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We Will Be Three

By: Barrie L. Goldstein
Lakeville Journal
May 20, 2010

Solicitor General Elena Kagan’s nomination to the U. S. Supreme Court was hardly a surprise, but it nevertheless is welcome news for those who advocate that the Supreme Court should have more gender diversity…
 
 

Sharon Dispute Goes On

By: Max Wittstein
Litchfield County Times
Feb. 19, 2010

A legal battle surrounding the placement of a gate on the discontinued Old Joray Road has been dragging on for more than a year and a half, and is not over yet...


Effective Removal Policy Not Effective

By: Barrie Goldstein
Connecticut Law Tribune
August 17, 2009
Vol. 35, No. 33

A gaping hole exists in the statutory framework that Connecticut has created to satisfy a parent’s fundamental right to due process when his custodial rights are altered by the Department of Children and Families on the basis of child safety....


For The Love Of Law

By: Jack Coraggio
Litchfield County Times
Feb. 14, 2008

Barrie Goldstein loves her two Sealyham terriers, Domino and Fitzgerald. She loves the three acres of land she owns in Roxbury, where she has lived full time since 2006. And she loves her husband, Justin "Jud" Ebersman, who works in commercial real estate in New York City...


Better Days at Justice

New York Times
Published: June 30, 2008

"Report Assails Political Hiring in Justice Department" (front page, June 25) documents what we had feared: a partisan administration that perverted a department respected for the quality and fairness of its lawyers...

Recent Developments

Conde v. Town of Sharon: update. On behalf of a landowner, Attorney Barrie Goldstein has appealed the ruling of the federal district court. She stated that “private property is sacred and must be protected by due process from governmental overreaching.” A federal district court judge recently held that a landowner was not entitled to due process when the Town of Sharon refused to allow the construction of a gate.