Daily Business Review | Slideshow
By Lidia Dinkova | January 19, 2021
S.D.A. Immigration Law is moving into a 10th-floor suite at Ofizzina office tower.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 7, 2020
"Shouldn't I anticipate the political landscape, and perhaps even the physical landscape, will change then?" U.S. District Judge Casey Cooper said of the change in administrations.
By Marcia Coyle | November 30, 2020
During Monday's arguments, the justices focused almost exclusively on whether the case was ripe to decide and whether the court should await more information about how many undocumented immigrants would be excluded.
By Marcia Coyle | September 22, 2020
The case is the second 2020 census count dispute to reach the Supreme Court. In June of last year, the justices, in a 5-4 decision from Chief Justice John Roberts Jr., rejected an attempt by the Trump administration to include a citizenship question on the 2020 census.
Daily Business Review | Profile
By Raychel Lean | September 14, 2020
Miami attorney Pamela Ferretjans says she's living proof that it's OK to start a law firm with "uncertainty and a dream."
By Raychel Lean | August 26, 2020
Already suspended, Miami attorney Mark Gallegos is facing a second complaint from the Florida Bar over his work on three immigration cases. Here's what allegedly went wrong.
By Lisa Rathke | August 17, 2020
Ariel Quiros, the former owner of Jay Peak and Burke Mountain ski resorts in northern Vermont, changed his plea to guilty on charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, money laundering and the concealment of material information.
By Charles Toutant | August 7, 2020
A lawsuit by New Jersey attorneys seeks a declaration that making attorneys appear for in-person proceedings in nondetained cases during the pandemic, without a videoconference option, is a violation of the Administrative Procedures Act and the Fifth Amendment's due process clause.
By Marcia Coyle | July 27, 2020
The census statute "does not curtail the president's authority to direct the secretary in making policy judgments that result in 'the decennial census,'" then-Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote. John Roberts Jr., then a U.S. Justice Department lawyer, argued for the government.
By Ana Ceballos | July 8, 2020
State university officials are scrambling to figure out the full implications of a regulation issued by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement that will not allow foreign students to stay in the country if they only take online classes during the fall.
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