By Ross Todd | September 10, 2021
Sozi Tulante secured a precedent-setting victory for B.C., an asylum-seeker from Cameroon, in an immigration appeal centering on B.C.'s primary language, Pidgin English, and the need for an interpreter.
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 Ross Todd | July 9, 2020
Reich helped convince a federal judge in Washington, D.C. to do an about-face and find Trump officials violated the Administrative Procedure Act by not following the law's "notice-and-comment" requirement before enacting a new asylum rule.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | July 6, 2020
Judge Eric Miller, confirmed to the Ninth Circuit last year, wrote separately in an opinion upholding an injunction against a Trump administration rule restricting asylum for certain migrants to say the reasons for its adoption was "contradicted by the agencies' own record."
By Jenna Greene | February 5, 2020
Of all the ugly, mean-spirited cases to bring, it's hard to top prosecuting people for leaving caches of water and food in the desert wilderness…
By Nate Robson | January 23, 2020
The panel, composed of Judges Frank Easterbrook, William Bauer and David Hamilton of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, said the Justice Department "flatly refused" to implement the original order.
By Jenna Greene | December 11, 2019
"Immigration is an issue I'm really passionate about," said Niketa Patel, a sixth-year litigation associate who is based in Mayer Brown's New York office.
By Mike Scarcella | September 30, 2019
Trump's Justice Department is pushing to end the power of federal trial judges to issue nationwide injunctions. U.S. District Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson in Washington says the push "demonstrates contempt for the authority that the Constitution's Framers have vested in the judicial branch."
By Robert Storace | September 16, 2019
"The prosecution at issue in this case, if permitted to go forward, will irrevocably tip the scales of justice," the retired judges wrote in support of Massachusetts District Court Judge Shelley M. Richmond Joseph.
By Marcia Coyle | September 11, 2019
Justices Sotomayor and Ginsburg dissented: "By granting a stay, the court simultaneously lags behind and jumps ahead of the courts below."
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