By Greg Land | August 24, 2018
The appellate opinion's sharp criticism of the 45-year-old U.S. Supreme Court opinion continues a trend of lower courts' judges attacking the ruling and lamenting their duty to enforce it.
By Dara Kam | August 24, 2018
U.S. District Judge Mark Walker on Wednesday ordered the Florida Department of Corrections to continue providing hormone treatments to Reiyn Keohane, who was born a male but began identifying as female at age 8 and started wearing women's clothing, makeup and hairstyles at 14, according to court records.
By Jim Turner | August 23, 2018
Pointing to ideological opposition to the process rather than the specifics of the proposed constitutional amendments, the 16-member group called Save My Constitution described the eight ballot measures as “confusing” and “misleading.”
By Tony Mauro | August 23, 2018
A U.S. Supreme Court case testing the constitutionality of a cross-shaped memorial on public land in Maryland features myriad Big Law attorneys and a surprise amicus: William Suter, a former high court clerk.
By Jonathan Ringel | August 22, 2018
A Fulton prosecutor tried to defend a judge's refusal to suppress statements from a murder defendant who said he didn't want to talk to police multiple times.
By Greg Land | August 22, 2018
Chief Judge Ed Carnes wrote the panel must apply an “aberration” of constitutional law in applying Supreme Court precedent.
By Tony Mauro | August 22, 2018
The rules barred wearing political buttons, showing lawn signs, opining on candidates on social media or contributing funds to candidates, among other activities.
By Andrew Denney | August 22, 2018
Cohen pleaded guilty in federal court in Manhattan to eight counts, including five counts of tax evasion for lying about his income each year from 2012 to 2016 and one count of making false statements to a lending institution for failing to report $14 million in liabilities related to his taxi medallion business on an application for a home equity line of credit.
By Jim Saunders | August 22, 2018
In a 47-page brief, Attorney General Pam Bondi's office disputed arguments that the proposed amendments violate First Amendment rights and improperly tie together unrelated subjects.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp | August 21, 2018
In their Second Circuit Review column, Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp explain that the Second Circuit has now made clear that, for purposes of class action certification, named plaintiffs only need standing for their own claims.
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