New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Eric Tirschwell and Ivan Wohner | June 26, 2023
It is now incumbent on the Supreme Court to bring some order to the post-Bruen chaos and confirm that last year's decision did not close the door to gun safety.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Eric Tirschwell and Ivan Wohner | June 26, 2023
It is now incumbent on the Supreme Court to bring some order to the post-Bruen chaos and confirm that last year's decision did not close the door to gun safety.
By Cheryl Miller | June 21, 2023
Greg Jacob, now a partner at O'Melveny & Myers, testified at John Eastman's disciplinary hearing that the former Trump adviser's legal theories about blocking Joe Biden's election had no legal merit.
Daily Report Online | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Gabriel "Jack" Chin | June 21, 2023
The Constitution requires that a trial must be "held in the State where the said Crimes shall have been committed" and that a defendant is entitled to an "impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed."
By Cheryl Miller | June 20, 2023
A lawyer for the California bar suggests Trump counsel John Eastman didn't sufficiently scrutinize the fraud claims he cited after the 2020 presidential election.
By Adolfo Pesquera | June 20, 2023
"Under Claiborne, Mckesson cannot be liable for violence unless he encouraged violence. It is not enough that he encouraged or committed unlawful-but-nonviolent actions that preceded violence," Circuit Judge Don R. Willett said in dissent.
By Cheryl Miller | June 16, 2023
Trial counsel with the state bar will try to persuade a judge that the Trump adviser knew, or should have known, his legal theories were based on falsehoods.
By Alexander Lugo | June 16, 2023
Justice Ricky Polston stepped down from the high court at the end of March and immediately went to work as general counsel at Citizens Property Insurance, Florida's not-for-profit insurer of last resort.
By Lisa Mascaro | The Associated Press | June 16, 2023
Several Republican Congress members have stood by the indicted former president, adopting his grievances against the federal justice system as their own.
By Colleen Murphy | June 15, 2023
"In Bostock v. Clayton County, the Supreme Court brought sexual-orientation discrimination within Title VII's embrace," said Judge Susan B. Graber, in her written opinion for the Ninth Circuit. "The court held that discrimination 'because of' sexual orientation is a form of sex discrimination under Title VII. We conclude that the same result applies to Title IX."
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