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Supreme Court Brief

Gorsuch, in First Dissent, Rejects Invitation to 'Tweak' Statute

In writing his first dissent, which came in the first case he heard as a new justice, Neil Gorsuch on Friday told his colleagues what will surely be his governing mantra: "Just follow the words of the statute as written."
4 minute read

Daily Report Online

Laurel Boatright, Assistant U.S. Attorney, Northern District of Georgia

Practice Profile: Boatright as a community outreach coordinator implements programs aimed at crime prevention and reducing recidivism in metro Atlanta.…
3 minute read

National Law Journal

Mueller Bolsters Russia Team's Appellate Readiness in New Hire

Adam Jed, a 2008 Harvard Law School graduate and former clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, has joined Special Counsel Robert Mueller III's legal team in the investigation of Russia's interference with the U.S. presidential election. At the DOJ, Jed defended the Affordable Care Act and helped implement the Supreme Court's DOMA ruling.
5 minute read

New York Law Journal

Greene v. Carson

HUD Only Partly Granted Judgment in Action Over Denial of Continued Section 8 Subsidy
2 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

Connecticut Taxpayers Could Suffer Under Trump Proposal

The lost revenue from doubling the standard deductions would be funded by part of the increased revenue from eliminating the deduction for local and state taxes.
5 minute read

Supreme Court Brief

The Roberts Court Hasn't Reargued Many Cases. That Could Change

The possibility that the U.S. Supreme Court will rehear a set of cases—including several immigration disputes—looms over the justices as the term moves into its final weeks.
12 minute read

National Law Journal

Baker McKenzie Tax Lawyers Wade Into Trump Litigation

The lawyers represent nonprofit group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington and the National Security Archive at George Washington University, which claim Trump and his executive office are violating the Presidential Records Act.
12 minute read

National Law Journal

Acosta Makes Apprenticeship Pitch to Manufacturing Trade Association

U.S. Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta on Wednesday promoted apprenticeship programs as key to closing the skills gap in a speech to a friendly audience of the National Association of Manufacturers, the powerful trade group that participated in many lawsuits against the U.S. Labor Department during the Obama administration.
7 minute read

The American Lawyer

Latham Makes Another Key Litigation Hire in Leslie Caldwell

Leslie Caldwell has become the latest former head of the U.S. Department of Justice's criminal division to join Latham & Watkins. The firm announced Wednesday that Caldwell will join its white-collar defense and investigations practice in September. The former partner at Morgan, Lewis & Bockius will work out of San Francisco.
5 minute read

Daily Business Review

Federal Appeals Court Rejects Caloosahatchee Water Case

A federal appeals court rejected a lawsuit alleging that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' management of water flowing from Lake Okeechobee into the Caloosahatchee River caused pollution problems in the Southwest Florida waterway.
3 minute read

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