By Cogan Schneier | November 3, 2017
It's the most recent lawsuit against the Trump administration over the decision to end the DACA program.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | November 2, 2017
The judge considering whether the DOJ can withhold federal grant money from Philadelphia due to its status as a sanctuary city spent much of an oral argument session Thursday grilling federal lawyers about whether their arguments matched the facts.
By Scott Graham | October 31, 2017
The U.S. solicitor general, law professors, nonprofits and even one pharma company make the case for saving the Patent and Trial Appeal Board as a cost-effective mechanism for challenging patents.
By Marcia Coyle | October 31, 2017
The Federalist Society's annual convention on Nov. 16 features Justice Neil Gorsuch as its ticket-only dinner speaker and a convention theme close to his heart: administrative agencies and the regulatory state.
By Christine Sexton | October 30, 2017
Gov. Rick Scott vowed to immediately appeal an administrative-court order invalidating a pair of emergency rules requiring nursing homes and assisted…
By Ben Seal | October 26, 2017
A coal miner injured while shoveling out of a massive spill presented sufficient evidence to establish the extent and duration of his disability and its causation, the Commonwealth Court has ruled in affirming a workers' compensation determination in his favor.
By Cogan Schneier | Ross Todd | October 25, 2017
A federal judge in San Francisco found that the Trump administration has so far put forth the more convincing legal argument and that an injunction would be “counterproductive."
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | October 19, 2017
The spouse of a deceased police officer was entitled to resolve a dispute with the city over survivor pension benefits through arbitration, rather than a local agency appeal, because those benefits were specifically provided for in the police union's collective bargaining agreement with the city, a unanimous Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled.
By Jason Grant | New York Law Journal | October 17, 2017
The settlement came after a whistleblower in 2011 filed a sealed qui tam complaint in Manhattan Supreme Court that alleged violations of the New York False Claims Act in connection with a 2005 renovation of a Manhattan hotel.
By Cogan Schneier | National Law Journal | October 17, 2017
Katsas, a judicial nominee for the D.C. Circuit, told senators some of the issues he worked on in the past nine months, including the travel ban and the Mueller investigation.
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