By Avalon Zoppo | November 1, 2022
The underlying case challenges a federal statute prohibiting felons from possessing firearms.
By Cedra Mayfield | November 1, 2022
"A judicial spouse could earn untold sums, via legal or consulting work, from entities that have cases before their husband or wife, and the public would be none the wiser, so long as the entities paid their employer and not the spouse directly," read a statement by Fix The Court, a New York-based advocacy group.
By Marcia Coyle | October 21, 2022
"[T]ime will tell whether this is a court that can get back to finding common ground..." Kagan said during an appearance Friday.
By Alaina Lancaster | Zack Needles | October 14, 2022
In U.S. District Judge William Alsup's latest book, the judge aims to construct the best line of defense in an alternate universe where Lee Harvey Oswald had to stand trial for the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
By Brad Kutner | October 12, 2022
"The law school is moving forward on its central commitments and we are focused on educating the next generation of lawyers and instilling them with the values so many of us hold dear," said dean Heather Gerken.
By Avalon Zoppo | October 11, 2022
A dozen unnamed federal judges told a news outlet last week that they would join Ho in not hiring Yale Law students, but other jurists have been more critical of the boycott.
By Brad Kutner | October 7, 2022
"I spent a year working alongside three co-clerks and one judge who had fantastically different instincts than me on everything," said former Scalia counter clerk Gil Seinfeld.
By Michael A. Mora | October 6, 2022
"Trump's lawyers need to read the criminal jury instructions which say, 'The indictment is not evidence,'" said Brian Tannebaum, an ethics expert not involved in the case.
By Marcia Coyle | October 3, 2022
New U.S. Supreme Court justices generally take one of two approaches to their first oral argument: a cautious question or two, or full-throated participation in the quick back and forth between justices and advocates. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson took the second during two arguments Monday.
By Avalon Zoppo | Brad Kutner | Christine Charnosky | September 29, 2022
"I very much doubt that any liberal-leaning students had any desire to clerk for him, so his decision ironically only adversely impacts conservative-leaning Federalist Society members who agree with him ideologically," one Yale law student said.
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