-
April 13, 2026
An Illinois state appeals court has ordered that a man convicted of murder more than two decades ago be given a new trial, finding he successfully demonstrated that newly discovered evidence could exonerate him if put in front of a new jury.
-
April 13, 2026
An Eighth Circuit panel dismissed claims from a St. Louis family whose home was invaded by a SWAT team in connection with a 2023 carjacking that the family had nothing to do with, ruling that their rights were not violated.
-
April 13, 2026
Former U.S. Department of Justice pardon attorney Liz Oyer spoke recently with Law360 about how the pardon process has changed, the impact the shift might have on the DOJ and how the system could be reformed.
-
April 13, 2026
A Connecticut man who has spent decades in prison for murdering his friend's mother in 1974 did not get a fair shot at a sentence modification because a judge improperly relied on parole board outcomes to justify keeping him locked up, the state's high court heard Monday.
-
April 10, 2026
A father of 16, convicted of plotting to kill the biological parents of his five adopted children, cannot have his initial confession disregarded, a Second Circuit panel said Friday, finding that even though he wasn't read his Miranda rights for two hours, he was speaking freely when he acknowledged his plan.
-
April 10, 2026
A group of judges in the Fourth Circuit have called for rethinking circuit precedent about whether oral pronouncements made at in-person sentencing hearings should have more weight than written judgments, saying existing case law creates a "tangled web of inconsistencies."
-
April 10, 2026
A man convicted of selling drugs in Schenectady County, New York, is entitled to have the trial court review his challenge to the dismissal of a Black juror, a New York state appeals court has unanimously found.
-
April 10, 2026
Colorado's public defender's office is not a "criminal justice agency" subject to the Colorado Criminal Justice Records Act, a state appellate panel ruled, reversing a statutory penalties award entered against the office.
-
April 10, 2026
A recent Fifth Circuit ruling has led a number of district court judges in that circuit to lean on a different rationale for rejecting the Trump administration's detention of unauthorized immigrants without bond: their "liberty interest."
-
April 10, 2026
A Muslim woman forced to remove her hijab in front of male officers during booking at an Aurora detention facility has hit the city with a proposed class action in Colorado federal court, alleging its policy requiring women to remove religious head coverings for booking photographs violates the U.S. Constitution.
-
April 09, 2026
An Ohio man who sent to numerous women harassing messages that included nude images of the victims, both real and artificial intelligence-generated, became the first person to be convicted under a 2025 federal law targeting revenge porn, according to a Thursday announcement from the U.S. Department of Justice.
-
April 09, 2026
A Colorado sheriff and others have been hit with a state court lawsuit alleging his jail illegally detained a man for nearly three weeks after jail officials mistakenly identified him as a different man who has the same first and last names and was subject a warrant from another county.
-
April 09, 2026
A Georgia federal judge pored over a county jail's policy of only allowing in books sent from authorized retailers, as jail leadership argued its approach was narrowly tailored and a local bookstore claimed it was arbitrary and unconstitutional.
-
April 09, 2026
Tucked into the Trump administration's budget request for fiscal 2027, the U.S. Department of Justice is trying once again to take an ax to a program that provides legal assistance to noncitizens.
-
April 09, 2026
Latino New Yorkers accused the Trump administration of executing an unconstitutional policy of racial profiling and warrantless arrests amid its crackdown on illegal immigrants, telling a New York federal court that underlying the policy is an arrest quota from the top.
-
April 07, 2026
The California Supreme Court has tossed the conviction and death sentence of a man found guilty of murdering his mother and a police chief, saying the trial court failed to investigate defense claims that a juror was biased.
-
April 07, 2026
Federal judges are issuing increasingly detailed, critical and decisive orders for habeas relief in immigration cases, stepping in as what immigration experts say is a last resort check on a system viewed as having crumbling due process safeguards.
-
April 07, 2026
Judge Devin Robinson's courtroom at the Red Hook Community Justice Center in Brooklyn looks and feels very different from the courthouse archetype.
-
April 06, 2026
A Michigan federal jury has awarded more than $300 million in a suit accusing a prison healthcare provider of refusing to approve a now former inmate's surgery, which forced him to defecate uncontrollably into a bag fastened to his stomach for more than two years.
-
April 06, 2026
The Legal Services Corp. is asking Congress for $2.14 billion in fiscal year 2027 to fund civil legal services for low-income Americans who cannot afford an attorney.
-
April 03, 2026
Law360 is pleased to announce the formation of its 2026 Editorial Advisory Boards.
-
April 02, 2026
The Fifth Circuit on Thursday gave federal prosecutors in Mississippi a second chance to prove a defendant in a drug trafficking case voluntarily waived his rights during a police interview because he continued to speak with investigators even after being misled.
-
April 02, 2026
The North Carolina Supreme Court ruled in a divided decision Thursday that a trial court lacked the power to impose constitutional remedies for the state's failure to provide students with a quality education, invalidating nine years of developments in the decadeslong case known as Leandro.
-
April 01, 2026
A Ninth Circuit panel on Wednesday affirmed First Amendment protections for journalists, legal observers and protesters in a case brought by individuals injured by U.S. Department of Homeland Security officers during Los Angeles-area immigration raid protests, but said a preliminary injunction issued by a California federal judge had to be narrowed.
-
March 31, 2026
A Black man on Mississippi's death row told the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday that state courts failed to properly address his objections to the prosecution's peremptory juror strikes at his 2006 trial, which he said were racially motivated.