By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 2, 2021
At one point the judge asked a lawyer for the Republican members if the attorney was suggesting that the deadly pandemic "is not truly a significant problem confronting the American public."
By Greg Land | December 1, 2021
A federal judge reversed himself and reinstated a punitive damage claim filed by a self-represented inmate against a Fulton County corrections officer accused of performing an unconstitutional strip search.
By Marcia Coyle | December 1, 2021
In more than two hours of arguments, the justices divided along ideological lines in their questioning, with the conservative wing probing most deeply the challengers to the Mississippi ban, and the liberal wing pressing the state's attorney.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Christopher Dunn | December 1, 2021
Nearly 250 years after the adoption of the Bill of Rights, in a country peopled by immigrants, basic constitutional protections remain unresolved for one group: noncitizens detained on suspicion of civil offenses involving U.S. immigration law. This hole in constitutional law must be filled.
By Jason Grant | December 1, 2021
Lawyers argued fiercely about whether there had been sufficient, or any, DOJ oversight of Rita Glavin, the judge-appointed special prosecutor, during the contempt case, and about whether an alleged lack of such supervision had violated the U.S. Constitution or Supreme Court case law.
By Marcia Coyle | November 30, 2021
When the legal battle over the abortion right is joined Wednesday in the U.S. Supreme Court, advocates will face justices who claim loyalty to principles of "stare decisis," or standing by precedents, but often are bitterly divided over how to apply them.
By Cheryl Miller | November 30, 2021
"Judge VanDyke has no way of knowing the personal views of other members of the court about firearms," one judge wrote in a concurring opinion countering VanDyke.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 30, 2021
"This administration is not just handing over information to a supposedly friendly Congress," a top DOJ lawyer told the court.
By Tom McParland | November 30, 2021
The decision left in place a previous order from the appeals court that had temporarily spared the DOE workers from a Wednesday deadline to either receive the shot or possibly face termination.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Warren A. Estis and Alexander Lycoyannis | November 30, 2021
Warren A. Estis and Alexander Lycoyannis discuss 'Melendez v. City of New York,' where a group of New York City owners commenced n district court action for a judgment declaring the Guaranty Law unconstitutional and for an injunction permanently enjoining its enforcement.
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