By Avalon Zoppo | March 8, 2023
If the Fifth Circuit rules against the government, legal experts said the decision would extend an existing at-will removal requirement for agencies led by single directors to the multimember Consumer Product Safety Commission, and could have more far-reaching effects if the U.S. Supreme Court gets involved.
By Avalon Zoppo | March 7, 2023
Fourth Circuit Judges Julius Richardson and Allison Rushing, both Trump appointees, seemed skeptical of the arguments by the transgender Medicaid participants who brought the lawsuit.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | March 7, 2023
"We think that prison debt laws across the board, particularly the amount Connecticut collects and the way in which it collects it, [are] unconstitutional," Elana Spungen Bildner of the ACLU Foundation of Connecticut said. "We're committed to sticking around for this fight for however long it takes."
By Avalon Zoppo | Brad Kutner | March 7, 2023
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear an admiralty dispute involving choice-of-law clauses in maritime contracts according to Monday's orders list.
By Avalon Zoppo | March 6, 2023
"Offended observer standing appears to warp the very essence of the judicial power vested by the Constitution," Thomas wrote in a dissent.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Eliana Baer and Matheu D. Nunn | March 3, 2023
Tensions between First Amendment considerations and enforceability by civil courts of agreements to discourage religious barriers to remarriage are oftentimes invoked in the context of a "get."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Black and Jonathan Robert Nelson | March 3, 2023
Religious institutions all too often have bylaws that are out-of-date or poorly drafted. For the many reasons discussed below, the authors believe that should change.
By ALM Staff | March 3, 2023
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Matthew T. Mangino | March 2, 2023
Shapiro's position is not the usual political side-step. He didn't say the death penalty is racist, or there are too may exonerations or even that the process is arbitrary—no, Shapiro contends the death penalty is wrong, state-sponsored death is immoral and Pennsylvania, or any other state for that matter, should not be in the business of death.
By Avalon Zoppo | February 28, 2023
Linda Coberly, the chair of the ERA Coalition's legal task force who attended the hearing, said the circuit's decision punts the debate over the deadline's validity to Congress.
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