By Alaina Lancaster | Zack Needles | June 24, 2022
In this week's episode, the ACLU's Li Nowlin-Sohl and Lambda Legal's Sasha Buchert discuss the future of the legal fight for LGBTQ rights in America.
By Ellen Bardash | May 12, 2022
Though no litigation had been filed as of May 12, authorities at both Delaware State University and the state government have made statements suggesting it's a possibility.
By Ellen Bardash | March 11, 2022
Burdening people with punishment for not paying fines they can't realistically afford only reinforces poverty and creates a likelihood of more crime is part of the message of the ACLU of Delaware's campaign to ease use of financial penalties in misdemeanors.
By Ellen Bardash | December 15, 2021
The jury found a corrections officer violated the Eighth Amendment rights of an incarcerated person. McCarter & English was appointed by the court to represent the plaintiff.
By Ellen Bardash | June 15, 2021
Susan L. Burke's 34-year career has earned her recognition on a national and international scale, including a $5.25 million judgment for Iraqi plaintiffs tortured at Abu Ghraib prison and a settlement with security firm Blackwater for its killing of Iraqis in Baghdad.
By Ellen Bardash | May 13, 2021
Kimberly Evans shares what she's learned and how the practice of law has been transformed by the pandemic, and says the courts in Delaware have been successful in keeping her cases moving forward.
By Ellen Bardash | April 16, 2021
The county government pledged to update property assessments in a move that completes resolution of a statewide legal campaign aimed at increasing resources for underserved students across the state. The plaintiffs were represented by a team from Arnold & Porter.
By Ellen Bardash | October 5, 2020
Had state officials taken earlier efforts to quarantine inmates and provide them with face masks, the deaths of 12 inmates and 1 in 3 people at the Georgetown facility testing positive for the virus might have been avoided, plaintiffs said.
By Ellen Bardash | October 5, 2020
Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who clerked for Delawarean Walter Stapleton when the latter served on the Third Circuit, said from his perspective, Delaware's process doesn't differ much from those used in other states.
By Ellen Bardash | July 9, 2020
Attorney Michelle Allen said her client's Gilder's experience with Sallie Mae qualifies as racial discrimination because the company's consideration of criminal histories brought "racial disparities in the criminal justice system into the employment process."
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