Wetlands Decision Muddies the Water at EPA
A recent SCOTUS wetlands decision opens waterways to pollution for profit, while destroying natural buffer areas that purify water and protect cities.
A recent SCOTUS wetlands decision opens waterways to pollution for profit, while destroying natural buffer areas that purify water and protect cities.
Airbnb claims that a recently-passed New York City ordinance would make it all but impossible for most hosts to continue listing their short-term rental properties.
An attorney for the family of Banko Brown claims that a contracted Walgreens security guard killed the 24-year-old man for allegedly stealing $14 or $15 worth of goods.
Attorneys for controversial Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis had earlier asked that the judge overseeing Disney’s First Amendment complaint against the state be removed.
The family of the late Oscar Leon Sanchez said that officers entered the 35-year-old man’s home and shot him dead while he stood in his living room, purportedly holding a metallic scooter component.
The City of Chicago filed its lawsuit against Gary-based Westforth Sports several years after a police report indicated that a significant percentage of guns used in local crimes had been purchased in the same store.
Attorneys for A Better Childhood claim that San Bernardino’s child protective services agency is so overburdened that it has, at times, placed foster children with registered sex offenders.
The lawsuit, supported by 51 attorneys general, accuses an Arizona-based telecommunications company of forwarding more than 7.5 billion robocalls to people on the national Do Not Call Registry. Of these calls, millions are believed to have been scam calls targeting elderly Americans.
The popular social media company has claimed that a “TikTok Ban” would infringe upon Montana residents’ First Amendment rights.
In court documents, attorneys for the United States Department of Justice suggested that the Northeast Alliance was more akin to a “de facto merger” than a legitimate business agreement.