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October 29, 2021

ACLU identifies issues among Nebraska law enforcement with non-English language accessibility - Lincoln Journal Star

ACLU identifies issues among Nebraska law enforcement with non-English language accessibility  Lincoln Journal Star
October 29, 2021

A law criminalizes walking in our state - Redlands Daily Facts

(Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG) Why did the pedestrian cross the road? To get to the other side. Except, though he was safely doing so, he was caught up in a police enforcement sting targeting so-called “jaywalkers,” which, if you think about it, are merely people who choose to walk around the town rather than sitting in or on a motorized vehicle. And yet, for generatio...
October 29, 2021

State's Top Court Looks at Law That Makes Convicts Pay Bills - 9 & 10 News - 9&10 News

State's Top Court Looks at Law That Makes Convicts Pay Bills - 9 & 10 News  9&10 News
October 29, 2021

Symposium Recap: Security, Privacy and Innovation – Reshaping Law for the AI Era - Just Security

Earlier this month and last month, the National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence, the Reiss Center on Law and Security at NYU School of Law, the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, and Just Security convened a three-part virtual symposium of experts to debate critical legal issues around the growing use and influence of artificial intelligence ...
October 29, 2021

A law criminalizes walking in our state - The Daily Breeze

(Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG) Why did the pedestrian cross the road? To get to the other side. Except, though he was safely doing so, he was caught up in a police enforcement sting targeting so-called “jaywalkers,” which, if you think about it, are merely people who choose to walk around the town rather than sitting in or on a motorized vehicle. And yet, for generatio...
October 29, 2021

A law criminalizes walking in our state - OCRegister

(Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG) Why did the pedestrian cross the road? To get to the other side. Except, though he was safely doing so, he was caught up in a police enforcement sting targeting so-called “jaywalkers,” which, if you think about it, are merely people who choose to walk around the town rather than sitting in or on a motorized vehicle. And yet, for generatio...
October 29, 2021

Richard Birns and Theodore Olson Named Sports Law Power Players - Gibson Dunn

Sports Business Journal recognized New York partner Richard Birns and Washington, D.C. partner Theodore Olson in its “Power Players: Outside Counsel” list. The profile was published on October 25, 2021. Richard Birns is Co-Chair of the firm’s Private Equity and Sports Law Practice Groups. He focuses his practice on a wide range of merger and acquisition-related matters, including domestic and...
October 29, 2021

Gov. Kim Reynolds signs law allowing Iowans fired for defying COVID vaccine mandates to get unemployment - Burlington Hawk Eye

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds took both legislative and legal action on Friday to push back on federal vaccination requirements for employers, continuing her opposition to the Biden administration's COVID-19 strategy. Reynolds signed a law Friday morning that will give employees of Iowa businesses wider latitude to claim medical and religious exemptions from COVID-19 vaccination mandates. It also w...
October 29, 2021

Texas AFT :Governor starts process of signing special session bills into law - Texas AFT

After a busy third special session of the Texas Legislature concluded last week, bills passed by the House and Senate were sent to the governor for his final approval. So far, Gov. Greg Abbott has signed into law bills regarding redistricting, transgender student athletes, and the funding of higher education construction projects. On Monday, Abbott signed into law all four redistricting maps ...
October 29, 2021

State's top court looks at law that makes convicts pay bills - HollandSentinel.com

Associated Press DETROIT — The Michigan Supreme Court has agreed to look again at a law that allows communities to collect millions of dollars from poor criminal defendants to pay salaries, keep lights on and wax floors in courthouses up and down the state. The issue is whether it's unconstitutional, especially when a judge knows a conviction will bring in cash and please local officials who...