By Sue Reisinger | May 16, 2017
Lawyers for the ACLU have filed additional complaints against Frontier Airlines charging the company with discriminating against pregnant and nursing employees.
By Charles Toutant | May 16, 2017
The Supreme Court of New Jersey has made it harder to prove double jeopardy in cases where a defendant is charged with two related offenses. The court on a 5-2 voteTuesday held that double jeopardy protection from a second conviction applies where a defendant who has been convicted of one offense is charged with another offense requiring proof of the same elements.
By Andrew Denney | May 12, 2017
A New York City Law Department attorney has been sanctioned for using heavy-handed objections while deposing a police officer, at times preventing the plaintiff's attorney from getting his questions answered.
By Karen Sloan | May 9, 2017
The funds will establish new scholarships for students interested in public interest, academic, and government careers, and create a new clinical professorship.
By Cogan Schneier | May 8, 2017
The judges and lawyers repeatedly turned to hypothetical situations throughout the roughly two-hour en banc hearing to formulate their points on President Donald Trump's second version of the order.
By Jenna Greene | May 4, 2017
The same day that Justice Department lawyers won a criminal conviction against Desiree Fairooz for laughing during the confirmation hearing of Attorney General Jeff Session, they also announced that they didn't have enough evidence to bring charges against the Louisiana police officers involved in the shooting death of Alton Sterling. Is this how it's going to be, Mr. Attorney General?
By P.J. D'Annunzio | May 4, 2017
A man claiming he was fired because of his age and slandered when his employer accused him of theft and criminal behavior can proceed with his lawsuit against the chemical company he worked for, a federal judge has ruled.
By John Council | May 2, 2017
It's always admirable when a lawyer works to free a single person from prison who shouldn't be there. But Neal Manne just won a monumental ruling from a Houston federal judge that will release thousands of people jailed for minor offenses who are stuck behind bars for no other reason than they are poor.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | May 1, 2017
A lawsuit alleging the Steak 'n Shake restaurant chain violated the Americans with Disabilities Act by not having adequate accessibility for handicapped patrons has been granted class action status.
By ROBERT STORACE | May 1, 2017
The ACLU of Connecticut filed a Freedom of Information Act request April 26 to all Connecticut police departments seeking every alternative, police-commissioned study of traffic stop data.
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