April 2025 Criminal Law Top Blawgs
Covers constitutional law, criminal law, free speech and torts.
Addresses issues faced by license professionals and regulated businesses in civil, business, administrative and criminal matters with an emphasis on health care. By Green & Associates.
Covers fraud and forensic accounting, including tax fraud and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. By Tracy Coenen.
Covers family law, personal injury, criminal defense, and construction law.
Covers New Jersey criminal law, family law and personal injury law.
Edited by University of Miami School of Law Professor Michael Froomkin, The Journal of Things We Like (Lots)–JOTWELL–invites law professors to join us in filling a telling gap in legal scholarship by creating a space where legal academics will go to identify, celebrate, and discuss the best new legal scholarship.
Covers mortgage fraud information, fraud schemes and indictments. By Rachel Dollar.
Covers Boston criminal law and DUI news. By the Law Offices of Lefteris K. Travayiakis, P.C.
Covers white collar crime news. By Jef Henninger.
Covers New York criminal law topics such as criminal procedure, DWI and traffic offenses, drugs and narcotics, fraud related offenses, and violent crimes. By Jeremy Saland.
Covers Florida violent crimes, drug offenses, DUIs, traffic offenses and federal crimes. By Blake & Dorsten, P.A.
A New York Criminal Defense Blog. By Scott H. Greenfield.
By Rand Mintzer.
Edited by Ellen S. Podgor, Lucian E. Dervan and Solomon L. Wisenberg and Lawrence S. Goldman.
Covers criminal defense, civil litigation and whistleblowers.
Covers business and commercial disputes, appeals, litigation and white collar criminal defense.
Covers Florida criminal law news concerning domestic violence, gun offenses, sex offenses and immigration status. By the Law Offices of Ralph Behr.
Educational legal blog written for the layman on criminal defense, personal injury, and civil rights topics.
Features articles on criminal defense in Dallas and throughout Texas. By Broden & Mickelsen.
Incorporates history and legal analysis to raise questions on criminal justice issues. By Victoria Nadel.