Daily Report Online | Commentary
By John Amabile, David Pardue and Todd Sprinkle | April 21, 2020
It's notable that the new extension order includes the court's not so gentle chiding that "all lawyers are reminded of their obligations of professionalism."
By R. Robin McDonald | April 21, 2020
A federal judge in Atlanta has rejected a request to suspend the state's handgun carry license law during the ongoing COVID-19 emergency.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Alexandra Weaderhorn | April 21, 2020
While the government, state and federal, are instituting public health regulations, stay at home orders, and classifying essential and nonessential employment and medical procedures, we wonder and consider the authority to do so in light of civil and religious liberties.
By David A. Carrillo and Matthew Stanford | April 17, 2020
Long relegated to a quiet corner full of dusty academics like us, the Tenth Amendment has roared back into public life recently, with noted conservative and liberal luminaries alike relying on it to rebut the current administration's absurd initial claim that federal authority can countermand state quarantine orders.
By R. Robin McDonald | April 16, 2020
The general counsel of GeorgiaCarry.Org has been enlisted by two other pro-gun groups to challenge a Georgia law requiring a license to carry a handgun in public.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | April 15, 2020
President Donald Trump said he wants to adjourn Congress to make recess appointments. He can only do that if the chambers are in disagreement about when to adjourn—which they aren't.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Tom McParland | April 15, 2020
A Second Circuit panel said an inmate at Connecticut's Osborn Correctional Institution, had offered adequate support for Eighth Amendment claims that prison officials acted with "deliberate indifference" in ignoring his pleas for protection from a fellow inmate.
By R. Robin McDonald | April 15, 2020
U.S. District Judge Steve Jones' staff warned callers at the start of the hearing to mute their phones if they were not participants. But missing from the equation was a universal mute function or a virtual bailiff to shut down inadvertent and intentional interruptions from the remote audience.
By R. Robin McDonald | April 15, 2020
U.S. District Judge Steve Jones opted to reconvene privately with lawyers after the audience failed to abide by repeated requests to mute their phones.
By R. Robin McDonald | April 15, 2020
U.S. District Judge Steve Jones opted to reconvene privately with lawyers after the audience failed to abide by repeated requests to mute their phones.
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