Law.com | Video
By Samantha Joseph | August 17, 2021
"When I think of mentorship, I really think that I want to lighten the load of people who are coming behind me, and not make them have to … relearn the things that I've already learned, and really show young people how to navigate and be successful in the legal field," said Kasowitz Benson Torres partner Nefertiti J. Alexander.
New York Law Journal | Photo|Video
By Ryland West | December 18, 2020
A look back at the year that felt like a decade.
Law.com | Video
By Samantha Joseph | September 29, 2020
"When you talk about microaggressions, it seems so innocent and harmless. But it's the repeated nature of hearing similar comments or expectations or questions that really ultimately impact the receiver of those comments."
By Jason Grant | June 25, 2020
Samuel Brownridge, Queens Justice Joseph Zayas and Donna Aldea, the pro bono lawyer for Brownridge, all shed tears during Tuesday's exoneration hearing for Brownridge, who was wrongly imprisoned for 25 years.
By David Handschuh | December 30, 2019
New York Law Journal photo editor David Handschuh this year captured images of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, law firms moving to Hudson Yards, court officer graduations from the new academy in Brooklyn and drag queens celebrating Pride Week at midtown law firms.
New York Law Journal | Slideshow|Video
By David Handschuh | September 9, 2019
Workers remove 110 portraits of judges, some dating back to 1932, which were hanging in the Nassau County Courthouse in Mineola.
By Vivia Chen | January 10, 2019
Lawyers rarely get to display their artistic talents. The closest most get to the creative process is drafting a contract for a performer or writer.
By David Handschuh | November 15, 2018
The New York City Bar Chorus celebrated its 25th anniversary in front of a packed house at the New York City Bar Association on Friday, Nov. 9.
By David Handschuh | September 28, 2018
Presiding Justice Alan Scheinkman of the Appellate Division, Second Department, on Thursday reopened the Orange County Courthouse, which was damaged by hurricanes seven years ago.
By Mike Scarcella | September 12, 2018
Well, not the returns themselves. Because Trump hasn't released them. But there is a public-records case, set for argument Thursday in the D.C. Circuit, that seeks to force the IRS to disclose the records.
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