By Ross Todd | June 17, 2021
Almost all judges think they're better than average at avoiding racially biased decision-making.
Litigation Daily | Best Practices
By Ross Todd | June 15, 2021
"You've got to learn to mean mug. You know why? Nobody is putting on the record what you look like," says former Broward County Circuit Judge Ilona Holmes.
By Mike Scarcella | April 14, 2021
In addition to showing $2.03 million in partnership share, the financial disclosure from Elizabeth Prelogar, now the acting U.S. solicitor general, revealed a $100,000 payment from Cooley that was described as a "transition" compensation on entering the firm partnership, as well as advisory work for major technology and social media clients, including Twitter, Uber and Facebook.
By Nate Robson | April 1, 2021
White-collar lawyers expect an increased focus on prosecuting fraud, bribery and other corporate misconduct, and the Garland DOJ is also expected to put a strong focus on the broad protection of civil rights.
By Zach Terwilliger, Branden Stein, and John Greil | March 12, 2021
Two months in, the Biden administration has already signaled certain departures from the Trump era on white-collar enforcement.
By Ross Todd | February 9, 2021
Tuesday's Senate proceedings, which focused on the Constitutional question of whether a former president can stand trial for impeachment, had elements of both opening statements and appellate arguments.
By Ross Todd | February 1, 2021
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher client Kelu Chao, a veteran Voice of America journalist, joined a lawsuit fighting political interference at the U.S. Agency for Global Media during the Trump administration only to be named the agency's interim head by President Biden.
By C. Ryan Barber | January 21, 2021
McQuaid, named acting leader of the U.S. Justice Department's criminal division, earlier spent more than five years as a federal prosecutor in the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York before joining the Obama White House in 2013.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | July 31, 2020
A regional director with the Federal Labor Relations Authority turned down an effort by the Justice Department to decertify a union of immigration judges.
By Tom McParland | July 22, 2020
President Donald Trump has defended recent actions by federal officers in Portland, Oregon as necessary to restore law and order, and threatened to take similar steps in other large cities, including New York, Chicago and Philadelphia.
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