By Marcia Coyle | February 24, 2022
The former coach's lawyers contend he was prevented from making a quiet prayer after each game, while school district officials content it delved into a melee in which crowds rushed the field and staff were threatened.
By Alaina Lancaster | February 24, 2022
U.S. District Judge James Donato said he didn't see instances of coercive statements from state actors in a lawsuit from former President Donald Trump, which claims federal officials coerced and worked directly with Twitter to violate the president's First Amendment rights and suspend him from the platform.
By Allison Dunn | February 24, 2022
"My son honked because he was protesting," said Robert W. Hagopian, whose son was hit with a $55 citation for beeping his car horn at a police officer working detail during a traffic jam caused by construction work. "He was exercising his First Amendment right."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jerry H. Goldfeder | February 24, 2022
As Congress deliberates reform of the Electoral Count Act, it behooves the legal community to keep a watchful eye.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Best Practices|News
By Andrew Larson | February 24, 2022
"We are concerned that a rule of this sort constrains lawyers from speaking freely, and I think that's bad for everyone," said Richard Samp, of the New Civil Liberties Alliance in Washington, D.C., who is representing the plaintiffs.
By Allison Dunn | February 23, 2022
"A uniformed highway patrolman and court IT technician made insensitive comments to the jury regarding [a defendant's] guilt," the majority wrote. "Because of who said what to the jury and the circumstances of the interaction, [the defendant] was entitled to a rebuttable presumption of prejudice."
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By William Josephson | February 23, 2022
A recent New York Times editorial responds to the efforts of a bipartisan group of senators to consider changes in the Electoral Count Act of 1887. But the editorial is not a good guide to what may need to be changed.
By Allison Dunn | February 23, 2022
The Utah Supreme Court has rejected prosecutors' argument that the state's single criminal episode statute applied to the multiple prosecutions of an alleged car thief because there were different victims for each of the offenses.
By Marcia Coyle | February 22, 2022
The justices declined to review a challenge to the release of White House documents to a committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the nation's Capitol.
By Michael A. Mora | February 18, 2022
"If you have a situation where those rules can be changed or some outside force can pick the winners or losers, then you lose consistency and predictability, and that's a bad thing," said Seth Miles, a partner at Buckner + Miles.
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