By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | November 24, 2021
"In this case, despite overwhelming racial prejudice, justice was still served. Yet this was the exception to the rule," the League of Women Voters said in a written statement.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 24, 2021
"It's a constant battle to protect our dignity and try to rid this kind of racist, anti-Semitic attitude from the nation's core," said Cooley senior counsel Alan Levine.
National Law Journal | News|Profile|Q&A
By Marcia Coyle | November 22, 2021
"There is no Justice Kennedy to save us this time around," said Kathryn Kolbert of the ACLU's reproductive rights project.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 18, 2021
"We sued the people who are responsible, the leaders, the promoters, the group leaders, the people who brought the army, the people who were the most violent members of the army. Those are the people who we asked you to hold accountable today," said Paul Weiss partner Karen Dunn.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | October 21, 2021
Dr. Cherron Payne of Farmington and Jon FitzGerald of Bristol have been chosen to serve as administrative judges for Connecticut's Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities.
By Andrew Goudsward | October 6, 2021
"[T]his court will not sanction one more day of this offensive deprivation of such an important right," the judge wrote in the scathing order.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News|Q&A
By Robert Storace | September 1, 2021
New Haven civil rights attorney Alexander Taubes talks prisoner rights, the health pandemic and qualified immunity.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Live Coverage|News
By Robert Storace | September 1, 2021
A three-member lawyer panel heard claims for and against civil rights attorney Josephine Smalls Miller during a Wednesday hearing. That panel will make a recommendation within 60 days on whether the attorney should be reinstated to practice in state courts; a final decision will be made by a three-judge panel.
By Andrew Goudsward | August 26, 2021
Seven Capitol police filed a lawsuit accusing Donald Trump, his allies and Capitol riot defendants of acting together to disrupt Congress and assault officers.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Samuel Estreicher and Julian G. Ku | July 8, 2021
A near-unanimous majority of the U.S. Supreme Court dealt yet another blow to plaintiffs seeking to bring lawsuits against corporations for violations of international law holding that mere "corporate activity" within the United States is not enough to satisfy the general presumption against the extraterritorial application of federal law.
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