By Marcia Coyle | July 22, 2021
The Supreme Court took steps to return to normal operations, and there's a new effort underway to promote more female advocates at the high court.
By Andrew Goudsward | July 21, 2021
The Justice Department's decision in the E. Jean Carroll defamation case is just one example of the raft of politically sensitive Trump-era cases that Attorney General Merrick Garland and his leadership team have inherited.
By Jason Grant | July 20, 2021
"There is a group of dedicated women and men attorneys across the country that are laboring hard to protect our nation's right to vote, for all citizens," said constitutional law attorney Pedro Irigonegaray, who is helping represent civic groups challenging Kansas' new laws.
By Frank Francone | July 19, 2021
In late April, the Texas Supreme Court affirmed an appellate court's decision overturning the sealing of multiple exhibits in the Title Source (now…
By Meghann M. Cuniff | July 16, 2021
The snafu is a procedural one, but it encompasses issues Avenatti's lawyer, H. Dean Steward, raised about the constitutionality of the jury selection process that could arise again in an appeal should Avenatti be convicted.
By Andrew Goudsward | July 16, 2021
Rosen's brief tenure atop the Justice Department was marked by then-President Donald Trump's attempts to pressure the department to probe electoral fraud claims.
By Ross Todd | July 16, 2021
DWT's Elizabeth McNamara and Rachel Strom successfully argued that a release the former Alabama chief justice signed prior to his appearance on the satirical Showtime program "Who is America?" barred precisely the claims he was bringing.
By Dara Kam | July 15, 2021
A coalition of groups, including the Dream Defenders and the Florida State Conference of the NAACP, contends that Combating Public Disorder Act will have a "chilling" effect on protected speech and violates equal-protection and due-process rights.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Eugene R. Barnosky, Lindsay T. Crocker, Joel M. Markowitz and Michelle A. Mahabirsingh | July 15, 2021
The potentially conflicting interests of schools and their students are to be balanced on both sides of the gate, while the bar appears decidedly higher for schools in the off-campus setting.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | July 14, 2021
Defense counsel said that allowing jurors to wear masks that conceal facial expressions violates a criminal defendant's Fifth Amendment right to due process and Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury. But that position so far has failed to gain traction with appellate courts.
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