By Michael A. Mora | July 12, 2023
"A year from now, we will be looking back at this data and thinking about the good ol' days when only 33 cases per month were considered low,'" said Franklin Zemel, who co-chairs the first U.S. standing committee on cybersecurity and privacy law for the Florida Bar.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By David G. Mandelbaum | June 29, 2023
Close analyses of the Supreme Court's opinions abound. Therefore, I offer only a brief thumbnail here. Section 301 of the federal Clean Water Act prohibits discharges of pollutants from a "point source" to "navigable waters" without a permit.
By Chris O'Malley | June 27, 2023
The FTC rolled out new merger-review hurdles that it says are partly aimed at addressing congressional concerns that subsidies by foreign powers such as China "can distort the competitive process."
By Ellen Bardash | June 22, 2023
Biden's defense counsel Christopher Clark is no stranger to high profile litigation: he's defended both Elon Musk and Mark Cuban in SEC actions. His client is set to plead guilty in July.
By Brad Kutner | June 15, 2023
As long as Sen. Tim Scott, R-South Carolina, stays away from Congress, it's good news for the president's effort to fill the federal bench.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Riley Brennan | June 15, 2023
"In writing the IDEA, Congress understood that families take many forms, but the bottom line is always the best interest of the child with a disability. That is why the IDEA has such a broad definition of the person assuming the role of 'parent,'" said the plaintiffs' attorney, Alan L. Yatvin of Weir Greenblatt Pierce, in Philadelphia.
By Jimmy Hoover | June 14, 2023
The often-cited British common law is not always what the justices say it is, the researchers found.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Kenneth J. Warren | June 8, 2023
On June 1, Congress enacted the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (FRA). A casual observer would not expect fiscal legislation temporarily suspending the debt limit and restricting future discretionary spending to address environmental law. Yet 27 pages of a 99-page bill are devoted to environmental and associated issues.
By Avalon Zoppo | May 30, 2023
Stephanos Bibas, of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, said judges are struggling to apply the test for the "discretionary function exception."
By Chris O'Malley | May 23, 2023
"You're going to see scrutiny like you've never seen before," BakerHostetler partner John Carney said of the DOJ's pursuit of wrongdoing. "It's not like 20 years ago, when a company would circle the wagons and contain it."
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