The Colorado Freedom of Information Coalition (CFOIC) has asked the state’s highest court to affirm that when a public body fails to properly announce the “particular matter” to be discussed in an ...
Jeffrey A. Van Detta (Atlanta's John Marshall Law School) has posted Heresies, Heretics, and Hermeneutics: The Battle of Textualism Against Pragmatism-And Itself-On the Roberts Court on SSRN. Here is ...
In the wake of a shooting that left two foster family members dead during an alleged kidnapping of a child they were ...
Colorado's second-highest court clarified on Thursday that relief is only available when the judiciary denies access to ...
The Quilts of Valor Foundation is a volunteer organization founded by Catherine Roberts, with more than 10,000 members and ...
The LSU gymnastics team will have some major turnover after this season. Freshmen Kailin Chio and Lexi Zeiss are already ...
Dalton says it best, “The Laramie Project is a message of hope. There’s a through line about the light in the darkness of ...
Draped in the pomp and pageantry fitting of a royal coronation, the installation of Archbishop Jeffrey Grob officially began ...
Supreme Court appeared to lean towards upholding law requiring TikTok divestment from Chinese parent ByteDance. Read more.
The Supreme Court appeared to favor the government's national security claims over TikTok's 1st Amendment argument.
Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, for instance, suggested the law was aimed at ByteDance as a non-American entity, not TikTok. Roberts said Congress cared not about ...
But TikTok and some users say the divest-or-disappear law violates the First Amendment. The two lawyers pressing that point faced scepticism. When Noel Francisco, arguing for the company, said ...