-
The case centered on whether a judge's order violated the defendant's constitutional rights when it prohibited him from posting the plaintiff's name or image online.
-
Dan Hynes, an attorney who ran for state Senate in 2018, alleges he was defamed by a negative mailer that didn’t mention his annulment of a previous extortion conviction.
-
Republican-drawn maps entrenched that party’s power in the State House following the 2020 census. Democrats want the courts to step in and say a line was crossed.
-
The two women are moving on with their lives and into new apartments, after reaching agreements Thursday with their landlord.
-
A Manchester parent is suing to force schools to disclose changes in students’ gender identity.
-
The justices found that a lower court judge’s decision to prevent Woodburn’s self-defense argument was unreasonable.
-
States across the country have been split on whether to allow these kinds of lawsuits.
-
The two-to-two split decision by the New Hampshire Supreme Court will leave a lower court order denying the request in place.
-
The case involves one specific public records request, but it poses a larger question: whether the public ever has a right to view internal police personnel files that document misconduct.
-
Smart’s latest request for a commutation for her life sentence was denied last year by the Executive Council.