By Tony Mauro | Marcia Coyle | September 19, 2018
The Brett Kavanaugh controversy was looming in the backdrop of a recent Supreme Court event featuring top practitioners. Plus, on a lighter note, how good is your SCOTUS history? Team Madison squared off with Team Jefferson. And Justice Thomas questions the origin of "expectation of privacy." Welcome to Supreme Court Brief.
By Jim Turner | September 19, 2018
Incoming Senate President Bill Galvano pointed to the Feb. 14 mass shooting at Parkland's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that killed 17 people.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | September 18, 2018
The state Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in several closely watched cases starting Tuesday, but a dispute stemming from the high-profile grand jury report outlining decades of sex abuse at Catholic dioceses across Pennsylvania is expected to highlight the two-day session.
By Jim Saunders | September 18, 2018
Attorney General Pam Bondi's office filed a 44-page brief in a battle focused on proposed amendments that the Florida Constitution Revision Commission approved this spring.
By Ross Todd | September 17, 2018
The lawsuit marks the second time this month that Musk's tweeting has resulted in a lawsuit following earlier securities suits based on his tweets about taking Tesla private.
By Ross Todd | September 17, 2018
Lin Wood represents British explorer who volunteered in Thai cave rescue in July.
By Michael Booth | September 17, 2018
The township of Mahwah has agreed to settle a lawsuit filed by the state last year alleging that the Bergen County municipality adopted two discriminatory ordinances.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Peter B. "Bo" Rutledge and Michael Baker | September 17, 2018
Despite Jesner's holding, several potentially viable avenues for ATS litigation remain.
By Jim Saunders | September 14, 2018
A panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit rejected arguments by Jeffrey Koeppel that the Valencia College had violated his First Amendment and due-process rights and the federal education law known as Title IX, which addresses discrimination based on sex.
By Jonathan Ringel | September 13, 2018
The four-page draft of the Constitution was supposed to have been destroyed when the final document was completed, but Georgia lawyer Abraham Baldwin kept his copy.
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