By R. Robin McDonald | June 25, 2018
Atlanta attorney Loren Collins created a spoof Trump Hotel website aimed at "tender age" detention centers, saying they should go down as President Donald Trump's historical legacy.
By Jenna Greene | June 20, 2018
As everyone from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to the ACLU recoils at the separation of migrant children from their parents, the legal community is eager to fight.
By Marcia Coyle | June 14, 2018
The U.S. Justice Department told the Seventh Circuit that it would ask the U.S. Supreme Court to stay a nationwide injunction if the appeals court doesn't rule by June 18. The appeals court, responding to Main Justice, refused to budge. The court said it was awaiting the Supreme Court's decision in Trump v. Hawaii, which raises issues about the propriety of nationwide injunctions.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | May 14, 2018
Quinnipiac University School of Law graduate Denia Perez spoke at a public hearing Monday supporting amending the Connecticut Practice Book to allow DACA beneficiaries to practice law in Connecticut.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | May 2, 2018
Alisa Tiwari, a participant in Yale's San Francisco Affirmative Litigation Project, said she first became interested in taking court action after reading last December that the U.S. Department of Justice, under Attorney General Jeff Sessions' direction, had repealed guidance calling for more compassionate and less stringent treatment of poor, young and disabled Americans, as well as people of color.
By Marcia Coyle | April 25, 2018
Here are eight questions posed during the argument. By the end, there appeared to be a majority that could favor the Trump administration.
By Marcia Coyle | April 25, 2018
"The president could have distanced himself [from his statements and tweets] but instead embraced them," Hogan Lovells partner Neal Katyal, arguing for Hawaii, told the justices Wednesday.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | March 8, 2018
A Middletown artist from the Democratic Republic of Congo who was nearly executed while incarcerated in his home country is scheduled to find out Thursday in New Jersey if his request for asylum has been granted.
By Cogan Schneier | March 6, 2018
The lawsuit alleges certain provisions in three recently-passed California laws violate the Constitution's supremacy clause.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | February 23, 2018
Connecticut's Wiggin and Dana recently broadened its leadership team with the promotion of Pakistani-American business immigration attorney and recent new mother Najia Khalid to partner.
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