By Lara Yeretsian | May 18, 2020
People should be very concerned about the privacy implications of these programs, which seek to gather personal information such as health and location data.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | May 17, 2020
We hope the decision will be upheld on appeal. The Legislature finally heeded the obvious need, and judicial call, for detailed statutory treatment of this element of end-of-life conflicts in favor of individual autonomy.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Norman Siegel and Steven Hyman | May 15, 2020
New Yorkers are allowed to go out with masks and stay at least 6 feet apart, as long as it is to go shopping or sit in a park, but if they are adhering to those requirements and they say something about an issue of public concern, that speech will make the speaker subject to arrest on the specious basis that speech is a public health risk.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | May 14, 2020
"The majority has only confirmed one of the Founders' worst fears: that, while no man may be above the law, a group of judges, so emboldened, may consider themselves beyond it," one dissenting judge wrote.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | May 14, 2020
"The majority has only confirmed one of the Founders' worst fears: that, while no man may be above the law, a group of judges, so emboldened, may consider themselves beyond it," one dissenting judge wrote.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | May 14, 2020
"Allowing the president to be the final arbiter of both the interpretation and enforcement of the law—as the dissents would—would gravely offend separation of powers," the court's majority opinion states.
By Jenna Greene | May 14, 2020
'The Fourth Amendment does not vanish behind prison walls.'
By Tom McParland | May 13, 2020
A contingent of unions representing law-enforcement and civil-service employees claimed that the wage freeze reneged on an earlier collective bargaining agreement.
By Marcia Coyle | May 13, 2020
Welcome to Supreme Court Brief -- the court hears its final historic telephonic arguments this morning, taking up whether electors can defy state law. Plus, there's a new book out, Shortlisted, that looks at women passed over for the high court. Thanks for reading, and stay safe.
Texas Lawyer | Analysis|Best Practices|Commentary|Event
By Randy D. Gordon | May 12, 2020
In a famous 1975 lecture before the Collège de France, the philosopher and social theorist Michel Foucault proposed that the plague of the mid-1300s…
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