By Andrew Denney | June 30, 2017
Increasingly frequent appearances of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in New York courthouses is causing immigrants fearing deportation to stay away, legal service providers for immigrants told a New York City Council committee on Thursday.
By Andrew Denney | June 30, 2017
A federal appeals court has reinstated a Belarusian petrochemical company's sovereign immunity defense to a suit filed by a New York lawyer who holds the company responsible for his 2008 abduction and alleged torture at the hands of Belarusian authorities.
By Karen Sloan | June 30, 2017
Subsidized government loans for graduate students became a casualty of the 2011 debt ceiling crisis, but law school proponents are pushing to resurrect them with the help of sympathetic lawmakers.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | June 29, 2017
Settlement's Undistributed Balance Must Be Sent to CFPB for Disgorgement to U.S. Treasury
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | June 29, 2017
The U.S. Coast Guard announced Wednesday it has temporarily suspended plans to anchor oil barges in the Hudson River at 10 locations from Yonkers to Kingston, pending a Ports and Waterways Safety Assessment of the river.
By ERIN MULVANEY | June 29, 2017
Management tactics that weed out older workers have pushed federal regulators and anti-discrimination groups to train an eye on hiring rather than firing when it comes to protecting against age bias, an effort advocates acknowledge is a steeper hill with increasingly narrowed protections for aging workers.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | June 28, 2017
May 2015 Suit Untimely as to Claims Against IRS Under 'Borrowed' Limitations Statute
By Josefa Velasquez | June 28, 2017
New York state is taking regulatory steps to ensure that health insurers maintain coverage for certain benefits currently provided under federal law…
By Tony Mauro | June 28, 2017
Dozens of GOP House members are calling on Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to recuse herself from the high-stakes case because of negative comments she made about Donald Trump before he was elected president. While Ginsburg may not be forced to withdraw, one law professor said she "has only herself to blame for the optics."
By C. Ryan Barber | June 28, 2017
The head of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's whistleblower office defended broad anti-retaliation protections for corporate insiders on Wednesday, just days after the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to consider when employees are entitled to those safeguards under the Dodd-Frank Act.
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