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Mike Scarcella is a senior editor in Washington on ALM Media's regulatory desk. Contact him at [email protected]. On Twitter: @MikeScarcella. Mike works on a slate of newsletters: Supreme Court Brief | Higher Law | Compliance Hot Spots | Labor of Law.
June 26, 2015 | Legal Times
Marcia Coyle, the NLJ's chief Washington correspondent, spoke with PBS NewsHour host Hari Sreenivasan on Friday evening about the Supreme Court's historic ruling that declared same-sex marriages constitutional.
By Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
June 23, 2015 | Legal Times
Marcia Coyle, the NLJ's chief Washington correspondent, speaks with PBS NewsHour host Gwen Ifill about the Supreme Court's rulings on hotel registries and grapes.
By Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
June 19, 2015 | Legal Times
Marcia Coyle, the NLJ's chief Washington correspondent, spoke with PBS NewsHour host Judy Woodruff on Thursday evening about the Supreme Court's two First Amendment rulings: the Texas license plates case Walker v. Sons of Confederate Veterans, and Reed v. Town of Gilbert, a dispute over a church's roadside signs.
By Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
June 12, 2015 | Legal Times
Twitter's surveillance suit is in jeopardy. The Chicago federal trial judge in the Dennis Hastert case will stay on. The D.C. Circuit declines to block net neutrality rules from taking effect. And Eric Holder Jr. takes on the high court over voting rights. This is a roundup of news from ALM and other publications.
By Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
June 5, 2015 | Legal Times
Dennis Hastert was more a big name than a revenue-generator at Dickstein Shapiro. Quinn Emanuel takes the field for FIFA. Justice Antonin Scalia offers graduation-day insight to an all-girls school in suburban Maryland. And a Brooklyn appeals court says a 31-year-old undocumented immigrant from Mexico is allowed to practice law. This is a roundup of news from ALM and other publications.
By Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
May 26, 2015 | Legal Times
Opening statements begin today in the Dewey & LeBoeuf trial in Manhattan. Democratic candidates for president face criticism over their litmus test for would-be Supreme Court picks. And Daniel Meltzer, who served as the second-in-charge at the White House counsel's office, dies. This is a roundup from ALM and other publications.
By Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
May 15, 2015 | Legal Times
The Justice Department is planning to tear up a settlement with Swiss bank UBS AG over alleged violations related to interest-rate rigging. A 1997 law caps Amtrak's damages liability in any single rail crash at $200M. The feds ask the Ninth Circuit to revive ATF stash-house stings. And the Kentucky Supreme Court takes a look at frats and the Fourth Amendment. This is a roundup of news from ALM and other publications.
By Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
May 5, 2015 | Legal Times
David Kendall, a lawyer for Hillary Clinton, tells a House panel it will have one chance to question the former secretary of state over her emails and the attacks in Benghazi. Ferguson's paying Winston chairman Daniel Webb $1,335 an hour to negotiate with the feds. The D.C. Circuit is cool to a challenge over immigration policy. This is a news roundup from ALM and other publications.
By Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
May 1, 2015 | Legal Times
Rough rides. Nickel rides. Joy rides. The NYT looks at the "dark tradition" of police misconduct that involves a suspect getting an anything-but-smooth trip in the back of a police wagon. More news: The justices meet today to discuss same-sex marriage. A Wiley partner spends hundreds of hours building an NFL draft-day guide. This is a roundup from ALM and other publications.
By Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
April 22, 2015 | Legal Times
Federal officials wrongly blocked a retired Army lieutenant colonel from publishing certain details in a memoir about his service in Afghanistan, U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer in Washington said in a ruling unsealed Tuesday.
By Zoe Tillman and Mike Scarcella
1 minute read
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