By Angela Morris | April 10, 2020
In states like Texas, New York, Georgia, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C., lawyers are filing cases arguing that governments' coronavirus restrictions are violating Americans' constitutional rights.
By Katheryn Tucker | April 9, 2020
"Due to the governor's extension of the state of emergency through a time period that includes almost every day of in-person voting for an election on May 19," Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said, "I am now comfortable exercising the authority vested in me by Georgia law to postpone the primary."
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Alan Silber and Darcy Baboulis-Gyscek | April 9, 2020
Due Process requires that discovery must be a "two-way street" or provide for equality of the burdens placed on the respective parties.
By Dara Kam | April 9, 2020
Secretary of State Laurel Lee argued that a class certification was unnecessary because the state would abide by a ruling about whether the law requiring felons to pay outstanding "legal financial obligations" to vote amounts to an unconstitutional poll tax.
By Katheryn Tucker | April 8, 2020
"Because of the pandemic, the number of voters who mail in ballots will skyrocket," ACLU of Georgia Legal Director Sean J. Young said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Massimo F. D'Angelo | April 8, 2020
The 'Regina' decision will have significant reverberations for the real estate market going forward, as it will unfreeze the chill over the purchase and sale of rent-regulated buildings.
By Marcia Coyle | April 8, 2020
Welcome to Supreme Court Brief, and we hope you are safe. Scroll down for our new reports on pending cases and more, including the latest SCOTUS headlines. Thanks for reading, and be well.
By Dara Kam | April 8, 2020
A Santa Rosa Beach lawyer filed the lawsuit against Gov. Ron DeSantis arguing that the governor's refusal to issue a statewide mandate shutting down beaches puts Floridians at risk of becoming infected with COVID-19.
By Jim Saunders | April 6, 2020
The Florida Department of Corrections has asked a federal appeals court to decide by Sept. 8 whether to overturn a district judge's order that requires the state to provide expensive treatment to inmates who have been diagnosed with early stages of hepatitis C.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Kamins | April 6, 2020
Forty-four years ago, the Court of Appeals held, in People v. DeBour, that New York must assess the propriety of street encounters that do not rise to a level of a seizure for the purpose of the Fourth Amendment. In his Criminal Law and Procedure column, Barry Kamins discusses how the Court has more recently taken up the issue of whether DeBour can be applied to non-criminal offenses.
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