By Phillip Bantz | June 11, 2020
"It is yet another bad faith attempt by the campaign to threaten litigation to muzzle speech it does not want voters to read or hear," wrote CNN general counsel David Vigilante.
By Suzette Parmley | June 11, 2020
"Although a court rule authorizes judges to amend a sentence and release an individual defendant because of illness or infirmity, neither the rule nor the other sources raised provide authority for the courts to establish and oversee a broad-based program to release or furlough inmates in state prison," wrote Chief Justice Stuart Rabner.
By Ellen Bardash | June 11, 2020
Senate Bill 191 would amendment the Delaware constitution to bar discrimination based on race or ethnicity.
By Jenna Greene | June 11, 2020
Bill Barr is gunning for a place in history as one of the worst attorneys general. What a disappointment he has turned out to be.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | June 10, 2020
The Minnesota attorney general also urged American Constitution Society members to help create change in their communities in the wake of George Floyd's death.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joseph M. McLaughlin and Shannon K. McGovern | June 10, 2020
A class should not be certified unless plaintiff establishes by a preponderance of the evidence that the process of distinguishing the injured claimants from the uninjured claimants will not entail highly individualized factual inquiries
By Marcia Coyle | June 10, 2020
Welcome to Supreme Court Brief. An attack on "Strickland" has been relisted over and over—what's going on? Plus: Justice Sotomayor has some words about the 11th Circuit. DOJ's Jeff Wall will argue in the Michael Flynn case, and scroll down for the headlines—many about qualified immunity—catching our eye. Thanks for reading!
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Katheryn Tucker | June 9, 2020
"I hear people say this is not who we are. I'm not so sure about that. This country was founded on the slave trade," Judge Theodore McKee said. "The Constitution protected it."
By Jane Wester | June 9, 2020
The arrestees were questioned by NYPD officials and FBI agents despite being arrested on minor charges, including curfew violations, according to the letter, which was put to city lawyers by attorneys who won a 1971 case restricting the questioning of protesters.
By Greg Land | June 9, 2020
A federal judge declined to order onetime City Council candidate Matthew Cardinale, who is suing the city, to stop sending emails and legal demands to city officials and councilmembers.
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