A federal magistrate in Manhattan denied a request for pre-trial discovery in a constitutional challenge to city and state cannabis enforcement laws, citing unresolved standing questions and the breadth of the requests.
The Nevada Supreme Court on Thursday reversed a lower court and ordered a preliminary injunction against a 1985 law requiring minors to notify a parent or obtain judicial approval before receiving an abortion, finding key provisions unconstitutionally vague.
Four veterans and a historic preservation advocate filed suit seeking to halt construction of a 250-foot monumental arch on Memorial Circle, alleging the Trump administration is proceeding without congressional authorization in violation of federal law.
The United States and NRCS win dismissal from a suit over access to a hunting parcel near Locust Grove Road in Dyer County.
U.S. District Judge Lee H. Rosenthal granted summary judgment to two Harris County deputies in a civil rights lawsuit, ruling that body-worn camera footage showed the officers used only the force necessary to overcome the plaintiff’s active resistance while...
U.S. District Judge Robert S. Lasnik ruled Thursday that intervenor-defendants in a Washington Voting Rights Act case lack Article III standing to seek relief from a court-drawn remedial map, denying their motion to vacate the judgment.
A federal judge approved a settlement requiring the Oakland Unified School District to grant Child Evangelism Fellowship NorCal equal access to school facilities under the First Amendment.
A federal judge in Maine partially invalidated the town’s 1,000-passenger daily cap on cruise ship disembarkations, ruling the limit is constitutional during the congested summer months but excessive during the quieter shoulder season.
Virginia’s Republican legislators asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday to uphold the state Supreme Court’s decision invalidating a constitutional amendment that would have allowed the General Assembly to draw a new congressional map for the 2026 elections.
A Colorado appellate division ruled that the state constitution does not guarantee a right to shelter on public property, affirming Boulder’s ban on camping and tents because the protections against cruel and unusual punishment mirror the federal Eighth...
A federal judge in Kansas allowed a woman’s excessive force lawsuit to proceed against a sheriff’s deputy, ruling that her complaint plausibly alleged the deputy used unreasonable force against a nonviolent misdemeanant who posed no threat.
The Supreme Court may issue a decision Thursday in Foothills Christian Ministries v. Johnson on whether a California law requiring licensed childcare centers to post signs and distribute handouts informing parents that children are free to attend...
A federal judge denied a preliminary injunction sought by Mid Vermont Christian School, ruling that a state education law reducing tuition payments to independent schools is neutral and not motivated by religious animus.
The Supreme Court cleared the way for Alabama to use its 2023 congressional map, vacating a lower court order that had blocked the map as racially discriminatory and sending the case back for reconsideration in light of Louisiana v. Callais.
The Supreme Court’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais has significantly raised the burden for plaintiffs challenging redistricting maps under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, requiring illustrative maps to meet not only traditional districting...
Virginia is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to override a state court decision that struck down a congressional map, arguing the ruling violated federal law and threatened the 2026 elections.
A federal judge held Cook County liable under Monell for deliberately ignoring the obvious risk that its property tax sale system would strip homeowners of equity without compensation, violating the Fifth and Eighth Amendments.
Randy Flowers, an independent candidate for Congress in Illinois’s 17th District, cannot bypass the state’s signature requirements to appear on the general election ballot.
A federal judge deferred ruling on a motion to seize $11.5 million in blocked Iranian assets in the Jeremy Levin terrorism case, holding that due process requires notice to the front companies before execution.
A federal judge ruled that Cook County is liable under Section 1983 for its deliberate indifference to constitutional violations in its property tax sale system, finding the county knew its policy of withholding excess equity from homeowners was unlawful...