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Big-ticket state and federal trial, appellate and Supreme Court litigation focused on business challenges to agency rules and regulations
By Riley Brennan | January 19, 2024
The ruling marks a win for Washington, D.C., boutique litigation firm Cooper & Kirk, which represents the plaintiffs challenging the statutes.
5 minute read
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | January 19, 2024
The disgraceful comment should be retracted by the attorney in question without ambiguity and without blaming the press.
2 minute read
By Avalon Zoppo | January 18, 2024
Appeals court declined to disregard New Deal-era Supreme Court precedent.
5 minute read
By Jimmy Hoover | January 18, 2024
The justices will consider whether the president is an "officer of the United States."
6 minute read
By Rory K. Little | January 18, 2024
"But rejecting the clear language of the 14th Amendment to say that it bars Trump from running for the office, is to fall prey to the very criticism levelled at some justices: deciding a case based on feelings and politics, rather than law," according to Rory Little, a professor at The University of California College of the Law, San Francisco.
9 minute read
By ALM Staff | January 17, 2024
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
2 minute read
By Sophia A. Nelson | January 16, 2024
"It's time that the legal profession stepped up boldly to lead the much-needed college campus free speech reforms we all know are required in this national moment of consequence," says attorney and political commentator Sophia A. Nelson.
7 minute read
By Jimmy Hoover | January 12, 2024
Advocates for the homeless say the ordinances violate the prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment.
3 minute read
By Avalon Zoppo | January 12, 2024
Judge Patrick Bumatay dissented from a decision that San Francisco's anti-vagrancy enforcement likely constitutes cruel and unusual punishment.
4 minute read
By Allison Dunn | January 12, 2024
"Counsel's constructive absence during either a significant portion of trial or an important aspect of trial so offends the constitutional protections surrounding the right to assistance of counsel that it renders the entire adversary process 'presumptively unreliable' and creates an uncurable error," Chief Justice Kimberly S. Budd wrote.
5 minute read
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