By Emily Wagster Pettus | The Associated Press | October 31, 2023
U.S. District Judge Keith Starrett ruled that Sharpe, a former tight end, was using "rhetorical hyperbole" in saying on air that Favre was "taking from the underserved," that the former quarterback "stole money from people that really needed that money" and that someone would have to be a sorry person "to steal from the lowest of the low."
By Jimmy Hoover | October 30, 2023
The Supreme Court will review the promptness of hearings after car confiscations and then examine First Amendment implications of social media and trademark law.
By Andrew Denney | October 28, 2023
Taking top honors at the competition for first and second best oralist, respectively, were St. John's Law 2Ls Takunda Muziwi and Daniella Sesto.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Randall J. Peach | October 27, 2023
Anyone who follows school law knows that these types of HIB charges are commonplace—and difficult to challenge. In seeking to combat bullying, the HIB statute (N.J.S.A. 18A:37-13) is exceedingly broad, focusing not on traditional categories of protected traits (race, gender, nationality, etc.) but on any "distinguishing characteristic," of any kind.
By Cheryl Miller | October 26, 2023
The suit argues the federal government has "no basis" under the Controlled Substances Act to interfere with state-licensed cannabis commerce.
By Adolfo Pesquera | October 26, 2023
"All judges have that kind of burden imposed on us," Justice Jeff Boyd said during oral arguments. "As a result of the role we play within our governmental system, we're prohibited from making money doing other things, particularly if those other things suggest some favoritism or bias."
By Jimmy Hoover | October 25, 2023
The justices will hear a series of social network cases just months after Elena Kagan observed that "these are not like the nine greatest experts on the internet."
By Jimmy Hoover | October 24, 2023
State officials tell the high court that a judge's statewide injunction was overly broad.
By Alex Anteau | October 24, 2023
"I suspected after oral argument that the court was not going to agree with our interpretation of the long-standing Georgia precedent on the void ab initio clause," said plaintiff-appellee attorney Julia Stone of Caplan Cobb. "And the opinion has borne that out."
By Cheryl Miller | October 23, 2023
Testifying before California's State Bar Court, John Eastman said that even if elections officials found just a handful of ballots cast by deceased voters — including many who died after voting — it backs his claims of 2020 election irregularities.
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