
This Court has recognized an exception to the mootness doctrine where “collateral consequences” flow from the challenged action. Carafas v. LaVallee, 391 U.S. 234, 237-38 (1968). The Eighth and Federal Circuits have held that injury to reputation alone cannot meet the “collateral consequences” exception. The First, Second, Third, Sixth, Seventh, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits, along with a n
read moreThis case asks whether Congress, through the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, meant to interfere with the way in which a State engages in a sovereign function—its debt collection. Ohio requires its Attorney General to collect debts owed to the State. It authorizes the Attorney General to “appoint special counsel,” in addition to employees, “to represent the state in connection with” t
read moreIn 2011, as a cure for a severely underfunded pension system, the New Jersey Legislature enacted amendments to N.J.S.A. 43:3C-9.5 which increased both State and employee contributions for a period of seven years in order to restore the pension system to a fiscally sound level. The language of the amendments clearly states that these pension contributions were contractual obligations of the State .
read moreSection 502, subsection (b)(7) of title 11 of the United States Codes instructs bankruptcy courts to limit a “claim of an employee for damages resulting from the termination of an employment contract” to the amount of compensation provided under the contract for one year. Does this one-year cap apply to limit a claim of a retiree for payment of unpaid vested retirement benefits, where the reti
read moreHas the federal system quietly barred the courts to employment discrimination claims? Given the growing number of Supreme Court petitions addressing this question, the canary in the coalmine may already have been dead for quite a while. This petition argues that the Sixth Circuit has built a summary judgment firewall that is not permitting cases with genuine issues of fact to go to the jury.
read moreThey say that neither snow, nor rain can stop the US Postal Service from delivery. However, what happens when something is mailed to a deceased person? What if that item is an all-critical legal notice that is meant to be served upon living heirs and representives of the deceased person? The case of McClure Dry v. Steele et al., No. 14-180, asks this very question.
read moreMany lawyers take up the law for idealistic reasons - to fight for the weak, to correct injustices, and preserve the rule of law. However, when the lawyer takes on corruption whose seed might be planted within the legal system itself, the system sometimes retaliates with a fury with the ultimate punishment for an attorney - a referral to the bar's disciplinary committee and long term suspension or
read moreSocial media is everywhere - Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Google Plus, Linked In - humans are social creatures and they want to be connected. But what about judges, or as in this case, justices of the North Dakota Supreme Court? Is it appropriate for them to Facebook friend the defendant in this case and not recuse themself?
read moreA group of world renowned journalists and human rights advocates, led by Pulitzer Prize winning reporter Christopher Hedges and Daniel Ellsberg of Pentagon Papers fame want to restore a permanent injunction against the National Defense Authorization Act §1021(b)(2) which permits the U.S. Military to indefinitely detain American citizens in off-grid foreign prisons if suspected of significantly as
read moreAre officers who brutally assaulted a person resulting in his death entitled to qualified immunity, when the victim was not actively resisting, did not pose a physical threat, and was not fleeing, because the person was later found to be possessing drugs. The Fourth Circuit opined that there was no distinction between active and passive resistance in justifying the use of police violence–a resu
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