By Erin Mulvaney | April 10, 2018
“I believe one of the best ways to get a higher level of compliance or get a better handle is to go after the small, individual claims and never let up,” Gustafson told a U.S. Senate panel Tuesday at her confirmation hearing.
By Staff | April 10, 2018
Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation, spoke with former South African Constitutional Court Justice Albie Sachs on “What it Means to Live in a Constitutional Democracy” at CUNY Law School.
By Tony Mauro | April 10, 2018
"He is not paying attention to the newspapers, he's paying attention to briefs, and cases, and laws. He's not one for the D.C. cocktail circuit, as it were. Just not his scene, never has been," says Jamil Jaffer, a former Gorsuch clerk.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Raoul Felder | April 10, 2018
Whether you like Donald Trump, don't like Donald Trump, or are indifferent to Trump, what happened yesterday is appalling.
By Marcia Coyle | April 9, 2018
"The executive action at issue took place under circumstances that strongly suggest that the explanation given by the executive for its action is untrue," lawyers for the plaintiffs wrote in seeking to compel Heritage Foundation and Family Research Council to respond to a subpoena.
By Jim Turner, News Service of Florida | April 6, 2018
And that's as the overall contest was listed by the University of Virginia's Center for Politics as a “toss-up.”
The Legal Intelligencer | Expert Opinion
By Samuel C. Stretton | April 5, 2018
If a judge would normally be disqualified from a case, but all parties agree for the judge to—in an administrative matter—accept a waiver or a waiver of a preliminary hearing or a negotiated guilty plea, can the judge do that?
By Erin Mulvaney | April 4, 2018
“I filed this lawsuit against my former employer today because I believe that Americans should not be forced to choose between their principles and their paychecks,” Juli Briskman, the plaintiff, said in a statement.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Christopher Dunn | April 4, 2018
Civil Rights and Civil Liberties columnist Christopher Dunn writes: While it's too early to predict the cases the Supreme Court might see over the 2020 Census, an examination of three of its most recent decisions provides important insights into what types of disputes might come to the court, who can bring those disputes and when, and what types of constitutional and statutory claims the cases may offer.
By C. Ryan Barber | April 4, 2018
"Chasing indictment after indictment is not an adequate remedy," Manafort lawyer Kevin Downing argued in court Wednesday, urging a judge to restrain Robert Mueller's ongoing Russia investigation.
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