A newsletter by Reuters and Westlaw |
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- The U.S. Supreme Court will hear two oral arguments.
- The 1st Circuit will consider whether the Trump administration may implement a provision of his recently enacted tax and spending bill that would deprive Planned Parenthood and its members of Medicaid funding. The appeals court stayed a lower-court judge's injunction while it considers the case. Read the lower court's PI.
- U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden in D.C. will hold a preliminary injunction hearing in a lawsuit brought by a former Amazon delivery driver against the EEOC for ceasing investigations into workplace policies with discriminatory impacts, including her complaint accusing the online retail giant of sex discrimination. Read the complaint.
- OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma will go before a bankruptcy judge in White Plains, New York, for a hearing on whether to confirm its latest Chapter 11 plan and approve a $7.4 billion settlement of legal claims related to the company's sales of addictive opioid medication.
- U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes in D.C. will hold a status conference in lawsuits over the collision this year between an American Airlines regional jet and a U.S. Army helicopter that killed 67 people near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. Reyes has set the trial for 2027.
- Trading platform Robinhood will urge U.S. District Judge Richard Stearns in Boston to block the state of Massachusetts from initiating an enforcement action that seeks to prevent it from operating a sports prediction platform in the state.
- The Wyoming Supreme Court will consider whether the state is underfunding its schools in violation of the Wyoming constitution. Earlier this year, a trial court found that the state was inadequately and inequitably funding public schools and ordered lawmakers to address the shortfalls. Read that ruling here.
- Opening statements will begin in Brooklyn federal court in a case against Linda Sun, a former top aide to Governors Andrew Cuomo and Kathy Hochul. Sun is facing charges for allegedly acting as a foreign agent for the Chinese government without registering with the U.S. Attorney General. Sun and her husband Chris Hu are also charged with money laundering and federal program bribery.
- Abigail Jo Shry of Alvin, Texas, is scheduled to be sentenced after admitting she called the chambers of U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan in D.C., who was overseeing the since-dismissed 2020 election subversion criminal case against President Trump, and made threats.
- U.S. Magistrate Judge Joseph Marutollo in Brooklyn will oversee the arraignment of Cleveland Guardians pitcher Luis Leandro Ortiz-Ribera, who is facing charges related to sports betting and money laundering conspiracy.
- U.S. District Judge J. Paul Oetken will speak in conversation with Professor Abbe Gluck at Yale Law School.
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Court calendars are subject to last-minute docket changes. |
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"They all collectively, maybe four of them, have told me I was gonna pass the bar, so they're all full pathological liars — don't believe anything they say."
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- A Utah state judge threw out a new U.S. congressional map passed by the Republican-led legislature in favor of an alternative that appears likely to result in flipping one of the state's four U.S. House seats to Democrats in next year's midterms. Read more here.
- United Airlines asked a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit claiming it unfairly charged passengers extra money to sit in "window seats" that, to their surprise, lacked windows. Read more here.
- Former LSU coach Brian Kelly is taking the school to court, asking a judge to clarify that he was not fired for cause and is entitled to a buyout of close to $54 million. Read more here.
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Mark Goldstein and Jude Halawi of Reed Smith examine key trends and best practices as accommodation requests expand to remote work, mental health, and religion, creating new compliance challenges for employers. Read today's Attorney Analysis. |
Westlaw Today is seeking contributed articles from practicing attorneys, legal scholars and other legal professionals for a special series on constitutional law, examining key principles, theories and concepts that form and frame the government. To express interest in writing an article, please send a brief description (two to three sentences) to Elaine Song, Managing Editor, Westlaw Today Contributions, at elaine.song@thomsonreuters.com. |
Additional writing by Shruthi Krishnamurthy. |
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