By Jenna Greene | June 21, 2018
As everyone from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to the ACLU recoils at the separation of migrant children from their parents, there's a clear sense that many in the legal community are eager to fight again. The question is, what exactly can lawyers do?
By Tom McParland | June 20, 2018
Gov. John Carney is appealing a federal district court ruling last year striking down a provision of the Delaware Constitution that requires party balance on key state courts.
By Tony Mauro | Marcia Coyle | June 20, 2018
What to make of two cases—Masterpiece and Gill v. Whitford—that perhaps didn't live up to the hype? We asked around. Plus: Paul Clement takes on SG Noel Francisco over a federal judge's twitter account. And Rod Rosenstein's undefeated at SCOTUS. Thanks for reading—and subscribing to—Supreme Court Brief!
By Katheryn Tucker | June 19, 2018
Both cases involved men detained after being found incompetent to stand trial on charges of sexually assaulting children. Both were represented by public defenders.
By Ellis Kim | June 19, 2018
Two letters, one signed by state attorneys general and one from former U.S. attorneys, urged the Trump administration to pull back from its policy Tuesday.
By Katheryn Tucker | June 18, 2018
“At the heart of Maxim's challenges to the City's adult business regulations is its desire to continue operating as a full-nudity strip club while also selling alcoholic beverages,” Justice Britt Grant said. “This is not the first time we have heard such a claim, and again, we disagree."
By Samantha Joseph | June 18, 2018
The case required the court to examine the intersection of the principles of free speech and probable cause for arrest.
By Samantha Joseph | June 18, 2018
The case required the court to examine the intersection of the principles of free speech and probable cause for arrest.
By Shari Claire Lewis | June 18, 2018
In her Internet Issues/Social Media column, Shari Claire Lewis discusses Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University v. Trump which held that President Trump and Daniel Scavino, the White House social media director, had violated the First Amendment by blocking various individuals' access to the @realDonaldTrump Twitter account after the individuals criticized the president.
By Greg Land | June 18, 2018
Fulton County Superior Court Judge Henry Newkirk ruled that sovereign immunity protects Clayton County from claims that it improperly withholds tax collections from College Park.
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