By Adolfo Pesquera | April 19, 2024
"Subjecting Paxton to disciplinary proceedings does not violate separation of powers; immunizing him does," Justice Erin Nowell wrote for the majority.
By Adolfo Pesquera | March 8, 2024
"H.B. 1181 limits access to constitutionally protected speech, regardless of whether the viewer is a minor. Such action 'is to burn the house to roast the pig,'" U.S. Fifth Circuit Judge Patrick Higginbotham said.
By Adolfo Pesquera | February 20, 2024
Court of Criminal Appeals Place 8 Judge Michelle Slaughter became a target of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.
By Marianna Wharry | February 13, 2024
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar, ALM's source for immediate alerting on just filed cases in state and federal courts. Law.com Radar now offers state court coverage nationwide. Sign up today and be first to know about new suits in your region, practice area or client sector.
By Adolfo Pesquera | February 5, 2024
George B. Murr of Murr Law said in his post-oral argument brief the Safeco's counsel's argument bars the insured's causes of action, but that is not how jurisprudence in Texas works.
By Charles Toutant | January 31, 2024
After shifting to remote work during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, New Jersey's courts instituted a remote work program for court employees. But the policy does not apply to judicial law clerks or judicial secretaries, the complaint said.
By Adolfo Pesquera | January 31, 2024
"The agency did the one thing the legislature expressly said it could not do—and that is set prices," said Allyson Ho, counsel for Luminant Energy Co.
By Adolfo Pesquera | January 30, 2024
Justice Debra Lehrmann questioned how it was not interference when the parent has made a decision based on consultation with medical professionals based upon medically sound guidelines that have been accepted by the nation's medical community.
By Emily Saul | January 26, 2024
Wayne LaPierre's health has been a point of contention throughout the trial, and defense attorney P. Kent Correll last week requested a medical accommodation for his client.
By Allison Dunn | January 12, 2024
"Counsel's constructive absence during either a significant portion of trial or an important aspect of trial so offends the constitutional protections surrounding the right to assistance of counsel that it renders the entire adversary process 'presumptively unreliable' and creates an uncurable error," Chief Justice Kimberly S. Budd wrote.
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