By Avalon Zoppo | July 26, 2024
"Because the [Supreme] Court wasn't more expressive in providing guidance, we're going to continue to see turmoil and confusion in the lower courts," said SMU Dedman School of Law professor Eric Ruben.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | July 25, 2024
The First Amendment has worked for centuries because despicable and hateful speech has been countered and overridden by rational and moral discourse. As lawyers and citizens, we need to stay that path.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Alan B. Morrison | July 25, 2024
There are reasons why the First Amendment may not be TikTok's strongest claim, and instead why the court should strike down the act as a violation of the constitutional prohibition on Congress passing Bills of Attainder.
By Colleen Murphy | July 24, 2024
"Today is a very good day for religious liberty. The court unanimously adopted a flexible and protective standard for evaluating employment-related tort claims brought against religious institutions, and its specific holding will provide those institutions with important legal protections in communicating with their faith communities without fear of groundless defamation claims," said Akiva Shapiro, a partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher who served as counsel for the Rosenbaum Yeshiva defendants.
By Emily Saul | July 24, 2024
"The question is whether public access provides a substantial benefit to the proceeding's ability to carry out its purpose," U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero of the Southern District of New York wrote. "The court finds that it does. The public cannot have faith in a process that it cannot see."
By Charles Toutant | July 24, 2024
"So it doesn't matter what the content of the act is. If the act violated the quorum clause in the way it was passed through Congress, then it's invalid, no matter how laudable the goals of the legislation might be. If a law is unconstitutional, it's unconstitutional," plaintiff's attorney Eric Heigis said.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Thomas H. Barnard, Marisa Rosen Dorough and McKenna S. Cloud | July 23, 2024
On June 28, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its highly anticipated ruling in a pair of cases challenging the long-standing Chevron doctrine.
By Mason Lawlor | July 22, 2024
"Trump-backed Republican candidates bankrolled by Kemp, through and in coordination with Georgia First, are able to spend exponentially more than what they would have been able to spend on their races if they were limited to just the money that they were able to spend on their own," said the executive director of the Democratic Party of Georgia.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | July 19, 2024
Peaceful protest and even some civil disobedience—recognizing and accepting the legal consequences of illegal behavior—is in the best American free speech tradition.
By Kim Chandler | The Associated Press | July 18, 2024
It was the state's third execution this year and the 10th in the nation, joining others in Texas, Georgia, Oklahoma and Missouri.
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