The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Lisa T. Felix | January 15, 2019
I urge you to turn to the article by Gina Tomaine “The Immigrant on My Couch.” The article explains the professional challenges faced by her highly qualified, American-educated future brother-in-law from India in the “Buy American, Hire American” era.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Frank P. Cervone | January 11, 2019
When I recently visited the border crossing between El Paso, Texas and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, at the Las Americas Bridge over the Rio Grande, I saw a wholly different reality: two communities so integrated that port-of-entry commuter traffic rivaled Philadelphia's Schuylkill Expressway, and dozens of students chatted warmly as they walked from their high school on the U.S. side to their family homes in Juarez.
By Andrew Denney | January 8, 2019
The director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services violated the law by disregarding dangerous conditions in Haiti when recommending the termination of temporary protected status for refugees who fled the country following a devastating 2010 earthquake, the director's predecessor told a federal judge at a Brooklyn trial testing the Trump administration's decision.
By Tony Mauro | January 3, 2019
"President Trump's comments display a disgraceful degree of disrespect for the Supreme Court and role of an independent federal judiciary," Gibson Dunn's Ted Boutrous said.
By Tony Mauro | January 3, 2019
“President Trump's comments display a disgraceful degree of disrespect for the Supreme Court and role of an independent federal judiciary,” Gibson Dunn's Ted Boutrous said.
By Dan Clark | December 28, 2018
With no immediate end in sight, what does the federal government shutdown mean for employers?
By Mike Scarcella | December 27, 2018
U.S. District Judge John Bates in Washington on Thursday was weighing the New York attorney general's opposition to the government's request that deadlines be extended in a suit against the U.S. Labor Department.
By C. Ryan Barber | Mike Scarcella | December 27, 2018
Many cases are being put on hold, but not in every instance. A Maryland federal judge called the shutdown a “funding dispute” between the legislative and executive branches and said the Justice Department is required to find the “means by which to continue their participation in this litigation on a timely basis regardless of their client's internal issues.”
By Mike Scarcella | December 26, 2018
Justice Department lawyers are seeking a filing extension in an immigration case against Miami-Dade County.
By Dilnaz Saleem | December 26, 2018
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) published an advance copy of a proposed rule to make significant changes to the selection process…
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