Archives
January 24, 2025
Feature
- Law professor publishes new short story collection
- Federal judge dismisses lawsuit against civil rights department alleging discrimination by ignoring complaint
- Business taxpayers reminded about state filing of W-2s and 1099s
- What is seditious conspiracy, which is among the most serious crimes Trump pardoned?
- Daily Briefs
Business
- How mega-polluters take advantage of billions in green loans
- 5 ideas for avoiding an overemphasis on short-term results
Column
- Michigan’s policy choices delay rollout of high-speed internet
- 10 years after the Charlie Hebdo attacks in France, conversations about free speech are still too black and white
- Mark Zuckerberg thinks workplaces need to ‘man up’ - here’s why that’s bad for all employees, no matter their gender
- Many more older people are leaving prison and face unmet needs for housing and health care — as well as a tangle of groups trying to help
Courts
- Court Digest
- Families sue TikTok over teen suicides they say are linked to harmful content
- Law requiring Ten Commandments to be displayed in classrooms is back in court
- Judge to weigh genetic evidence and search warrants in quadruple murder case
Nation
- Border app that became ‘a salvation’ for migrants to legally enter the U.S. may end
- GOP-led states are emboldened to keep rolling back trans rights. Democrats struggle with a response
- National Roundup
- Amanda Knox gets a final shot at clearing her name of slander in Italy’s top court
State
headlines Detroit
headlines National
- Summit offered research-based roadmap for law firms seeking to implement generative AI
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice agrees to license suspension for alleged election-review misconduct
- ‘Stay out of my shorts,’ other discourteous comments led to censure for New York judge
- Federal judge’s Columbia clerk boycott didn’t harm public confidence in judiciary, judicial council rules
- ‘There is no question that we will fight,’ says latest law firm targeted in Trump executive order