By Randy D. Gordon | August 23, 2020
Now, on the cusp of global migration spurred by social unrest, economic uncertainty, and—we increasingly hear—climate change, we must hope, as Walt Whitman imagined in "Passage to India," for human—not national—solutions.
By Kenneth Artz | August 20, 2020
Texas Lawyer spoke with Sidley Austin attorney David Sillers about a pro bono case that secured permanent asylum for a Burundian journalist and Red Cross employee who had been tortured and marked for death.
By Angela Morris | August 17, 2020
Two clients allege the attorney led them to a real estate investment that lost all their money and said he didn't disclose his alleged connection to the investment company.
By Mike Scarcella | Marcia Coyle | August 6, 2020
"Look, we have great respect for the institution of the Supreme Court of the United States, but Chief Justice John Roberts has been a disappointment to conservatives," Pence told Christian Broadcasting Network.
By Angela Morris | August 4, 2020
The COVID-19 pandemic has forced technological innovations on immigration courts, and lawyers and a judge hope they're here to stay.
By Marcia Coyle | July 27, 2020
The census statute "does not curtail the president's authority to direct the secretary in making policy judgments that result in 'the decennial census,'" then-Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote. John Roberts Jr., then a U.S. Justice Department lawyer, argued for the government.
Texas Lawyer | Analysis|Commentary
By Andrés Correa | June 29, 2020
Regents keeps the American Dream alive, but only for now. It is now up to us to push the other political branches to find a solution that will keep it alive for good in order to remind the world—and more importantly, ourselves—why this truly is the land of opportunity.
Texas Lawyer | News|Photo|Video
By Angela Morris | June 19, 2020
A fire Thursday in the downtown Austin law office of immigration firm J. Sparks Law caused $200,000 in damage. Now owner Julie Sparks is hustling to get her client files treated for smoke damage.
By Marcia Coyle | June 18, 2020
Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. led the court in ruling 5-4 that the Trump administration had failed to address important factors bearing on its decision to wind down the program and that failure violated the federal law known as the Administrative Procedure Act.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | June 11, 2020
The Dallas and Houston-based firm claims its former attorney tried to steal clients when he left in the spring.
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