By Associated Press | October 31, 2017
Exxon Mobil settled air pollution violations with the Trump administration by paying a $2.5 million civil penalty and promising to spend $300 million…
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | October 31, 2017
Lawyers are poised to pack a Texas courtroom as they attempt to persuade a federal judge to pick them to lead litigation filed by individuals whose property was flooded from Houston reservoirs during Hurricane Harvey.
By Associated Press | October 31, 2017
A judge has blocked Houston's public housing authority from evicting residents of a senior-living apartment complex that was damaged by heavy rains…
By Cogan Schneier | October 24, 2017
The court reversed an order it issued Friday that blocked the 17-year-old from getting the procedure until a sponsor could be found for her.
By Cogan Schneier | National Law Journal | October 20, 2017
The government argues it should not be required to facilitate an abortion for a pregnant undocumented minor, while the ACLU contends the government is violating her constitutional rights.
By Cogan Schneier | National Law Journal | October 19, 2017
Chief Judge Merrick Garland agreed Thursday to livestream the arguments, scheduled for Friday.
By Herbert B. Dixon Jr | October 10, 2017
Fair, impartial and independent courts are necessary to maintain the American way of life.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | October 4, 2017
The Louisiana Civil Justice Center, created after Hurricane Katrina hit Louisiana in 2005, is putting its disaster-response chops to work by manning a hotline for people in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands who have legal questions in the wake of Hurricane Irma and Hurricane Maria.
By Kristen Rasmussen | September 15, 2017
A federal judge in Texas sentenced a woman with advanced metastatic cancer to 75 years in prison for Medicare fraud last month amid a crackdown on health care fraud by the government. Here's what we learned about the case.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | September 14, 2017
Texas plaintiffs firms have begun filing lawsuits on behalf of clients who live in Houston neighborhoods that flooded when the Army Corps of Engineers authorized controlled water releases from two reservoirs in the wake of Hurricane Harvey. The suits allege that the intentional flooding was an unlawful government taking of property, violating the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
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