By Adriana Gomez Licon and Amy Taxin | June 3, 2019
A decades-old settlement governing the care of detained immigrant children calls for them to be released to family members, sponsors or other locations within 20 days.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | May 31, 2019
After nearly two years held up in the sanctuary of a Connecticut church, Sujitno Sajuti walked out Friday after ICE officials said they no longer wanted to deport him to his native Indonesia.
Daily Business Review | Profile
By Zach Schlein | May 31, 2019
Over the course of his career the Miami-based lawyer has found the time to navigate immigration law, work on behalf of the federal government, release music, and even help to pioneer online legal writing.
New York Law Journal | News|Podcast
By Jason Grant | May 30, 2019
Yates explained to MSNBC podcast host Chuck Rosenberg why she thought it was more important to defy the president on the issue—leading to her firing—rather than simply resign.
By Angela Morris | May 30, 2019
“Lawyers can't commit crimes,” said legal ethics lawyer Chuck Herring. “You can't bribe. That's sort of a no-brainer.”
By Dan Packel | May 29, 2019
Corporate immigration attorney Pierre Georges Bonnefil and his wife Marysia were drinking coffee in bed and watching the news in their Manhattan apartment on the morning of Feb. 6, 2013, when she noticed something was wrong.
By Dan Packel | May 29, 2019
Pierre Georges Bonnefil calls his recovery a miracle—and credits his wife for the immediate treatment that allowed him to maintain his practice. Still, he says, ”I fight with it every day."
By Angela Morris | May 28, 2019
“GEO's staff also told the fathers that they would be deported without their children, that their children would be adopted by families living in the United States and that they would never again see their children,” alleged the complaint.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp | May 28, 2019
In their Second Circuit Review, Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp discuss the court's recent decision in 'Ragbir v. Homan', in which a split panel held that federal courts do have subject matter jurisdiction over claims that a high-profile, foreign-born immigration activist was singled out for removal from the United States on the basis of his disfavored speech against the authorities.
By Susan DeSantis | May 28, 2019
"It is no exaggeration to say that there is no one in the history of this nation who has done more over a lifetime to serve the public than he," said Chief Judge Robert A. Katzmann of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
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