By Victoria Hudgins | September 10, 2019
Like other regulatory and compliance practices, immigration law is complicated, and lawyers are turning to technology to simplify its delivery for their clients and themselves.
By Katheryn Tucker | September 10, 2019
"At this very moment, thousands—if not tens of thousands of people—are trapped in the Bahamas on devastated islands," said Southern Poverty Law Center Senior Supervising Attorney Paul Chavez.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | September 9, 2019
U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar found that "a nationwide injunction is supported by the need to maintain uniform immigration policy."
Daily Business Review | Profile
By Zach Schlein | September 6, 2019
Before graduating from the University of Miami School of Law and joining Foley & Lardner as an associate, Romes dedicated much of her life to the performing arts and theater.
By Tom McParland | September 6, 2019
U.S. District Judge Jesse M. Furman of the Southern District of New York said Thursday that provisions of federal law "channel all challenges" to removal orders and proceedings to federal appeals courts, as the "sole and exclusive means for judicial review."
By Maria Verza and Christopher Sherman | September 6, 2019
Mexico's foreign secretary said he believed its strategy of cracking down on illegal migration, investment in Central America and allowing the U.S. to make more asylum seekers wait in Mexico was enough to avert American tariffs on all Mexican imports.
By Ross Todd | September 5, 2019
U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar, who previously issued an injunction barring new Trump Administration rules regarding asylum, seems poised to revive his prior ruling's nationwide scope—despite appellate pushback.
By Angela Morris | September 4, 2019
"They can't treat detainees in an unconstitutional fashion and hide behind a claim that these are designed for short-term use, when detainees in our case have been detained weeks or months," said Haynes and Boone associate Brent Beckert, a pro bono lawyer for the migrants.
By Dan M. Clark | September 4, 2019
"There is no time for Defendants' procedural maneuvering," Merola's attorneys wrote.
By Robert Storace | September 3, 2019
Attorneys for ICE and Hartford resident Wayzaro Walton made oral arguments Tuesday in front of a three-judge panel at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. ICE is trying to deport Walton to her native England for several criminal offenses she committed in this country even though Connecticut has pardoned her for those crimes.
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