By Colby Hamilton | December 14, 2017
The appellate panel heard arguments on the mandamus petition before it over U.S. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis' order to have the government proceed with document production and discovery in the suit over the federal wind down of DACA.
National Law Journal | Slideshow
By Tony Mauro | December 14, 2017
Three D.C. Circuit judges got to play Supreme Court justices on Dec. 14— nearly 60 years after the Warren Court heard arguments in the First Amendment challenge: Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Alexander H. Southwell and Jason P.W. Halperin | December 14, 2017
Alexander H. Southwell and Jason P.W. Halperin explore this ongoing problem of “how-to” terrorism guidance on the Internet, and propose a solution: legislation aimed at barring the publication of online materials that offer instructions on how to commit mass violence.
By Law.com Editors | December 14, 2017
Tune in today! Join National Law Journal Supreme Court correspondent Tony Mauro and former Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal for a conference call at 3 ET to discuss new demographic research on Supreme Court law clerks. The call is free. Register now and be part of the conversation.
By Katheryn Tucker | December 14, 2017
Oral arguments have an intangible value that lawyers and judges seem to understand instinctively. At best, they're conversations—starting in midsentence with many interruptions—that mostly seem mutually useful.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joseph M. McLaughlin and Shannon K. McGovern | December 13, 2017
Corporate Litigation columnists Joseph M. McLaughlin and Shannon K. McGovern write: Last month, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held as a matter of first impression in this circuit that direct evidence of price impact is not always necessary to demonstrate market efficiency (as required to invoke the 'Basic' presumption), and a defendant's rebuttal burden is one of persuasion (not production), and defendant must show the absence of price impact by a preponderance of the evidence.
By Tony Mauro | December 12, 2017
Boeing's executive vice president and general counsel J. Michael Luttig has been staffing the company's law department with former U.S. Supreme Court law clerks.
By Greg Land | December 12, 2017
Most of those lawyers found slots with conservative Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito.
By Karen Sloan | December 12, 2017
We collected the stories of four unlikely SCOTUS clerks to provide a glimpse of how hard work, happenstance and well-placed mentors can pave a nontraditional path to the U.S. Supreme Court. Here's what they had to say.
By Ross Todd | December 12, 2017
The 38 clerks that Stanford has sent over the past dozen years is about a third the amount sent by Harvard and Yale. The school has sent twice as many clerks to the court's liberal justices than its conservatives.
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