By Meredith Hobbs | March 25, 2021
"Radical groups are making it very difficult" these days for a state lawmaker to hold a job with a big law firm or company, said Georgia state Sen. John Albers, who resigned as CIO of Fisher Phillips.
By Jonathan Ringel | January 15, 2021
"We overran multiple police barricades and swarmed the building," wrote W. McCall Calhoun, according to an FBI affidavit. Calhoun is represented by the federal defender office in Macon.
By Cheryl Miller | November 4, 2020
The initiative's victory further fragments the landscape of industries subject to California's worker-classification law, AB 5.
By Alaina Lancaster | October 7, 2020
"One of the options is shutting down," West said. "We are thinking very hard at all different eventualities, and at the end of the day, the law is the law, and we will comply."
By Tom McParland | September 16, 2020
U.S. District Judge Alison J. Nathan said that the actions of the Manhattan U.S. Attorney's Office had eroded public trust in the criminal justice system by making "countless" belated disclosures to lawyers. While their client's conviction was vacated, Steptoe & Johnson attorneys have pursued evidence they suspected the government had withheld.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | September 15, 2020
The Open Courts Act of 2020, introduced by Reps. Hank Johnson and Doug Collins, would give the federal judiciary two to three years to update and modernize its electronic public access program before making PACER free for the public.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | August 7, 2020
"Because the committee's injury has been caused by McGahn's defiance of its subpoena and can be cured here only by judicial enforcement of the subpoena, the injury is traceable to McGahn's conduct and judicially redressable," the court found.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael Lotito and Jim Paretti | August 6, 2020
The Senate's proposed HEALS Act offers a solution that addresses both public health and economic needs, without risking one for the other.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | August 5, 2020
"The act lacks a rational basis, but was instead offered as a punishment of sworn law enforcement officers in the District of Columbia to quell rising tensions and protests in the District coming as a result of the death of George Floyd in Minnesota," the lawsuit alleges.
Daily Report Online | Editor's Letter
By Jonathan Ringel | July 18, 2020
"I happen to believe that in the bosom of every human being there is what I call a spark of the divine. We don't have a right to abuse it. It should be left for the Almighty and not for human beings to take the life of another human being."
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