Archives
February 06, 2024
Feature
- Michigan Supreme Court to hear oral arguments on Nessel’s appeal of 1999 and 2007 consumer protection decisions
- A Former Federal Judge Explains What it’s Like to be on the Bench in a High-Profile Trial Like Those Involving Trump
- Jury gets manslaughter case against school shooter’s mother
- Saying goodbye
- Daily Briefs
Business
- Miracle cures: Online conspiracy theories are creating a new age of unproven medical treatments
- Biden’s vow of affordable internet for all is threatened by the looming expiration of subsidies
Column
- 5 financial steps to take before marrying later in life
- Does Trump actually have to pay $83.3 million to E. Jean Carroll? Not immediately, at least
- From throwing soup to suing governments, there’s strategy to climate activism’s seeming chaos - here’s where it’s headed next
Courts
- Ex-CIA computer engineer gets 40 years in prison for giving spy agency hacking secrets to WikiLeaks
- Judge in Borgata/MGM case rules casinos have no duty to stop compulsive gamblers from betting
- Court Digest
- How two sentences in the Constitution rose from obscurity to ensnare Donald Trump
Nation
- Grave peril of digital conspiracy theories: ‘What happens when no one believes anything anymore?’
- National Roundup
State
headlines Detroit
- Michigan Law student receives Institute for Policy Integrity fellowship to work on environmental and energy policy
- DOJ suing Washtenaw County over immigration enforcement
- MPA sounds alarm bells on ongoing threats to transparency
- After court decision, MSP seeking applications for FEMA grant program
- Daily Briefs
headlines National
- Exodus: Thousands of federal lawyers left their jobs by choice or by force in 2025
- Wisconsin moves to UBE to ease access-to-justice woes
- The Burton Book Review: A discussion on ‘When You Come at the King’
- Facebook, Instagram pulling ads from lawyers looking for plaintiffs ... to sue them
- Florida law school pressed to include chapter of Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA
- BigLaw firm faces questions over $35M bill




