By Chris O'Malley | February 26, 2024
Antonio Morales resigned from the home improvement retailer in 2020 after it told him to remove "BLM" from his apron. The National Labor Relations Board found Morales was within his rights to display it.
By Colleen Murphy | February 26, 2024
"The words 'the people' in the Second Amendment presumptively encompass all adult Americans, including 18- to 20-year-olds, and we are aware of no founding-era law that supports disarming people in that age group," Third Circuit Judge Kent A. Jordan wrote.
By Chris O'Malley | February 23, 2024
The automaker argues that the racial discrimination lawsuit suffers from "factual vacuity." Separately, it has asked the court to stay the case, asserting the agency skipped a required "conciliation" process in a mad rush to to outshine the California Civil Rights Department, which had filed its own suit.
By Jane Wester | February 22, 2024
The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, accuses child protective services workers of using "coercive tactics" to enter and search families' homes.
By Jane Wester | February 22, 2024
The complaint, which was filed in the Eastern District of New York on Tuesday, accuses ACS caseworkers of using "coercive tactics" to enter and search families' homes.
By Riley Brennan | February 21, 2024
In a dissent, Sixth Circuit Judge Ransey Guy Cole Jr. shared that he believed that a reasonable jury could find that the Lexington Police Department's reasons for terminating a Black police officer who provided confidential department communications to activists protesting police brutality were pretextual.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | February 20, 2024
The defendants contend that Bernard's incarceration "was the result of his own vexatious and dilatory behavior."
By Marianna Wharry | February 16, 2024
The panel partially reversed the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California's denial of defendant Brett Wayne Parkins' motion to suppress a search of his apartment when officers from the Huntington Police Department questioned him for aiming a laser pointer at an aircraft.
By ALM Staff | February 14, 2024
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Amanda O'Brien | February 13, 2024
The firm previously prepared former Penn president Elizabeth Magill for a December congressional hearing investigating college campus antisemitism. Criticism over Magill's responses ultimately led to her resignation.
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