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Connecticut Law Tribune

What We Owe the Families We Separated at the Border

Our government should acknowledge the grievous wrong it has committed through a systematic policy of family separation.
6 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

COVID-19's Unquantified Victim—Camaraderie

Little has been written about the inevitable erosion of camaraderie at the bar that has resulted from the pandemic.
5 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

Scorched-Earth Policy Makes for an Unnecessarily Messy Presidential Transition

Scorched earth is what a nation's military forces do in combat operations against an invader's forces. It is not what an elected government in a democratic country does when it is voted from office.
4 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

Hurrah for Federalism!

President Trump has the power to bring lawsuits alleging election fraud. He does not have the power to adjudicate them.
3 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

Punitive-Centered Approach to COVID-19 Doesn't Work at Colleges

Experts say a punitive, abstinence-only approach to COVID-19 rules is "inhumane, radical and likely to backfire."
5 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

Return to Normalcy Necessitates Acknowledging Reality

Lawyers challenging the legitimacy of the 2020 election have hit a trio of hurdles.
4 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

A Rush to Execute: What's the Urgency?

Ten federal executions under President Donald Trump in 2020 would be the most in any single year since 1896.
5 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

It's Time To Give Up On Jury Trials This Year

Judicial branch leaders have tried to figure out a way to restart jury trials despite the worst public health crisis we have faced since 1918. It's time to give up.
3 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

Lawyers, the Honor System and Politics Disrupted

In Connecticut there is a level of confidence in knowing we won't let politics disrupt our ethical duties as lawyers.
5 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

What the U.S. Supreme Court Said Before Colin Kaepernick

In 1942, and with the apparent blessing of the Supreme Court, the West Virginia Board of Education imposed a requirement for a stiff-armed salute of the American flag.
7 minute read

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