By David E. Wood | December 13, 2024
"I see top-flight rainmakers in their 60s and 70s—even 80s—who reach the apex of the profession, but do not know how or when to stop," writes David Wood of David Wood Consulting.
By Kathleen Peratis | November 21, 2024
Employment boutique Outten & Golden's decision last year to disengage with a Columbia Law School professor due to her public statements on the Israel-Palestine conflict led a veteran partner to resign from the firm.
By Adam Klein | November 15, 2024
Outten & Golden's managing partner responds to a recent letter to the New York Law Journal over its decision to drop a Columbia University professor as a client over her comments on the Israel-Palestine conflict.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Jerry H. Goldfeder | November 6, 2024
A recent article published in the New York Law Journal highlighting the work of the Cozen O'Connor team representing the State Democracy Defenders Fund included a photo featuring lawyers who are not part of the group that may have been misleading for readers.
Corporate Counsel | Letter to the Editor
By Erica Beth Askin | October 16, 2024
As lawyers supporting strategic strikes, we're not indulging "chaos"—we're advancing a cause that's long overdue. Our job is to help workers achieve lasting victories by advising on strategy, building cases, and representing their voices so they resound effectively in the legal system.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Daniel M. Lehmann | October 7, 2024
An attorney who has worked thousands of cases before the New York City Office of Administrative Trials and Hearings applauds the court's recent announcement to submit rulings from its trial division to the New York Law Journal for publication. But he says going further and publishing rulings from the court's appeals and hearing divisions would more accurately reflect OATH and how its decisions impact the average New Yorker.
New York Law Journal | Commentary|Letter to the Editor
By Jerry H. Goldfeder | September 24, 2024
The new law gives the "win" to the voter, not the one partisan commissioner standing in the way. Putting the voter first is also progress.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Brian Graifman | August 26, 2024
A New York-based partner reflects on his use of a legal standard developed through by former Appellate Division, Second Department Justice Sondra Miller, who died earlier this month.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By David B. Saxe | August 21, 2024
A judge ran a campaign for judicial office "on an apparently unequivocal campaign pledge to incarcerate offenders, exclude drug dealers from the community, ensure maximum sentencing of repeat offenders, and protect victims of domestic violence."
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Evelyn Frazee, Richard A. Dollinger and Dolores Gebhardt | August 21, 2024
Justice Miller crashed through the glass ceiling: as one of the first women to graduate from Harvard Law School, then to serve on the Family Court, the Supreme Court, and the Appellate Division, Second Department.
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