New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Kimberly C. Lau, James E. Figliozzi and Branden P. Lynn | June 24, 2020
An analysis of some of the more groundbreaking and controversial changes in the new Title IX regulations, including the authors' opinions on the regulations' likely successes and shortcomings ahead of their implementation on Aug. 14, 2020.
By Marcia Coyle | Tony Mauro | June 24, 2020
Welcome to Supreme Court Brief -- the term is drawing to a close. But will it go into July? There's precedent. Plus: We catch up with the Appellate Project's work on diversity, and scroll down for all the big SCOTUS headlines. Thanks for reading!
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Tom McParland | June 23, 2020
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit sided with Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont and state Treasurer Shawn Wooden in finding that the plaintiffs, a group of individuals, energy-efficiency businesses and nonprofits, had no contractual right to control how the funds were spent.
By Jenna Greene | June 23, 2020
Lesser lawyers might have said the case was hopeless. But not a team from Kirkland led by Mike Williams and Susan Davies, who just got provisions of a 48-year-old law declared unconstitutional.
By R. Robin McDonald | June 22, 2020
Lakeland officials moved a 26-foot Confederate statue out of its nationally registered historic district before the case reached the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.
By Ellen Bardash | June 22, 2020
The move would likely put at least one electoral vote in the Republican column, that of Sussex County downstate, which has voted for the GOP national tickets in 2008, 2012 and 2016—in the first two of those elections with Biden as the Democratic vice presidential nominee.
By Greg Land | June 22, 2020
The brief legal fight involved a restriction that people circulating a recall petition must be able to vote in that election.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | June 22, 2020
The complaint, filed by attorneys with Steptoe & Johnson and the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, argues the rule conflicts with the Supreme Court's recent opinion protecting employees from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael Rikon | June 22, 2020
In his column on Condemnation and Tax Certiorari, Michael Rikon examines how the line between an eminent domain taking and regulating property to prevent harm to the public interest starts to blur in connection with pandemic orders.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Nativ Winiarsky | June 22, 2020
Less than a year after the HSTPA was enacted into law, the real estate world was shaken again by an "earthquake of a decision," Regina Metro. Co. v. New York State Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal, which, among other things, found that the retroactive application of Part F of HSTPA was unconstitutional on due process grounds.
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