By Adolfo Pesquera | April 12, 2022
Henry Neef Carnaby of the City of Houston Attorney Legal Department, and Seth Barrett Hopkins of the Harris County Attorney's Office represent the city, county and investigating officers.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Jason Grant | April 8, 2022
U.S. District Judge Jennifer P. Wilson wrote in part that she "cannot resolve" questions key to the dispute over use of the late Rev. Moon's 1965-created Twelve Gates, or Tongil, symbol "without delving into religious matters."
By ALM Staff | April 8, 2022
This suit was surfaced on Law.com Radar. Read the document here.
By Adolfo Pesquera | April 7, 2022
Thirty-two states have some form of an Israeli anti-boycott law. However, free-speech advocates and pro-Palestinian organizations have been successfully challenging these laws, which has resulted in a series of revisions by state lawmakers intent on insulating them from litigation.
By Jasmine Floyd | April 6, 2022
"Indeed, lawmakers' public commentary on the purpose of the law is crystal clear," attorney Roberta Kaplan said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Christopher Dunn | April 6, 2022
The court's March 24 decision in 'Ramirez v. Collier' reflects the much-noted religious zeal several current justices bring to the Supreme Court. Less recognized, the decision demonstrates how that zeal can yield important benefits in other areas of civil rights law.
By Adolfo Pesquera | April 6, 2022
Thirty-two states have some form of an Israeli anti-boycott law. However, free-speech advocates and pro-Palestinian organizations have been successfully challenging these laws, which has resulted in a series of revisions by state lawmakers intent on insulating them from litigation.
By Allison Dunn | April 5, 2022
Taking a closer look at the relationship between the state's forfeiture and storage laws, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court on March 31 reversed a Superior Court's order to turn over 12 improperly secured firearms found during a search warrant.
By Andrew Goudsward | April 5, 2022
Attorneys for Michael Sussmann are seeking to keep information about an alleged effort to find compromising information on former President Donald Trump out of his upcoming trial on a false statement charge.
By Brian Lee | April 5, 2022
The plaintiffs' attorney, Bobbie Anne Flower Cox, said the state health department, as an agent of the executive branch, didn't have the authority to enact the regulation. That should have been done by the legislature.
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