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| Supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump occupy the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, U.S., January 6, 2021. Jack Gruber/USA TODAY via REUTERS |
After President Trump's mass pardons of the U.S. Capitol rioters, some have gained influence inside the DOJ, meeting with officials to push for prosecutions of the federal lawyers who once helped convict them, Reuters found. The January 6 prosecutors describe mounting threats, harassment and fear of lasting damage to the U.S. justice system. Read the Special Report here. |
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- The D.C. Circuit will hear arguments in a lawsuit challenging a Trump administration rule establishing a new, nationwide immigrant registration system that also requires people to carry proof of their registration with them at all times, or risk federal criminal prosecution. Read the complaint.
- In California, U.S. Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler will weigh a proposed class action lawsuit by a former high school athlete in the state who said players should be paid for the commercial use of their names, images and likenesses. Defense lawyers at Arnold & Porter for the California Interscholastic Federation have called the case "an attempt to use antitrust law to reshape high school sports in California."
- U.S. District Judge Richard Leon in D.C. will consider issuing a temporary restraining order in a lawsuit filed by legal technology firm Fastcase that accused rival Alexi of breaching a data licensing agreement, misappropriating trade secrets and infringing trademarks as it vied to scale up an AI-powered research platform for lawyers. Read the complaint.
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Court calendars are subject to last-minute docket changes. |
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Want more news? A Reuters subscription gives you unlimited access for $1 a week. Plus, no surprise price increases and you can cancel anytime. Sign up here. | For some first-year law students with the right pedigree, the door to a lucrative job at an elite U.S. law firm now opens before their first grades are in. Karen Sloan has more here. |
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"If the secretary told them they face legal liability, isn't that an injury?" |
- U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy in Boston to DOJ attorney Isaac Belfer during a hearing over Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy's new vaccine policies. A group of major medical orgs argue the policy will lower vaccine rates. Belfer argues that they lack standing because they had not shown they were harmed by the CDC. Read more about the arguments here. |
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Haynes Boone's Neil Issar, Davis Price Shugrue and Brianne Wylie examine how DOJ actions on customs enforcement underscore a need for due diligence and compliance programs. Read today's Attorney Analysis. |
Additional writing by Shruthi Krishnamurthy and Namrata Arora. |
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