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Wednesday, May 8, 2024

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Louisiana’s congressional maps are tied up in a court battle with the 2024 election only six months away.

by Kelsey Reichmann

The court's decision means the August trial date sought by prosecutors is unlikely to materialize.

by Megan Butler

The tech giant's renewed investment in its data farm in the region will create thousands of jobs, the president and state Democrats said.

by Joe Kelly

Last month, the planet experienced the hottest April ever measured, bringing this record-breaking warm stretch to 11 months. El Niño and climate change are combining to make the planet so warm.

by Cain Burdeau

Supporters of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program hold up a banner outside the Houston federal courthouse on June 1, 2023.

Republican lawmakers were lukewarm on legislation providing a pathway to citizenship, arguing that Congress should focus first on securing the Southwestern border.

by Benjamin S. Weiss

Biden's appointees must still be confirmed by the U.S. Senate.

by Nolan Stout

Closing Arguments

A roundup of our top stories, delivered Fridays to your inbox.

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The California Supreme Court appeared puzzled by the state utilities commission's lack of warning that it was considering putting an end to its surcharges.

by Edvard Pettersson

EU by the Numbers

The European Union's services sector continued it steady climb out of the Covid slump in February, up 1.1% over January and a whopping 4.8% over the same time in 2023.

Podcast

Because there's not much real about reality television.

Courts & the Law

The South Carolina parks department argues that because it has sovereign immunity, the appeals court should quash Google's subpoena for records related to their ad products.

by Steve Garrison

The petition seeks to eliminate subminimum wages for tipped employees, such as front-of-house restaurant workers.

by Erik Uebelacker

The Bluegrass State accused the EPA of "bait-and-switch" tactics and argued its ozone regulation plan complied with all federal requirements under the Clean Air Act.

by Kevin Koeninger

Residents of Benton Harbor, Michigan, filed a class action in 2021, claiming that city and state officials failed to properly warn them about toxic levels of lead in their drinking water.

by David Wells

A Rhode Island prison inmate says he was unconstitutionally denied critical mental health and drug addiction treatments during an extended term of solitary confinement that lasted over a year.

by Josh Russell

A Muslim man claims his rap lyrics “I’m a doper for real,” were wrongfully included in his trial over distribution of the drug eutylone.

by Sydney Haulenbeek

Oregon doesn't have nearly enough beds to provide long-term treatment for mentally ill patients. As a result, many of them are left to languish in hospitals for months on end, a situation four hospital groups wants to fix.

by Hillel Aron

Around the Nation

The races involved dozens of candidates and millions in campaign spending.

by David Wells

Judge Aileen Cannon wrote it would be "imprudent" to schedule a trial in the classified documents case until she has resolved pretrial motions and evidentiary issues.

by Steve Garrison

A federal judge said the material terms of the proposed settlement are "satisfactory," but Apple and a class of investors must make some adjustments to the agreement before she'll approve it.

by Natalie Hanson

The abortion foes argue the Westchester County law imposes impermissible restrictions on their ability to "sidewalk counsel" outside reproductive health clinics.

by Nika Schoonover

The man's family members say the officers used excessive force when they placed their weight on Bryon Williams while he was in handcuffs, killing him.

by Michael Gennaro

The House Judiciary Committee told F1 owners Liberty Media to turn over documents related to its decision to keep the Indiana motorsports outfit out of the global racing series.

by Benjamin S. Weiss

Citizens say the extra $27 million allocated to police from the city's general fund could be better spent on community safety initiatives like increased public water fountains and access to cooling stations.

by Joe Duhownik

Fresh off a multimillion-dollar renovation, the exhibit hall dedicated to helping people to understand and identify violent extremism reopens to the public on Thursday.

by Amanda Pampuro

A Steve Bannon cohort wants the appellate court to look into possible juror misconduct in his 2022 criminal conviction in the "We Build The Wall" scheme.

by Josh Russell

Republican leaders say Proposition 211 — a voter initiative that requires source disclosure of campaign contributions of more than $5,000 —violates the separation of powers and nondelegation doctrines of the Arizona Constitution.

by Joe Duhownik

The appellate panel struggled with a feature of the California education code that precludes religious schools from receiving public funding to assist disabled students.

by Edvard Pettersson

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Rulings

by Daniel Conrad

The New Mexico Supreme Court reversed two lower courts’ rulings, ordering that crime victims’ visa information must remain confidential and is not to be made available to the defense counsel of accused criminals for potential use in trials. Subpoenas compelling the production of T- and U-visas are quashed, as victims’ privacy rights prevail.

A federal court in Texas ruled that a law firm may proceed with its claims against a lawyer referral service, which has diverted the firm’s prospective clients away by purchasing the top search result position for Google searches related to the law firm’s business name and other marks. The firm may not sue a specific, individual employee of the service, however, because its evidence of that person’s involvement did not suffice.

The Alabama Supreme Court decided not to rehear the in vitro fertilization case it considered earlier this year on the question of whether frozen embryos are children protected under the Alabama Wrongful Death of a Minor Act.

A federal court in California preliminarily approved a class settlement for two plaintiffs in an antitrust lawsuit between food preparers and big tuna companies such as StarKist and Chicken of the Sea.

The Tenth Circuit affirmed a New Mexico federal court’s decision to dismiss a doctor and his wife’s lawsuit against the Bernalillo County sheriff and the state’s family agency after law enforcement entered their home without a warrant and took their children into custody based on an anonymous report that the doctor was sexually abusing his four-year-old daughter. Though charges were dismissed against him, officers reacted reasonably.

From the Walt Girdner Studio
Hot Cases

by Courthouse News editors

More than 250 people say the city of San Diego underfunded and neglected its storm drain system for years, causing their homes to flood on Jan. 22, 2024. They are asking for $100 million in damages.

The U.S. Justice Department hit the Texas Department of Criminal Justice with a lawsuit after a prison clerk complained she was barred from wearing a head covering for religious reasons.

The Ridge Wallet Company, which sells plastic and metal wallets marketed to millennial and Gen Z men, accuses a company based out of Shenzhen, China, of selling knockoff "Ridge" wallets.

Airline passengers and former travel agents seek to stop Alaska Airlines from acquiring Hawaiian Airlines Inc., saying the deal creates a monopoly, shrinks competition in multiple passenger airline markets and threatens Hawaii's economy.

Hunter Biden filed an interlocutory appeal with the Ninth Circuit on Friday, arguing a federal judge improperly rejected his bid to dismiss tax evasion charges because a plea agreement barred the special counsel from charging him.

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