By Raychel Lean | April 22, 2020
Wearing face masks in the era of COVID-19 has transported Fort Lauderdale attorney Bruce Rogow back to 1980, when he represented a Florida Ku Klux Klan member convicted of illegally concealing his face in public.
By Tom W. Bell | April 22, 2020
If like tens of millions of Americans you have been trapped in your home by one of these COVID-19 lockdown orders, separated from loved ones and deprived of a livelihood, you might have wondered: Can your constitutional rights thus be negated without judicial review?
By X. Kevin Zhao | April 22, 2020
While the Eighth Circuit's recent decisions applying the effects tests provide helpful guidance, questions nonetheless remain, especially as the effects test relates to email, text, and telephone communications between out-of-state defendants and in-state plaintiffs.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Doug Lieb | April 22, 2020
The Supreme Court made its first foray into the civil law of wrongful convictions last year in 'McDonough v. Smith'. It seems to have made an already confusing situation still more so.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Elizabeth Wolstein | April 22, 2020
The owner of the closed business is made to sacrifice the use of his or her property for the good of the general public. Has the state thereby effected a taking under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments for which it must compensate the business owner?
By Marcia Coyle | Tony Mauro | April 22, 2020
Welcome to Supreme Court Brief. We're spotlighting the amicus lineup in a closely watched First Amendment case. And scroll down for our reporting on a rare confession of error from the Justice Department. Thanks for reading! And stay safe.
By Dara Kam | April 22, 2020
Gov. Ron DeSantis has staunchly defended a state law requiring felons to pay "legal financial obligations" before they can cast ballots.
By Jim Saunders | April 22, 2020
Attorney General Ashley Moody contends that the proposed constitutional amendment that would allow people to use recreational marijuana should be blocked from the ballot because it would be misleading to voters.
By Katheryn Tucker | April 21, 2020
"I think oral argument is largely a charade," Todd Bank said. But he doesn't believe his dust-up with the Second Circuit should figure into the Supreme Court's decision on the case, which centers on a rule requiring bar applicants to file sponsor affidavits.
By R. Robin McDonald | April 21, 2020
A federal lawsuit accuses Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard of soliciting sexual favors from a longtime former staffer.
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