Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Review of the Major Municipal Court Cases from 2015

Review of the Major Municipal Court Cases from 2015
 Nov 24th Municipal Court Practice CLE Seminar 
When:         Tuesday, November 24, 2015 2:00 PM until 4:00 PM  Where:          MCBA Office 87 Bayard Street New Brunswick, New Jersey  08901 
Presenters:         Kenneth A. Vercammen, Esq., Edison  William G. Brigiani, Esq., East Brunswick 
To Register:
http://www.mcbalaw.com/events/event_details.asp?id=652979

Info Contact:       MCBA Jonathan Cowles  jcowles@mcbalaw.com 
Phone: 732.828.3433, x. 102          
                 
Cost: $30-Young Lawyers; $40-MCBA Members; and $75-All Others
Contact: Jonathan Cowles
Phone: 732.828.3433, x. 102 –
See more at: http://www.mcbalaw.com/events/event_details.asp?id=652979



Some of the featured cases will include:
Some of the featured cases will include:
  State v. Kuropchak - Municipal Court improperly admitted into evidence Drinking Driving Questionnaire (DDQ) and Drinking Driving Report
  State v. Adkins - Police needed warrant for blood taking after DWI event in 2010 case
  State v. Taylor - Ten year step down in DWI also applies to Refusal
  State v. Pomianek - Bias statute requires proof of defendant intended bias, not victim perception and statute unconstitutional
  State v. Bacome - Police did not have reason to order passenger out of car
  Gilleran v. Bloomfield - OPRA can require town and police to provide video of security camera
  Maida v. Kuskin - A request for a civil reservation in municipal court must be made in open court
  State v. D.G.M. - Mere filming of ex spouse is not violation for FRO
  State v. Harris - No home release or wristlet if mandatory 180 jail
  State v. Perry - Driver is not subject to criminal driving while suspended if DWI suspension period expired prior to driving
  . . . and a review of the most significant cases from 2014.

This program has been approved by the Board on Continuing Legal Education of the Supreme Court of New Jersey for 2.0 hours of total CLE credit. Of these, 2.0 credits qualify for certification in municipal court law.


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