The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. Dannunzio | February 5, 2018
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday allowed redistricting of Pennsylvania's congressional map to continue, denying a request from state Republican leaders to delay the process.
By Tony Mauro | January 30, 2018
President Donald Trump boasted Tuesday night that he has appointed “more circuit judges than any new administration in the history of our country” and called Neil Gorsuch “a great new Supreme Court justice."
By Erin Mulvaney | December 20, 2017
"I think most Americans would be outraged to know that they are subsidizing sexual predators in the tax code,” U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez, D-New Jersey, told the New York Times.
By Melanie Waddell | December 19, 2017
Bill now moves to Senate for vote; Trump expected to sign into law as soon as Wednesday.
By Erin Mulvaney | December 6, 2017
Barbara Brickmeier, vice president for human resources and business development at IBM, said overlapping state and local paid leave mandates provide stress and compliance headaches for companies.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | November 27, 2017
Coulter tweeted a link to an August 2015 story about a Connecticut attorney who was pushing for immigration reforms following the murder of a Norwich woman by a Haitian immigrant who was illegally in the country.
By MP McQueen | November 22, 2017
One prominent adviser on cross-border matters that involve national security issues, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius partner Giovanna Cinelli, said the reform push will mean more worries for dealmakers involved in transactions that could involve high-technology, big data or critical infrastructure, in particular.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Roy Strom | November 6, 2017
The offshore legal industry largely avoided a regulatory crackdown in the wake of the Panama Papers. Will the same be true after the Paradise Papers?
By Erin Mulvaney | October 26, 2017
More than 100 human resources chiefs and dozens of the world's largest businesses on Thursday ramped up support for undocumented workers, signaling their opposition to the Trump administration's move to scuttle an immigration program that allows hundreds of thousands workers to be employed.
By Kristen Rasmussen | New York Law Journal | October 18, 2017
Nearly two dozen state attorneys general asked a federal judge in California on Wednesday to temporarily block the Trump administration from ending critical subsidy payments to insurers selling coverage through the Affordable Care Act.
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