By Ellen Bardash | August 10, 2021
Dominion's complaint in Delaware claims Newsmax's coverage crossed the line from reporting by a free press into defamation by not stating, as other news outlets did, that claims had been debunked.
By Ellen Bardash | August 10, 2021
"Newsmax made the intentional and knowing choice to publicize the lies about Dominion as truth, creating an alternate reality that continues to dupe millions of Americans into believing that Dominion stole the 2020 election from Trump," the complaint said.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | August 10, 2021
"OAN helped create and cultivate an alternate reality where up is down, pigs have wings, and Dominion engaged in a colossal fraud to steal the presidency from Donald Trump by rigging the vote," the complaint reads.
By Cedra Mayfield | August 6, 2021
The court tossed Wood's election rules appeal for lack of standing, citing "insufficient generalized grievance[s]" that didn't meet Article III requirements.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | August 4, 2021
"It sends an extraordinarily important message that the federal courts are not just a soapbox to air baseless conspiracy theories harmful to our democratic system," said Kaplan Hecker & Fink partner Joshua Matz.
By Hugo Guzman | August 4, 2021
The new general counsel, Sean Pittman, noted COVID-19, health care and wealth disparities, police brutality and voter suppression as issues that underline the importance of the National Bar Association.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | August 4, 2021
Authoritative court statements debunking election fraud should at least have warned attorneys to proceed with caution, a U.S. magistrate judge said, blasting the attorneys for instead pressing their case at full speed, even after the Jan. 6 insurrection "that had been prompted, in part, by dangerous suggestions that the election had been stolen."
By ALM Staff | August 2, 2021
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Tom McParland | August 2, 2021
The law has recently come under renewed scrutiny from partisan critics for supposedly giving tech firms too much leeway in squelching political speech online.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Joel Cohen | July 29, 2021
Should any lawyer be faulted when she's been engaged to wage a lawsuit whose purpose is not to actually succeed with the case as pleaded, or even come close (which should be totally acceptable even to the most stringent of ethicists)—but, rather, to promote some other purpose important for the client by merely filing the lawsuit?
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