Author: Caroline de Gruyter
Autocrats and ‘strongmen’ want us to feel defeated on international law. But ‘the fact that certain laws are being violated does not, of course, mean those laws no longer exist’, writes Caroline de Gruyter.Read More
Executive director Mark Byers pointed to Act 219 as the barrier to separating public and private school postseason play in response to a letter from Old Forge superintendent Chris Gatto criticizing Pa. combined high school championshipsRead More
The Kentucky General Assembly passed a plethora of bills before the veto period, including naming a state mushroom and changing fishing law.Read More
The report claims the Justice Department under Merrick Garland “violated the rights of Americans” by only applying the law to support those in support of abortion rights, not those who worked at anti-abortion rights facilities.Read More
Biden DOJ prosecutors on average sought 26.8 months in prison for pro-life defendants charged with non-violent crimes, compared with 12.3 months averaged for pro-abortion ones.Read More
A Manhattan court could pave the way for broader enforcement of New York City’s consumer protection law if it revives the city’s lawsuit accusing several oil giants of deceptive advertising.Read More
Citing childhood and piece of cheese, he seeks to help small supermarkets, retailers against Amazon, Wal-Mart through legislation he has cosponsored.Read More
‘International law is today fundamentally being violated by one country, which is the government of Israel,’ Sanchez says | AnadoluRead More
Regional public law schools produce public interest lawyers because their graduates often have less student debt, allowing them to pass up corporate legal jobs. The legal profession should aim to raise the cachet of teaching at these schools, which are closing the access-to-justice gap.Read More