By B. Colby Hamilton | August 15, 2017
Former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver has his date in court—again.
By Josefa Velasquez | August 11, 2017
The founder of a group that supports this year's referendum on whether the state should hold a constitutional convention has filed a lawsuit against the Board of Elections to put the question on the front of the ballot.
By Andrew Denney | August 3, 2017
Of the 10 candidates vying for five of the open seats in Brooklyn Civil Court in the Sept. 12 Democratic primary, five are running as part of an insurgent slate that seeks to shake up a system that they say is under the thumb of the borough's Democratic establishment.
By Cogan Schneier | August 2, 2017
Democratic state attorneys general scored two wins in D.C. Circuit Court in 24 hours allowing them to defend Obama-era health care and environment policies under threat from Republicans and the Trump administration.
By Josefa Velasquez | August 2, 2017
Despite earlier objections by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, New York has agreed to turn over the state's voter records to the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity.
By Erin Mulvaney | August 1, 2017
President Donald Trump announced his intent to nominate Iraq war veteran Daniel Gade, long a critic of disability pay for wounded veterans, for the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The White House earlier nominated Janet Dhillon, general counsel to Burlington Stores Inc., to serve as EEOC chair.
By Katelyn Polantz | August 1, 2017
The latest Big Law financial disclosure comes from Jeffrey Gerrish, the president's nominee to serve as deputy U.S. trade representative for Asia, Europe, the Middle East and industrial competitiveness.
By Cogan Schneier and Colby Hamilton | August 1, 2017
Rod Wheeler, a Fox News commentator and private investigator, alleges unpaid Fox News contributor Ed Butowsky and reporter Malia Zimmerman used fake quotations in the now retracted story "because that is the way the president wanted the article."
By Marcia Coyle | July 26, 2017
A comprehensive study of the historical meaning of "emolument" broadly attacks the U.S. Justice Department for using an "inaccurate, unrepresentative and misleading" definition in its opposition to a lawsuit that accuses President Donald Trump of violating anti-corruption provisions in the Constitution.
By Tony Mauro | July 18, 2017
Five protesters who disrupted a U.S. Supreme Court session with shouts and songs in 2015 should be sentenced to prison time and barred from the grounds of the court for a year, government lawyers said in court filings Monday.
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