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Mine Hill, New Jersey Mayor Sam Morris called Kirby's claim "ridiculous," telling ABC News it was "really insulting to all the people here who are living through this." "Come on out, Mr. Kirby ...
When two New York lawyers were sanctioned for submitting a legal brief that included fictitious case citations generated by ChatGPT, it looked even more bleak. Yet courts, judges, and law firms ...
ALM owns and publishes 33 national, regional, and international magazines and newspapers, including Credit Union Times, The American Lawyer, the New York Law Journal, Corporate Counsel, The National Law Journal, The Legal Intelligencer, Legal Times, GlobeSt.com, and Real Estate Forum, as well as the Law.com and Law.com International brands.
The Daily Record is a seven-day morning daily newspaper of the USA Today Network located in Parsippany-Troy Hills, New Jersey. [3] The Daily Record serves the greater Morris County area of northern New Jersey, Essex County and the south-western suburbs of New York City. It is owned by Gannett, who purchased it from the Goodson Newspaper Group ...
The New Jersey Law Journal (NJLJ) has named the firm Litigation Department of the Year for Intellectual Property in 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, and 2015. U.S. News-Best Law Firms ranked the firm a Tier One in New Jersey for Intellectual Property-Litigation, Litigation-Patent, Patent Law, and Trademark Law in 2023, continuing a decade ...
Dendrite International, Inc. v. Doe No. 3, 342 N.J. Super. 134, 775 A.2d 756 (App. Div. 2001), is a New Jersey Superior Court case in which Dendrite International, Inc., a purveyor of computer software used in the pharmaceutical industry, brought a John Doe lawsuit against individuals who had anonymously posted criticisms of the company on a Yahoo message board.
The New Jersey Register is the official journal of the Government of New Jersey that contains information on proposed regulations and rulemaking activities. It is published semimonthly by the state's Office of Administrative Law. [1] The first issue was printed and published by the New Jersey Law Journal on September 25, 1969. [2]
It was the flagship law review among the three accredited law journals at Rutgers School of Law–Camden. In 2015, predating the merger of the two law schools at Rutgers, the Rutgers Law Journal and the Rutgers Law Review (the law review of the former Rutgers School of Law–Newark), merged into one law review, called the Rutgers University Law ...