By Jacqueline Thomsen | April 2, 2020
"Although presidential declarations of emergencies—including this proclamation—have been at issue in many cases, no court has ever reviewed the merits of such a declaration," the Trump appointee wrote.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | April 1, 2020
Morgan Lewis' senior pro bono trial lawyer Susan Baker Manning is among the attorneys working on a class action to protect detained immigrant families during the COVID-19 pandemic.
By Julia L. Stommes | March 27, 2020
As events and rules are changing daily with respect to COVID-19. In February, we thought the worst thing to happen this year would be the new H-1B Cap Registration process. Little did we know that this pandemic would create uncertainty throughout the immigration landscape, says Julia L. Stommes, an immigration attorney of counsel for Fragomen.
By Marcia Coyle | March 27, 2020
"Termination of DACA during this national emergency would be catastrophic," lawyers for "Dreamers" told the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday in a letter.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By David N. Cinotti | March 26, 2020
The federal government's successful support for Kansas, in 'Kansas v. Garcia,' might hurt its case against New Jersey's Immigrant Trust Directive.
By Irina Plumlee | March 25, 2020
Just as immigration lawyers around the country started getting the hang of the ever-changing immigration policies and politics, such as navigating…
By Marcia Coyle | March 19, 2020
Kirkland's Paul Clement has four petitions on the justices' Friday conference list. Meanwhile, the court, responding to the COVID-19 crisis, is extending deadlines to file new petitions.
By Angela Morris | March 18, 2020
Immigration attorneys want the hearings to go on, because they want to get their clients out of detention, where the risk of infection is high because of packed facilities and poor sanitary conditions. Simultaneously, attorneys are concerned for their own health when they have to attend packed immigration court hearings.
By Raychel Lean | March 18, 2020
"Ordinarily, criminals are not so lucky as to receive a reduced sentence for piling on more criminal activity," the Eleventh Circuit ruling said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Louis Pechman and Laura Rodriguez | March 13, 2020
Although undocumented workers do not have legal work authorization, once they perform work for an employer, they are legally entitled to payment for that work.
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