By Sue Reisinger | August 16, 2017
The public university denies a request for Richard Spencer to speak on the Gainesville campus next month.
By John Council | August 16, 2017
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has slapped the New York Times by reviving a defamation lawsuit filed against it by a Louisiana economics professor and libertarian who sued the newspaper for defamation after he was quoted in an article stating that slavery was "not so bad."
By Jason Dearen | August 16, 2017
University of Florida's president calls out the "racist rhetoric" of organizer Richard Spencer.
By Cogan Schneier | August 15, 2017
The TV manufacturer says the order from the Singapore International Arbitration Centre violates its First Amendment rights.
By Cogan Schneier | August 15, 2017
Cooper & Kirk's Charles Cooper filed a new lawsuit this week on behalf of a convicted CEO to clarify which ex-cons should be allowed to purchase firearms.
By Jim Saunders | August 15, 2017
Rejecting arguments about a new lethal-injection procedure, the Florida Supreme Court refused to block the scheduled Aug. 24 execution of death row inmate Mark James Asay.
By Christine Simmons | August 15, 2017
In the midst of what some see as an uptick in libel cases, five attorneys involved in major defamation and First Amendment matters moved their practice this month from Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz to Davis Wright Tremaine, including New York partners Katherine Bolger and Rachel Strom and Washington, D.C., partner Nathan Siegel.
By Marcia Coyle | August 15, 2017
In a case involving law enforcement's use of cellphone location data, Apple, Google, Facebook, Microsoft and other major tech companies on Tuesday told the U.S. Supreme Court that transmission to a service provider should not automatically bar protection of digital data from warrantless search and seizure.
By Tony Mauro | August 15, 2017
A Hogan Lovells team is asking the court to decide whether "the death penalty in and of itself violates the Eighth Amendment." A sharp drop in death sentences and executions makes capital punishment "rare and freakish," the brief contends.
By B. Colby Hamilton | August 14, 2017
Attorneys for the U.S. Department of Justice said a preliminary injunction to force President Donald Trump to unblock a group of plaintiffs on Twitter would "send the First Amendment deep into uncharted waters," according to a letter filed Aug. 11 .
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