New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | June 19, 2020
Protesters in the District of Columbia, our nation's capital, were aggressively threatened and forcibly removed.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | June 19, 2020
If we are not to go through this crisis again, we need to take concrete measures to weed out abusive officers and to strengthen the political control of the policed over those who police them.
By Greg Land | June 19, 2020
Calvin Lofton spent 18 months in isolation in the Williamson County Jail in Franklin, Tennessee, because he was physically unable to wear the slippers required by jail regulations.
By Ross Todd | June 19, 2020
The federal appellate court upheld a lower court finding the law forcing the publisher of the Internet Movie Database to honor the request anyone who used its paid professional networking site to remove all age information from its public-facing IMDb.com site violated the First Amendment.
By C. Ryan Barber | June 19, 2020
Still, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth pressed Bolton's lawyer at length about whether he had moved forward with publication of the book, a damning account of his tenure in Trump's White House, before the prepublication review process had been completed.
By Dara Kam | June 19, 2020
Lawyers for Gov. Ron DeSantis say a federal court decision was based on a faulty premise that conditioning felons' voting rights on payment of financial obligations is wealth-based discrimination.
By C. Ryan Barber | June 18, 2020
The Justice Department asked for a temporary restraining order to halt publication of the book on the grounds it contains classified information.
By Bobby Caina Calvan | June 18, 2020
Descendants of July Perry along with local elected officials and residents attend a ceremony in 2019 unveiling a historical marker in Orlando. Perry was lynched by a white mob after helping a friend trying to vote.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Robin Bresky | June 18, 2020
There is growing concern that some of those orders during the coronavirus pandemic may have exceeded their authority to execute the law and, in effect, may have usurped the power of the legislature and caused businesses to fail and workers to lose their jobs without sufficient legal justification.
By Jenna Greene | June 17, 2020
The underlying case involves Arkansas' so-called "ag-gag" rule that would stymie undercover exposés of industrial agriculture--and it raises meaty First Amendment issues.
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