Search for: "Read v. United States" Results 2821 - 2840 of 30,054
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6 Jan 2023, 6:02 am by Richard Hunt
Based on this assumption the Court finds that a single family unit is not properly comparable to the unit make up of unrelated disabled residents of a group home. [read post]
6 Jan 2023, 5:01 am by Eugene Volokh
[C]ourts [interpreting this provision] … apply the balancing test articulated by the United States Supreme Court in Pickering v. [read post]
5 Jan 2023, 2:02 pm by Alison Martinez
 SB 118 is the swift legislative response to the March 2022 decision in Save Berkeley’s Neighborhoods v. [read post]
5 Jan 2023, 11:37 am by Holly
January 5, 2023  |  By: Ryan Kennedy On November 7, 2022, the United States District Court for the District of Virginia decided the case of Harrell v. [read post]
5 Jan 2023, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
The United States was a permanent arrangement, created by the people as an aggregated whole rather than by the states. [read post]
5 Jan 2023, 5:01 am by Karen Greenberg
” He had come to the United States in 1974 on a student visa, had graduated from the New York Institute of Technology, held a permanent resident visa, and traveled frequently between Pakistan and the United States. [read post]
4 Jan 2023, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
It was this nationalistic Hamiltonian mode that found its way into the United States Reports through Chief Justice John Marshall’s opinion for the Court in McCulloch v. [read post]
4 Jan 2023, 4:27 am
No special legislation in the United States was necessary to make it effective. [read post]
3 Jan 2023, 4:35 am by Peter Mahler
All ten decisions were featured on this blog previously; click on the case name to read the full treatment. [read post]
The summer of our discontents Two months ago, if you prompted Version 3 of the AI-art generator MidJourney to generate depictions of an “otter on a plane using wifi,” you were rewarded with the nonsense in the left panel of our lead graphic. [read post]
1 Jan 2023, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
One cannot answer that question strictly as a matter of public policy because the First Amendment right to free speech places limits on government’s power to make lying a crime.In United States v. [read post]