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New York Law Journal

Anti-Deportation Training Given to Fearful Immigrants

By | March 13, 2017
Don't open the front door if immigration officials knock. If you are taken into custody, tell them your name and nothing else. Definitely don't sign anything. That is some of the advice being given in New York City and around the country at training sessions put on by advocacy organizations.
3 minute read

National Law Journal

Hogan Lovells Publishes Docs Online in Hawaii's Trump Travel Ban Challenge

Hogan Lovells' Neal Katyal, counsel to Hawaii in the case, says “We want everyone to be able to read our work.”
11 minute read

New York Law Journal

Linares-Urrutia v. Sessions

By | March 13, 2017
BIA Must Decide if Asylum Applicant's 2012 Return From Canada Was 'Last Arrival' in U.S.
3 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

NJ Senate to Vote on Immigration Measures

The New Jersey Senate on Monday is set to vote on a series of measures aimed at blocking any local effects stemming from President Donald Trump's recent attempts to boost the detention and deportation of undocumented immigrants.
7 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

NJ Senate to Vote on Immigration Measures

The New Jersey Senate will vote next week on measures meant to counter President Donald Trump's immigration ban.
7 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

At Hogan, Trump Travel Ban Led to Dash Against the Clock

A team of lawyers led by partner Neal Katyal spent nearly 36 hours working with the Hawaii attorney general to meet a filing deadline in preparation for a hearing on Trump's travel ban.
16 minute read

The Recorder

Bringas-Rodriguez v. Sessions

By | March 09, 2017
6 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

Courts Must Do Better on Immigration This Time

By | March 09, 2017
A century ago, the judicial system failed us. The courts bent and almost broke the Constitution to uphold exclusion and deportation. Today, judges, at the urging of volunteer lawyers across the country, are upholding constitutional values in the face of bigotry and fear.
6 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

Supreme Court Considers Cross-Border Jurisdictional Issues

At a recent oral argument, Justice Elena Kagan described the ­U.S.-Mexico border as a jurisdictional "no-man's land." The Supreme Court confronted those jurisdictional limits in Hernández v. Mesa, a case arising from the fatal shooting of a Mexican teenager (Sergio Hernández) by a U.S. border patrol agent; the American officer shot from a position in the United States and wounded Hernández at a location across the border in Mexico.
10 minute read

Daily Report Online

Immigrant Advocates Seek Atlanta Bar's Pro Bono Aid: 'We Are in Emergency Mode'

The Southern Poverty Law Center announced a major initiative to recruit volunteer lawyers to represent every undocumented immigrant detained in the Southeast at a pro bono roundtable hosted by King & Spalding last week.
18 minute read

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