA Connecticut federal jury on Wednesday handed an exonerated murder defendant $5.7 million, finding a town police officer negligent for failing to stop evidence fabrication by a state police interrogator. 
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									March 18, 2025
									Conn. Murder Exoneree Asks Civil Rights Jury For $50MA Connecticut exoneree on Tuesday urged a federal jury to award more than $50 million — or $5,000 per day — for the three decades he spent behind bars for a 1985 murder, arguing two town cops ignored cracks in the case almost from the beginning. 
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									March 14, 2025
									New State Courts Org. President On Its 'Vitally Important' RoleElizabeth Clement, chief justice of the Michigan Supreme Court and the incoming president of the National Center for State Courts, joined Law360 Pulse for a conversation about her new role in maintaining the functioning and independence of state court systems around the country. 
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									March 13, 2025
									Experts Sound Alarm Over Law Used To Detain Grad StudentAn obscure provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act being invoked to deport Columbia University student activist Mahmoud Khalil was meant to be used sparingly, leading immigration attorneys to question how the Trump administration intends to use it moving forward. 
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									March 13, 2025
									NJ State Police Agree To Clear Expungements In 120 DaysThe New Jersey State Police have agreed to process judicial expungement orders within 120 days, resolving litigation over yearslong delays in the clearing of expunged criminal records, the New Jersey Office of the Public Defender announced Thursday. 
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									March 11, 2025
									Former Immigration Judges Defend Legal Services ProgramsA group of former immigration judges and Board of Immigration Appeals members told a D.C. federal judge that legal services programs for unrepresented detained immigrants that the Trump administration stopped funding help the courts function more efficiently. 
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									March 11, 2025
									Ex-Prosecutor's Handling Of 2017 Protest Evidence DefendedA former federal prosecutor accused of withholding key evidence in the criminal cases against hundreds of people arrested at a 2017 anti-Trump demonstration in Washington, D.C., was working "under profoundly challenging conditions" at the time, her attorney told an ethics panel in the nation's capital on Tuesday. 
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									March 10, 2025
									Bad Police Work Led To 30-Year Sentence, Conn. Jury ToldA Connecticut man who served 30 years in prison for a murder he did not commit should be compensated because one local police officer failed to disclose key evidence and another sat by as the state police fed facts to an informant, his attorneys told a federal jury Monday afternoon. 
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									March 10, 2025
									Split 5th Circ. Vacates Death Sentence Over Brady ViolationsA split Fifth Circuit has reversed and vacated a Texas woman's murder conviction and death sentence after 27 years, having determined that prosecutors failed to properly disclose evidence in accordance with U.S. Supreme Court precedent, and remanded the case to Amarillo, Texas, federal court. 
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									March 10, 2025
									DC Ethics Hearing Over Anti-Trump Protest Arrests To Kick OffA former federal prosecutor in Washington, D.C., is set to face an attorney ethics panel Tuesday in disciplinary proceedings that could shed new light on how the government handled key evidence in cases against hundreds of people arrested at protests of President Donald Trump's first inauguration in 2017. 
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									March 07, 2025
									Calif. Bar Reenacts Civil Rights History In Courtroom DramaDuring the day, California Deputy Attorney General Arvon Perteet handles complex fraud cases, among other matters, for the state. But on a recent weeknight, he left his work behind and transformed into Thurgood Marshall in 1961, overseeing the work of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund in New York City. 
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									March 07, 2025
									For Many Biden Clemency Grantees, Freedom Is On HoldFormer President Joe Biden set records when he granted approximately 2,500 people clemency at the end of his term, but the process of getting out of prison for those people has not been so straightforward and two months later, a majority remain in custody. 
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									March 07, 2025
									Trump DOJ's Shift Threatens To Upend Police ReformAs the Trump administration abandons consent decrees — court-ordered agreements designed to curb police misconduct — experts warn that a crucial mechanism for law enforcement accountability is disappearing. 
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									March 07, 2025
									NYC Bar Atty On New Shelter Advocacy ProjectThe New York City Bar Association's pro bono arm recently rebranded and expanded its homeless assistance program into the Shelter Advocacy Project. Its leader, attorney Jennifer Quijano, talked to Law360 about how the program aims to tackle urgent day-to-day issues creating barriers for people who are homeless, such as storage facility disputes, shelter placement challenges, and housing voucher delays. 
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									March 05, 2025
									NYU Law To Open Innocence Project Clinic Next FallThe NYU School of Law announced on Wednesday that it was opening a clinic with the Innocence Project next fall where students can work on nonprofit cases and learn about postconviction and wrongful-conviction litigation as part of an expansive new partnership. 
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									March 03, 2025
									Justices Pass On Reviewing Ohio Prisoner's Habeas WinThe U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to scrutinize a lower court ruling granting habeas corpus relief to an Ohio death row prisoner whom a biased judge had prevented from introducing new mitigating evidence at resentencing. 
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									February 28, 2025
									Ex-Iranian Intel Official Accused Of Torture In Fla. SuitA former top Iranian intelligence official was accused of human rights abuses in a Florida federal lawsuit brought by three California men, alleging he played a major role in maintaining the deposed shah's repressive regime through the arrest, mass torture and imprisonment of perceived political dissidents. 
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									February 28, 2025
									Advocates Step Up After EEOC About-Face On Gender IdentityTwo nonprofits taking up gender identity discrimination cases that the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is abandoning offers a preview of the role that advocacy organizations will play defending transgender workers as the Trump administration attacks their rights, experts said. 
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									February 28, 2025
									Why Pro Bono Work Is Essential To Any Attorney's PracticeFordham University School of Law’s Dora Galacatos discusses the importance of civil justice work to an attorney’s practice and how law firms can design and implement successful pro bono programs. 
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									February 27, 2025
									Conn. Supreme Court Snapshot: Water Rates, Judicial AttacksAn Eversource unit's request to offset inflation and $42 million in new infrastructure projects through rate hikes will top the Connecticut Supreme Court's March docket, with the justices examining another in a list of challenges to state regulators' attempts to keep a lid on customer costs. 
Expert Analysis
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								Habeas Ruling Shows Justices' Growing Hostility Toward Writ.jpg)  The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in Brown v. Davenport, upholding the murder conviction of a man who was shackled at trial in view of the jury, makes an unjust federal review law more potent, and points to the conservative supermajority’s increasing antagonism toward writs of habeas corpus, says Christopher Wright Durocher at the American Constitution Society. 
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								Time To Fix Legal Industry's Environmental Pro Bono Problem  As we observe Earth Month, it's sobering to note that pro bono environmental law work lags behind other practice areas — but the good news is that there are numerous organizations that can help lawyers get connected with environment-related pro bono projects, says Matthew Karmel at Riker Danzig. 
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								How Prosecutors Can End Cycle Of Intimate Partner Violence  With 10 million people in the U.S. reporting that they experience intimate partner violence each year, it’s clear that traditional forms of prosecution are falling short, especially in small and rural communities, but prosecutors can explore new ways to support survivors and prevent violence, say Alissa Marque Heydari at John Jay College and David Sullivan, a district attorney. 
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								DOJ's Boeing Immunity Deal Violated Crime Victims' Rights  The Northern District of Texas should support the arguments of 737 Max plane crash victims’ families, and hold that the U.S. Department of Justice violated the families' ability to provide input under the Crime Victims’ Rights Act when it secretly entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with Boeing, says Meg Garvin at the National Crime Victims Law Institute. 
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								Jackson Confirmation Hearings Should Examine Due Process.jpg)  In the upcoming U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings, senators should assess Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s approach to holding government actors accountable in the areas of qualified immunity and forfeiture, as revisiting shaky precedents on these topics could help guarantee due process for all, says Marc Levin at the Council on Criminal Justice. 
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								ABA's New Anti-Bias Curriculum Rule Is Insufficient.jpg)  The American Bar Association's recently approved requirement that law schools educate students on bias, cross-cultural competency and racism, while a step in the right direction, fails to publicly acknowledge and commit to eradicating the systemic racial inequality in our legal system, says criminal defense attorney Donna Mulvihill Fehrmann. 
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								Justice Reforms Call For Quick Action To Fill US Atty Spots  U.S. attorneys play an important role in transforming the criminal legal system for several reasons, and they can restore integrity and independence to the U.S. Department of Justice, so President Joe Biden and Congress must move quickly to fill the remaining two-thirds of the top prosecutor seats, says Derick Dailey at Davis + Gilbert. 
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								Judge's Veto Of Arbery Hate Crime Plea Deal Is Not Unusual  Contrary to media commentary, a Georgia federal judge’s rejection of the plea agreement between prosecutors and a defendant charged with hate crimes in the murder of Ahmaud Arbery is not actually surprising — it simply indicates the judge’s desire to retain discretion and allow all parties to be heard before making a just sentencing decision, says Dominick Gerace at Taft Stettinius. 
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								Indefinite Migrant Detention Without Review Is Kafkaesque.jpeg)  In two recently argued U.S. Supreme Court cases, the government's position that detained migrants can't demand an immigration judge review their confinement, but can instead file a habeas petition in federal court, reads like a work of Kafka, offering only the illusion of access to a hearing before a neutral fact-finder, says César García Hernández at Ohio State University. 
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								2 Worthy Goals For The DOJ's New Domestic Terrorism Unit  The U.S. Department of Justice’s newly announced Domestic Terrorism Unit should include both counterterrorism and civil rights prosecutors, and would benefit from a criminal statute that is modeled after international terrorism laws and that strikes a balance between protecting the public and constitutional rights, say Emil Bove and Brittany Manna at Chiesa Shahinian. 
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								Justice Reforms Are Not To Blame For Waukesha Tragedy  Last month's parade attack in Wisconsin has brought into focus the fact that the accused was out of jail on a low bond — but this tragedy must not be exploited to reverse years of long-overdue criminal justice reform, when emerging data shows that new prosecutorial models are associated with better outcomes than an overly punitive approach, says Alissa Marque Heydari at John Jay College. 
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								Addressing Prison Risk After CARES Act Home Confinement  Home confinement eligibility, which was expanded last year due to high rates of COVID-19 in penal institutions, may soon be tightened, so house-detained individuals at risk of returning to prison should understand their various avenues for relief, as well as the procedural obstacles they may face in mounting legal challenges, say Charles Burnham and Jonathan Knowles at Burnham & Gorokhov. 
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								We Must Help Fix Justice Gap In Georgia's Legal Deserts  In much of rural Georgia, there are too few lawyers to meet residents’ urgent legal needs, forcing self-represented litigants to navigate an impenetrable system, but courts, law firms and nonlawyers can help address these legal deserts in various ways, says Lauren Sudeall at Georgia State University College of Law. 
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								Reimagining Courthouse Design For Better Access To Justice  While courthouse design has historically been driven by tradition, it is time to shift from the classical courthouse to spaces that are accessible to those with mobility challenges, serve the needs of vulnerable litigants, and accommodate pandemic-era shifts toward remote and hybrid proceedings, says architect Clair Colburn at Finegold Alexander. 
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								Attorneys, Fight For Enviro Justice With Both Law And Protest  In this moment of climate crisis, lawyers can and should use law and protest in tandem — from urging law firms to stop serving the fossil fuel industry to helping draft laws that accelerate the transition to a sustainable way of life, says Vivek Maru at Namati. 
