By Marcia Coyle | July 30, 2020
"He obviously has centered himself not just physically but figuratively at the very center of the court," the former U.S. appeals court judge said during an American Bar Association review of the Supreme Court term. "The upshot was some surprising results."
By Dara Kam | July 30, 2020
Gun-control activists targeted National Rifle Association lobbyist Marion Hammer following the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School massacre in which 14 students and three faculty members were killed.
By Katheryn Tucker | July 28, 2020
"Despite the rapidly growing threat to Georgians from COVID-19, Governor Brian Kemp sued Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms to prevent her from implementing critical life-saving measures in Atlanta. Nevertheless, she persisted," the mayor's response brief said.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | C. Ryan Barber | July 28, 2020
"Do you think that it's fair for a 67-year-old man to be sent to prison to seven to nine years?" Barr asked one Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | July 27, 2020
"There was simply no time for litigation, particularly if these allegations were true. Whatever we did, it had to be fast," Eisen wrote of impeaching Trump.
By Scott Graham | July 27, 2020
A 2-1 majority of the Federal Circuit says the university cannot be hauled into court against its will, even as a plaintiff. But a different 2-1 majority said UT's licensee can go ahead and sue on its own. They also said it's time for the Supreme Court to reconsider key precedents on sovereign immunity and patent infringement.
By Marcia Coyle | July 27, 2020
The census statute "does not curtail the president's authority to direct the secretary in making policy judgments that result in 'the decennial census,'" then-Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote. John Roberts Jr., then a U.S. Justice Department lawyer, argued for the government.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | July 24, 2020
Republican members of Congress are suing over proxy voting rules adopted by the House during the pandemic. House lawyers argue the lawsuit has to be thrown out due to protections offered under the Constitution's speech and debate clause.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Jayme Jonat | July 24, 2020
While the Pregnancy Discrimination Act has been in place since 1978, it has by no means stopped such discrimination from occurring.
By Dara Kam | July 24, 2020
Plaintiffs in the case and 10 Democratic U.S. senators are asking that U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit Judges Barbara Lagoa, left, and Robert Luck, center, step aside from the voting-rights case. Judge Robin Rosenbaum, right, already has disqualified herself.
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