HURST v. SHAH
Case Summary
The court granted a motion to seal a document in the case of HURST v. SHAH, citing concerns for the safety of a witness. This decision allows the document to be kept confidential, but the exact reasons for the sealing are not publicly disclosed. The court's ruling is significant because it highlights the delicate balance between transparency and witness protection in the judicial system.
No timeline activity recorded yet. This page will grow as rulings and filings land.
Docket Snapshot
Court
D.N.J.
District of New Jersey · 3rd Circuit · NJ
Docket
Not captured
Civil
Stage
Active litigation
Active
Filed
Date unavailable
Not in the available feed
Latest Filing
1:24-cv-10670 HURST v. SHAH
Other · May 08, 2026
Coverage
1 article
1 source tracked
Participants
Parties not parsed yet
2 linked entities
Judge
Not assigned in feed
What the record shows
This case is tied to District of New Jersey, a federal district court in NJ.
The newest docket activity we have is a other dated May 08, 2026.
Party extraction has not produced a reliable plaintiff/defendant graph yet, so no speculative names are shown.
Press monitoring has found 1 related article from 1 distinct source.
About This Court
District of New Jersey (D.N.J.) is a federal district court in the 3rd Circuit, NJ.
Case Timeline
1 event1:24-cv-10670 HURST v. SHAH
The court granted a motion to seal a document in the case of HURST v. SHAH, citing concerns for the safety of a witness. This decision allows the document to be kept confidential, but the exact reasons for the sealing are not publicly disclosed. The court's ruling is significant because it highlights the delicate balance between transparency and witness protection in the judicial system.
Press Coverage
settings_backup_restore Data provenance expand_more
Sources tracked
1 outlet · 1 article
Timeline events
1 record on file
Last updated
7 hours, 52 minutes ago
Juryvine aggregates docket entries from PACER/CourtListener, press coverage, and GDELT signals. Ingestion timestamps do not appear in the What Changed feed — that reflects real court activity only.