Document EFTA00032906 is an email newsletter from Law360, an organization providing legal news and analysis.
This document is a Law360 "Access to Justice" newsletter from April 20, 2020, summarizing legal news articles. It covers topics such as the impact of the pandemic on defense investigations, victims' rights in the Jeffrey Epstein case, transparency in courts, and hearings for detained migrant children. The email also lists various law firms.
From:Access to Justice Law360 <[email protected]> To:. c > Subject:How Defense Sleuths Are Forging Ahead Despite A Pandemic Date:Mon, 20 Apr 2020 11:27:38 +0000 ;°',Law36 0 Access to Justice Access to Justice How Defense Sleuths Are Forging Ahead Despite A Pandemic Across the country, thousands of investigators who help build cases for indigent defendants are adjusting to a new reality in which field work is "pretty much shut down." Though arrests have slowed and many court proceedings are on hold, investigators say their work can't stop. Read full article Victims' Rights Suffer Blow In Epstein Case In the latest twist in the Jeffrey Epstein saga, a split Eleventh Circuit panel ruled last week that the protections of the Crime Victims' Rights Act do not arise until after a formal criminal charge has been filed. For Epstein's victims, it could mark the end of a 12-year-long legal challenge — and for the victims' rights movement, it could be a lasting blow. Read full article Virus Forces Transparency Reckoning Among Highest Courts Since coronavirus concerns shuttered courthouses nationwide, the U.S. Supreme Court and some appellate judges have given in to livestream technology. Transparency advocates welcome this development and hope the practice will continue even after the pandemic ends. Read full article Analysis Amid Pandemic, Hearings For Detained Migrant Kids Go On As federal courts close their doors during the coronavirus pandemic, immigration court proceedings for migrant children in government custody are moving forward. Attorneys told Law360 that continuing these hearings risks children's health and threatens due process. Read full article Monday, April 20, 2020 LAW FIRMS Arent Fox Ashurst LLP Austin LLP Baker Donelson Baker McKenzie Ballard Spahr Barnes & Thornburg Bast Amron Belkin Burden Blank Rome Boies Schiller Bracewell Brown Rudnick Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner Cadwalader Wickersham Cahill Gordon Clifford Chance Clyde & Co Cooley Covington & Burling Cravath Swaine Crowell & Moring Culhane Meadows DLA Piper Davis Polk Debevoise & Plimpton Dentons Duane Morris Eckert Seamans EFTA00032906
Q&A Coping With A Pandemic: Pine Tree's Nan Heald With distancing and isolation the new norm amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Law360 is sharing reactions from around the business and legal community. Today's perspective comes from Maine-based Nan Heald, executive director at Pine Tree Legal Assistance. Read full article Homeless Angelenos Get Due Process Win Over City Seizures In January 2019, Janet Garcia returned from getting ready for work to find that all of her belongings had been seized and destroyed by the Los Angeles Bureau of Sanitation. Read full article Bail Bond Groups Can't Sink Calif. Price-Fixing Suit For those who turn to bail bonds in California, the cost of getting oneself or a loved one out of prison while awaiting a court date can be steep, but a proposed class action now poised to move forward contends there's more to those rates than honest market forces. Read full article Pro Bono Spotlight O'Melveny Helps Reunite Family Amid COVID-19 Fears When three young siblings found themselves detained 50 miles from tneir father's home in Maryland, with the government moving to deport them rather than reunite the family, it was the latest hardship in a journey fraught with danger. Read full article Perspectives COVID-19 Highlights Access Injustice In Personal Bankruptcy In the age of enforced social distancing, the limits on access to electronic filing means bankruptcy is paradoxically only available to those individuals who can afford it, says Rohan Pavuluri at Upsolve. Read full article Perspectives Inmate Release Exhaustion Rule Should Be Waived For COVID The issue at the forefront of many compassionate release applications during the pandemic has been whether federal courts must wait 30 days before they can rule on them due to the statutory administrative exhaustion requirement. and those 30 days could become a matter of life or death, says Jolene LaVigne- Eversheds Sutherland Faegre Drinker Fenwick & West Fisher Phillips Foley & Lardner Foley Hoag Fragomen Del Rey Fried Frank Fross Zelnick Gibson Dunn Goldberg Segalla Goodwin Greenberg Traurig Greenspoon Marder Hinshaw & Culbertson Hodgson Russ Hogan Lovells Hogan Thompson LLP Holland & Knight Hueston Hennigan Husch Blackwell Immigration Law PLLC Jackson Lewis Jones Day K&L Gates Kelley Drye Kilpatrick Townsend Kirkland & Ellis Klehr Harrison Lanier Law Firm Latham & Watkins Levenfeld Pearlstein Lieff Cabraser Linklaters Loeb & Loeb Lowenstein Sandler Lucas Magazine Marshall Dennehey Mason Lietz Mayer Brown Mintz Levin Morgan Lewis Mukasey Frenchman EFTA00032907
Albert at Schlam Stone. Read full article Nixon Peabody Norton Rose O'Melveny & Myers Ogletree Deakins Orrick Paul Hastings Pepper Hamilton Perkins Coie Pierce Bainbridge Pryor Cashman Reed Smith Rivkin Radler Ropes & Gray Schiff Hardin Schlam Stone Seyfarth Shaw Sheppard Mullin Shook Hardy Sidley Austin Simmons & Simmons Slaughter and May Snell & Wilmer Squire Patton Boggs Stoel Rives Thompson HD Troutman Sanders Vinson & Elkins Williams & Connolly Wilson Sonsini Winston & Strawn Womble Bond Dickinson COMPANIES 3M Co. Aeropostale Inc. American Immigration Lawyers Association Apple Inc. Brooklyn Defender Services Burford Capital LLC CDI Corporation Cable News Network Inc. Ernst & Young LLP Facebook Inc. EFTA00032908
Google Inc. Instagram Inc. Johnson & Johnson Kids in Need of Defense Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles Linkedln Corp. Monsanto Co. Orleans Public Defenders Philip Morris International Inc. Pine Tree Legal Assistance Inc. Skype Technologies SA Sonos Inc. Spotify Technology SA The Walt Disney Co. Twitter Inc. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES California Department of Insurance California Supreme Court Executive Office for Immigration Review Federal Trade Commission Food and Drug Administration Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority New Jersey Office of the Public Defender New Jersey Supreme Court Occupational Safety and Health Administration Pennsylvania Supreme Court Securities and Exchange Commission Small Business Administration U.S. Attorney's Office U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit EFTA00032909
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services U.S. Department of Homeland Security U.S. Department of Justice U.S. Department of Labor U.S. Department of the Treasury U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement U.S. Supreme Court Not size if your firm subscribes? Ask your librarian. We hope you found this message to be useful. However, if you'd rather not receive future emails of this sort. you may unsubscribe here. Please DO NOT reply to this email. For customer support inquiries, please call +1-646-783-7100 or visit our Contact Us page. Privacy Policy Law360 I Portfolio Media. Inc. 111 West 19th Street 5th Floor. New York. NY 10011 EFTA00032910




















