
Top Stories
Biden’s Win on Carbon Costs Temporarily Dodges Rulemaking Bullet
A Supreme Court decision reviving a key interim carbon metric provides some relief from uncertainty while the Biden administration moves forward with new climate rules—but lower court hurdles still lie ahead, according to legal experts.
EY Weighs Audit, Advisory Split After Wirecard, NMC Woes
Ernst & Young could separate its audit practice from the rest of its business and is weighing whether to restructure the firm as part of a routine review of its global business, an assessment that comes as European regulators eye tougher oversight after a string of accounting scandals.
Lessons You Can Learn as IRS Says Chrisley Doesn’t Know Best
While ordinary taxpayers may not have as many zeroes to manage in our bank accounts as celebrities, we have the same basic reporting and filing obligations.
Postal ID Checks Floated as Selfie Alternative to Fight Fraud
Post offices across the U.S. have the potential to play a larger role in proving a person’s identity to access unemployment and other government benefits, while also addressing privacy and fairness concerns over technology used to prevent fraud.
Yates, Rosenstein Among 20 in Big Law Hit by Russia Ban
Former US deputy attorneys general Sally Yates and Rod Rosenstein, now King & Spalding partners, are among about 20 Big Law lawyers that Russia has banned from entering its country.
‘Non-Lawyer Legal Help’ Are No Longer Banned Words in New York
A ruling allowing a non-profit to train everyday people to provide specific legal advice—what boxes to check on a single page—shows that context matters when pursuing charges based on the unauthorized practice of law.
If Women Still Earn Less, Can Laws Even Fix The Pay Gap?
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