By LAW.COM EDITORS | August 21, 2017
Recent events in Charlottesville and the White House response have put the nation on edge and compelled leaders of U.S. businesses and law firms to speak out. The New York Times wrote last week that we're witnessing a “broad recasting of the voice of business in the nation's political and social dialogue.”
By Celia Ampel | August 21, 2017
A government agent asked for a continuance based on his plan to visit the solar eclipse's zone of totality Monday.
By R. Robin McDonald | August 17, 2017
For 20 years, Judge Frank Hull has served in a courthouse named for Elbert P. Tuttle, for whom Hull once clerked and whom she has called her greatest influence in the law.
By Jenna Greene | August 17, 2017
Big law firms, the ones billing Trump full-freight—can make moral decisions about whom they choose to represent, whose agenda they want to help advance. Their response to the violence in Charlottesville? Crickets...
By Tom Hays | August 15, 2017
Private lawyers seeking to represent Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman in his U.S. drug-trafficking case failed to get assurances that they'll get paid, leaving the Mexican drug lord's defense in limbo.
By Karen Sloan | August 15, 2017
Thousands of new students are flocking to law campuses across the country this month to kick off their legal careers. It's safe to say that most all of them can legally order a beer at the bar. Not Boca Raton's Aaron Parnas.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | August 10, 2017
Backlash over President Donald Trump's tweeted intention of banning transgender people from military services has now culminated in a federal lawsuit.
By Danica Coto | August 8, 2017
Puerto Rico was hit with two lawsuits that for the first time challenge the constitutionality of a federal control board overseeing the island's finances and its power to start a bankruptcy-like court process for some of the U.S. territory's more than $70 billion public debt.
By C. Ryan Barber | August 3, 2017
Robert Charrow, the Greenberg Traurig shareholder picked to serve as general counsel to the U.S. Health and Human Services Department, pledged on Thursday to resist any efforts to undermine the Affordable Care Act—regulations that Senate Democrats said remain the "law of the land" following the failure of Republican-backed reform legislation.
By C. Ryan Barber | August 3, 2017
A federal judge in Florida has opened an opportunity for the U.S. Justice Department to undercut the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in one of its biggest cases, teeing up a new fight as the Trump administration and Republicans in Congress ramp up their own attacks against the Obama-era agency.
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