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A Judge Called Trump Probably Guilty. Charging Him Is Fraught
Federal prosecutors have asked for hundreds of witness interviews from the House Jan. 6 committee , adding to the intrigue over whether President Donald Trump could face criminal charges just weeks after a federal judge ruled that Trump “more likely than not” committed fraud connected to the 2020 election.
NLRB’s ‘Salt Mine’ Tweet Decision Overturned by Third Circuit
The NLRB was wrong to rule that the publisher of conservative online magazine the Federalist unlawfully threatened workers by tweeting that he’d send them “back to the salt mine” if they tried to unionize, a federal appeals court in Philadelphia held.
Last-Minute Bid to Save Right to Abortion Comes via ERA Lawsuits
The threat of a Supreme Court ruling overturning Roe v. Wade has spurred a trio of new lawsuits seeking state court recognition of the Equal Rights Amendment—a last-minute effort to preempt that anti-Roe ruling by forcing the high court to factor new constitutional language into its decision.
Unions Vie for Apple Store Workers as Organizing Efforts Build
Appeals Court Undercuts Agency Enforcement in SEC Fraud Case
The Fifth Circuit fired a double-barreled blast at federal agency enforcement powers with its ruling that the SEC violated a hedge fund manager’s right to a jury trial by putting his case before an in-house judge.
Grassley Backs SuperValu Whistleblowers in SCOTUS Challenge
Health Sector Gets HHS Push to Join Climate Change Fight
The Biden administration is making a first-of-its-kind ask of the health-care sector: to act on climate change. However, the pledge to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is voluntary, making researchers and advocates question how effective it will be.
If Women Still Earn Less, Can Laws Even Fix The Pay Gap?
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