By Avalon Zoppo | December 17, 2024
The Tenth Circuit overruled its 1995 decision in Shillinger v. Haworth that a defendant is prejudiced and a Sixth Amendment violation occurs whenever the government deliberately and for no legitimate law enforcement purpose becomes privy to confidential attorney-client communications.
By Jimmy Hoover | December 16, 2024
The Supreme Court will decide whether fuel companies have standing to sue based on their claimed harm by California's stringent tailpipe rules designed to boost electric vehicle sales.
By Steve Lash | December 13, 2024
The Constitution bars states from requiring "religious entities to conform to stereotypes" to qualify for a "religious purposes" exemption from taxes, the organization wrote in its successful petition for Supreme Court review.
By Andrew Lieb | December 13, 2024
Andrew Lieb discusses how New York State’s expansion of workers' compensation benefits, (effective 1/1/25), to cover claims for mental injury premises upon extraordinary work-related stress will impact an employee's workplace discrimination claim.
By Steve Lash | December 7, 2024
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit dismissed the victims' lawsuit, saying U.S. courts lack personal jurisdiction to hear the claims against the Palestine Liberation Organization or the Palestinian Authority because the foreign actors' alleged conduct giving rise to liability occurred outside the United States.
By Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman | December 6, 2024
"We are pleased that the Fourth Circuit affirmed Judge [John] Gibney's conclusion that Virginia's election administrators must answer for the Commonwealth's unlawful disenfranchisement of our clients and thousands of other Virginians in violation of federal law," said Wilmer partner Brittany Amadi, who argued for the plaintiffs before the appellate court.
By Steve Lash | December 6, 2024
"The program survives strict scrutiny because the Naval Academy has established a compelling national security interest in a diverse officer corps in the Navy and Marine Corps," U.S. District Judge Richard D. Bennett wrote.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 6, 2024
“[T]he Government’s aim is to preclude a foreign adversary from manipulating public dialogue," Judge Douglas Ginsburg wrote for the appellate court. "To that end, the Act narrowly addresses foreign adversary control of an important medium of communication in the United States.”
By Steve Lash | December 4, 2024
In saying the statute discriminates based on sex, the high court's liberal justices said the law allows nontransgender children from being prescribed hormones that correspond to their gender assigned at birth.
By Kate Brumback | December 4, 2024
Also, former Trump campaign lawyer Kenneth Chesebro, who pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge in the case, asked a court to invalidate that plea. Chesebro was one of four people to plead guilty in the case in the months following the indictment.
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