By Dara Kam | December 14, 2018
“You've got to have somebody there who can swiftly and effectively neutralize the threat, and that means killing the killer,” Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said.
By Michael Booth | December 12, 2018
A three-judge panel of Second District Court of Appeal on Tuesday overturned a prior ruling by a Superior Court judge who said the expelled student was not deprived of a fair investigation and hearing.
By Michael Booth | December 12, 2018
A three-judge panel of District Seven of the Second Appellate District on Tuesday overturned a prior ruling by a Superior Court judge who said the expelled student was not deprived of a fair investigation and hearing.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Kimberly C. Lau | December 10, 2018
On Nov. 16, 2018, the U.S. Department of Education issued proposed regulations to supplement Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 in response to a dire need for clarification of the gender discrimination statute that has evolved so far from its beginnings. This article examines the provisions requiring more work during a 60-day notice-and-comment period, and those worth applauding.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Alissa Bernstein | December 7, 2018
OP-ED: The state's outdated "last in, first out" law prevents children in Newark from getting the education they deserve. And when politicians fail to protect children, the court system provides a way to seek justice, enforce their constitutional rights and make positive change.
By Ian Lopez | December 5, 2018
The move makes way for Katherine Rosen, a former UCLA student stabbed by her classmate while on campus, to bring her case against the university before a jury.
By Ian Lopez | December 5, 2018
The move makes way for Katherine Rosen, a former UCLA student stabbed by her classmate while on campus, to bring her case against the university before a jury.
By Vivia Chen | December 5, 2018
"The people bringing the suit would like to return to a day that's long passed," says the Wilmer partner representing the school in a challenge to its admission policies regarding Asian-Americans.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael J. Broyde | December 5, 2018
The law gives everyone just enough rights to hurt schoolchildren in underperforming private religious schools, but not enough rights to actually help them. In cases where religious parents want less education than the state mandates—or even simply refuse to teach that which conflicts with their religious faith that the state labels a minimum—a compromise is needed.
By Tom McParland | November 27, 2018
Chancery Court Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster said it appeared the current system for allocating public school resources suffered from "deep structural flaws" and that Delaware's public schools have become re-segregated by race and class.
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