Big Law

Big Law (261)

Is Congress the Right Party to Sue Obama?

The judiciary is going to have to play referee in the ongoing dispute between Republican Congressional leadership and the president, although not everyone is sold on the motive, method or likelihood that the case will yield any meaningful results for the House.

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Using Google Maps While Driving May Soon Be Illegal

Should the battle against distracted driving go beyond bans on cellphone use and texting while driving to include laws regulating the use of smartphone navigation aids like Google Maps? The Transportation Department thinks so. So reports The New York Times.

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Bergdahl swap sparks debate, but will litigation follow?

The return home for Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, and the attached exchange of five Guantanamo Bay prisoners some consider a threat to U.S. security, has led to partisan bickering, policy debates and questions about loyalty, terrorism, and Presidential authority. But, it may not be the impetus for any future litigation.

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High Court Nixes Fla. Standard for Death Row IQ Exemption

The U.S. Supreme Court has overturned a Florida court decision holding that a convicted murderer who scored 71 on an IQ test is automatically ineligible for the death penalty exemption that Florida affords intellectually disabled convicts. So reports the Florida Times-Union.

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Net Neutrality End Coming with Expected FCC Regs

FCC commissioners are expected to move forward with rules that would allow internet service providers like AT&T to charge tech and media firms like Facebook for higher speed connections. So reports the Washington Post.

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High Court OKs Sectarian Prayer at Town Meetings

The Supreme Court sided with the town of Greece, New York, in a case in which two of the town’s residents objected to the town’s practice of beginning town meetings with a sectarian prayer. So reports CNN.

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Severe Weather Impacting Lawyers' Bottom Lines

In many parts of the United States, the weather outside was frightening this past winter. Weather vocabulary like "polar vortex," "blizzard", "sub-freezing temperatures" and "record-setting snowfalls" were par for the course during the winter of 2013.

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Is the NBA's Punishment of Racially Insensitive Team Owner Legal?

The $2.5 million fine and lifetime ban that NBA Commissioner Adam Silver imposed on Los Angeles Clippers’ owner Donald Sterling for his racially insensitive comments were perfectly legal and will be hard to overturn. So reports the Wall Street Journal’s Law Blog.

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Tenn. Criminalizes Harming Babies Thru Pregnant Drug Use

Despite arguments that the measure will drive vulnerable women away from drug addiction treatment, Tennessee governor Bill Haslam has signed legislation providing that, beginning July 1, prosecutors may lodge misdemeanor assault charges against a woman who gives birth to child who has been harmed as a result of her drug use. So reports USA Today.

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High Court’s Prop 2 Decision: What Are the Implications?

The Supreme Court’s ruling upholding the constitutionality of Michigan’s affirmative action ban (“Prop 2”) has a much wider effect on race and the law than the limited defeat for affirmative action that the mainstream press is portraying it to be. So argues the author of a Gawker article.

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