Republican States Challenge Biden’s Student Loan Repayment Rule
Eleven Republican-led states filed a lawsuit against President
Adeel Mangi’s historic federal appellate court nomination started out as a celebratory moment for fellow Muslim lawyers—but, for them, it has now become a familiar spectacle.
A federal judge said looming deadlines and the US Supreme Court’s inaction forced her to allow South Carolina to use a redistricting map the court previously found disadvantaged Black voters.
The US Supreme Court signaled it’s likely to preserve full access to a widely used abortion pill as the justices heard arguments in a case carrying major stakes for reproductive rights and potentially this year’s elections.
Law firm lateral hiring took a nosedive last year, with associates bearing the brunt of the slowdown in demand from corporate clients.
The Judicial Council of the Second Circuit backed the decision to toss allegations that a federal judge created an abusive workplace environment for clerks, after the judge pledged to take corrective action.
Eleven Republican-led states filed a lawsuit against President
An unnamed public accounting firm is suing to halt a US regulator’s demand for documents as part of an ongoing probe of the firm’s crypto-related audit work.
An intensifying legal battle over efforts to store the country’s nuclear waste is likely to reach the US Supreme Court following appellate court rulings that split on the issue of whether the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has authority to license two facilities, one of the developers said Thursday.
Roughly 50 companies accused of violating a New Jersey law enforcement privacy statute—including the likes of
DarkPulse Inc.’s lawsuit alleging FirstFire Global Opportunities Fund LLC and its managing member engaged in fraud and racketeering connected to a promissory note was revived Thursday by the Second Circuit.
Two related social service companies must pay $112,000 plus interest to a pair of illegally fired workers after a federal appeals court upheld a National Labor Relations Board order to do so.
The Biden administration can spend $1.4 billion earmarked for building a border wall to acquire land for the project, a Trump-appointed federal judge ruled Thursday.
Black voters alleging recently redrawn North Carolina state Senate districts unlawfully dilute Black voting power were not entitled to a preliminary injunction prohibiting use of the new maps, the Fourth Circuit said Thursday.
The US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit plans to hold oral argument at Catholic University’s law school, reviving its once regular practice to visit local law schools for the first time since before the pandemic.
A former US State Department foreign affairs officer, whose security clearance was revoked after it came to light that he was linked to white nationalism, failed to state a legal claim against the department, a federal court said, dismissing all of his claims on the merits.
In this video, we look at the history of judicial ethics and probe the constitutionality of creating a code of conduct for Supreme Court justices.
A Delaware federal judge plans to enhance his transparency-boosting measures targeting litigation financing, months after he cracked down on companies running afoul of his current standard.
Roughly 50 companies accused of violating a New Jersey law enforcement privacy statute—including the likes of
Jon Mize has been appointed managing partner of Womble Bond Dickinson’s Raleigh and Research Triangle Park, N.C., offices, effective April 1, the firm said Thursday.
Jeewon Serrato and Shruti Bhutani Arora have joined Pillsbury as partners in the San Francisco office, the firm said Thursday.
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP is protected from a potential malpractice suit brought by a formerly bankrupt luxury hotel owner thanks to liability releases in the hotel’s bankruptcy plan, an appellate court said.
The US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit plans to hold oral argument at Catholic University’s law school, reviving its once regular practice to visit local law schools for the first time since before the pandemic.
Supreme Court Today, Vol. 92 No. 36, pages 3245-3254, dated March 28, 2024, is now available. A link to the PDF version can be found in the Related Documents field.
Supreme Court Today, Vol. 92 No. 35, pages 3237-3243, dated March 21, 2024, is now available. A link to the PDF version can be found in the Related Documents field.
Supreme Court Today, Vol. 92 No. 34, pages 3231-3235, dated March 14, 2024, is now available. A link to the PDF version can be found in the Related Documents field.
Get the latest legal, regulatory, and enforcement news and analysis, as well as in-depth business and industry covering in the following areas: