Remove Felony Remove Law School Remove New York
article thumbnail

New York Moves to Ease Arrest Disclosure Requirements by Would-Be Lawyers

The Crime Report

New York is moving to end a requirement that law school graduates report past arrests and police interactions short of convictions in order to become practicing attorneys, following a new report finding that excessive screening discourages people of color from applying to law school and the bar, reports Bloomberg News.

Lawyer 98
article thumbnail

Only 15% of NYC Hate Crime Charges End in Conviction

The Crime Report

More than 60 crimes fall under the hate crime statute in New York, from simple menacing to possession of a biological weapon. The state data shows that the more serious felony arrests for hate crimes yielded felony convictions — whether as a hate crime or not — in 19 percent of the cases closed citywide between 2015 and 2020.

Felony 97
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

BLM protester injured by Buffalo police files civil lawsuit

JURIST

New York resident and peace activist Martin Gugino on Monday filed a civil lawsuit against Buffalo, New York, police after being seriously injured by several officers this past summer. The post BLM protester injured by Buffalo police files civil lawsuit appeared first on JURIST - News - Legal News & Commentary.

Felony 119
article thumbnail

‘Outrageous Outcomes’: Plea Bargaining and the Justice System

The Crime Report

From about the 1600s, they had a gigantic Criminal Code where everything was a felony and every felony was punishable by death. You have a situation where somebody who is a perfectly well intentioned student coming from the lower or the middle classes and wants to change the world with a law degree.

article thumbnail

Court Officers Told Jurors Not To Discuss Cases During Deliberations, Says Grand Jury Foreman

The Crime Report

It instructed jurors that they would sit through witness testimony and review evidence by a prosecutor, and then “discuss with each other the evidence and the legal instructions” before voting on whether or not there is probable cause to indict each felony suspect. asked Mark Bederow, a criminal defense lawyer and former Manhattan prosecutor.

Court 98
article thumbnail

Alvin Bragg and The Art of Not Taking Law Too Seriously

JonathanTurley

After all, the base charge is a simple misdemeanor under a New York law against falsifying business records. Under New York’s penal law, section 175.10, it can be a felony if the “intent to defraud includes an intent to commit another crime or to aid or conceal the commission thereof.”

article thumbnail

Bragg and the Jackson Pollock School of Prosecution: Why the Trump Trial Could End With a Hung Jury

JonathanTurley

Bragg has achieved the same effect by regenerating a dead misdemeanor on falsifying business records as 34 felony counts. He is currently in prison in New York , but was not called by the prosecution. However, the only thing worse in New York than being a Trump supporter is being a chump. and Maurice C.

Legal 86