Native American

  • January 01, 2024

    Biggest Environmental Regulations To Watch In 2024

    As President Joe Biden's term draws to a close in 2024, executive branch agencies won't slow down their efforts to finalize important environmental regulations, from new controls on greenhouse gas emissions at power plants to stricter Endangered Species Act protections and chemical standards.

  • January 01, 2024

    Biggest Environmental Cases To Watch In 2024

    Game-changing environmental law decisions are on tap for 2024, from two U.S. Supreme Court cases that could make important changes to the practice of administrative law to more rulings on the extent of the federal government's jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act.

  • January 01, 2024

    The Biggest Cases To Watch In Native American Law This Year

    Disputes over administrative healthcare costs for tribes that could cost the federal government billions and Voting Rights Act cases that have the potential to undo rulings in several states all gained speed in 2023 with legal experts predicting major decisions out of the appellate courts in the new year.

  • December 22, 2023

    Utah Tribe Asks Gorsuch For Stay In $300K Sanctions Ruling

    A Utah tribe and its affiliated corporations asked U.S. Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch on Friday for an emergency stay on a mandate requiring them to pay more than $300,000 in attorney fee sanctions while they prepare an appeal.

  • December 22, 2023

    IRS Launches Prefiling Tool For Monetizing Energy Credits

    The Internal Revenue Service announced the launch of a tool Friday that's intended to simplify the process that lets businesses and other entities receive certain manufacturing, clean energy and production tax credits.

  • December 21, 2023

    8th Circ. Won't Extend ND's Deadline To Comply With VRA

    The North Dakota Legislative Assembly's bid to extend a deadline to submit a plan that will remedy Voting Rights Act violations would be better served in federal district court, the Eighth Circuit has ruled.

  • December 21, 2023

    Montana Camp Operator Seeks Stay In Tribal Lease Dispute

    A Montana campground operator is asking a federal district court for a stay on an order that found in favor of the Blackfeet Indian Nation in a decadelong land lease dispute, saying the ruling will likely cause it to liquidate its assets before an appeal on the issue is resolved.

  • December 21, 2023

    The Telecom Developments That Defined 2023

    The Federal Communications Commission advanced several new pro-consumer rules under a new Democratic majority in 2023, but was held back in its efforts to deploy more broadband by a lapse in spectrum auction authority and a looming depletion of a major broadband subsidy.

  • December 21, 2023

    Feds, Osage Nation See Win In Wind Farm 'Mining' Row

    A federal judge in Oklahoma largely granted summary judgment to the U.S. government and Osage Nation in their long-running wind farm dispute with Enel Green Power North America Inc. and two subsidiaries, and ordered the ejectment of 84 wind turbines after the companies failed for years to get a required mineral lease.

  • December 21, 2023

    The Biggest Environmental Law Cases Of 2023

    From a Supreme Court decision reshaping water rights in the United States to ongoing fights over so-called forever chemical contamination, lawsuits concerning the environment rumbled through the courts in 2023. Here, we look at the lawsuits that shaped the year.

  • December 21, 2023

    College NIL Fight, MLB Settlement Highlight 2023's 2nd Half

    The second half of 2023 saw yearslong issues boil over with some shocking revelations along the way, from college athletes winning class certification in a fight for the right to profit off their names, images and likenesses to MLB putting to rest its antitrust legal battle with its minor league, for now. Here, Law360 brings you up to speed on some of the most significant sports and betting moments from this year's second half.

  • December 20, 2023

    Seminole Tribe Must Face Casino Injury Suit, Fla. Court Rules

    A Florida appellate court on Wednesday affirmed a trial court's decision to greenlight a slip-and-fall suit against the Seminole Tribe-operated Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, saying the plaintiff filed her second suit after the tribe's one-year immunity period against tort claims had expired.

  • December 20, 2023

    Texas, Mo. Say Feds Overstate Footnote In Border Wall Case

    Texas and Missouri have told a Texas federal judge that the Biden administration's claim that a recent Supreme Court decision bars their ability to challenge its plans to spend border wall funding on things other than new barrier construction hinges on the flawed interpretation of a single footnote in the ruling.

  • December 20, 2023

    Biden Admin Tells 10th Circ. To Uphold Monument Rulings

    The Biden administration is urging the Tenth Circuit to back a pair of lower court rulings finding its two proclamations redesignating large swaths of southern Utah as part of the Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments do not exceed presidential limits under federal law.

  • December 20, 2023

    Fragrance Co. In Contract Row Wants Conn. Jury Loss Tossed

    A formerly Native American-controlled shampoo fragrance supplier that lost an $8.4 million bid for damages in a commercial contract feud now wants a Connecticut state court judge to undo last month's verdict in favor of its opponent, arguing that the jury was confused about the law.

  • December 20, 2023

    9th Circ. Won't Block Willow Project In Alaska During Appeal

    ConocoPhillips can continue winter construction on its controversial Willow oil and gas project on Alaska's North Slope as the Ninth Circuit considers an appeal from Native American advocacy and conservation groups to overturn the Bureau of Land Management's approvals of the project, the panel has said.

  • December 20, 2023

    Tribes Pressed VRA Cases In 2023, With Many Still Playing Out

    At least 100 civil rights groups, minority coalitions and Native American tribes in 2023 continued their challenges to voter redistricting efforts in at least half a dozen states, with more set to play out into the new year in the appellate courts.

  • December 20, 2023

    The Top Bankruptcy Cases And Issues Of 2023

    With the curtain closing on 2023, bankruptcy experts say the past year has featured cases and legal issues of great importance to the practice area that will have implications for years to come.

  • December 20, 2023

    Sport Fishers Say Tribes' Pact Threatens Great Lakes

    An organization representing sport fishers told the Sixth Circuit a new fishing pact between tribes and the state of Michigan lacks guardrails to prevent overfishing and endangers the Great Lakes fisheries.

  • December 20, 2023

    Reps. Urge High Court To Take On Ore. Monument Challenges

    More than two dozen Republican lawmakers are asking the Supreme Court to take up challenges to rulings upholding former President Barack Obama's expansion of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument on the Oregon-California border, and rein in presidential uses of the Antiquities Act of 1906.

  • December 20, 2023

    The Biggest Environmental Regulatory Actions Of 2023

    The Biden administration continued to strengthen environmental regulations during 2023, finalizing rules that imposed new asbestos reporting requirements, banning some uses of hydrofluorocarbons and cracking down on methane emissions, as well as floating a new proposal to control greenhouse gas pollution from power plants — but a signature Clean Water Act action was dealt a devastating blow by the U.S. Supreme Court. Here are some of the top environmental policy developments in 2023.

  • December 19, 2023

    AmerisourceBergen Ruling Sharpens Del.'s Compliance Focus

    The Delaware Supreme Court's revival of a multibillion-dollar stockholder derivative suit against drug giant AmerisourceBergen Corp. has heightened court concern for assuring fiduciary loyalty and care compliance among state-chartered companies caught up in lawbreaking claims elsewhere, experts told Law360.

  • December 19, 2023

    Gov't Nears Deal In $129M Loan Fight With Telecom

    Sandwich Isles Communications and a U.S. Department of Agriculture bank have come to general terms about how and when to sell off the Hawaii-based telecom carrier's assets to help pay back the $129 million in federal loans it defaulted on, according to a recent filing.

  • December 19, 2023

    Calif. Tribe Says Union Must Wait To Finish Labor Arbitration

    A California tribe is seeking to dismiss allegations it refused to select an arbitrator to count signed cards that would allow casino employees to unionize, arguing the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the issue and the claims are unripe, as talks between the parties have already started.

  • December 19, 2023

    Senate Confirms Former Cherokee Nation AG To Judgeship

    The Senate voted 52-14 on Tuesday to confirm former attorney general of the Cherokee Nation Sara Hill to serve on the bench of the Northern District of Oklahoma.

Expert Analysis

  • Series

    My Favorite Law Prof: How I Learned That Culture Shapes Law

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    U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff of the Southern District of New York considers how a class with Jerry Cohen at Harvard Law helped him understand culture and history’s influence on jurisprudence, and how even seemingly settled law can evolve — all while espousing a more humanistic approach to teaching that restored Judge Rakoff's pride in being a lawyer.

  • 9 Legal Ethics Considerations In Natural Disaster Preparation

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    Since natural disasters like Hurricane Ian do not relieve lawyers of their ethical obligations to clients, law firms should focus their preparedness efforts on specific areas crucial to continuity of representation and ethics compliance, like business and communications contingency planning, record redundancy and more, says Mark Hinderks at Stinson.

  • Series

    My Favorite Law Prof: How I Learned To Put Law Into Practice

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    Massachusetts U.S. Attorney Rachael Rollins looks back at how Judge Charles Spurlock's trial advocacy class at Northeastern University School of Law challenged her to apply what she had already learned about civil and criminal procedure, evidence and criminal law to solving real-world problems.

  • What To Consider When Leaving BigLaw To Go Solo

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    Attorneys contemplating leaving their once-ideal job in BigLaw to start their own business should take certain concrete steps before they depart, such as saving money and drafting a business plan, and prepare for some common challenges, says Claudia Springer at Novo Advisors.

  • Series

    My Favorite Law Prof: How I Learned Education Never Ends

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    D.C. Circuit Judge David Tatel reflects on what made Bernard Meltzer a brilliant teacher and one of his favorite professors at the University of Chicago Law School, and how Meltzer’s teachings extended well past graduation and guided Judge Tatel through some complicated opinions.

  • Opinion

    New-Parent Attorneys Need Automatic Litigation Stays

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    To facilitate parental leave for solo practitioners and small-firm attorneys excluded from the Family and Medical Leave Act's protections, the American Bar Association should amend its rules to implement automatic litigation stays for attorneys welcoming a new child, says attorney Gabriel Levy.

  • Associate Skills That Impress Firms In A Cooling Job Market

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    With the lateral hiring market calming down and law firms no longer overlooking resume deficiencies when evaluating candidates, associates at all levels should be cognizant of the skills and attributes that make them marketable to prospective employers, says J.B. Pullias at VOYlegal.

  • High Court Could Resolve Thorny Atty-Client Privilege Issue

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    The U.S. Supreme Court recently granted review in a federal grand jury proceeding that presents a rare opportunity to clarify — and possibly significantly expand — the scope of the attorney-client privilege for complex mixed-purpose communications with counsel, says David Greenwald at Jenner & Block.

  • Internet Gaming Biz Hit The Jackpot With Wire Act Ruling

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    A Rhode Island federal court's order in IGT v. Garland last month — siding with the First Circuit's interpretation of the Wire Act and confirming it applies only to sports betting — opens up opportunities for interstate online gaming and gambling, which will entail harmonized regulation and taxation regimes, say attorneys at Blank Rome.

  • Minn.'s New Common Interest Doctrine: A Primer

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    In its recent ruling in Energy Policy Advocates v. Ellison, the Minnesota Supreme Court adopted the common interest doctrine, extending confidentiality to communications between an attorney and client that include a third party — but successful use of the doctrine will require care, preparation and attention to detail, says George Singer at Ballard Spahr.

  • Refining Info Governance As E-Discovery Gets More Complex

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    Courts are increasingly requiring litigants to produce chats and other conversations recorded on business collaboration platforms as evidence, so companies should develop strategies for preserving and organizing such data to timely comply with e-discovery requests and to protect sensitive information, say attorneys at Akerman.

  • Permitting Reform: Electric Transmission Implications

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    While Sen. Joe Manchin recently withdrew his energy infrastructure permitting reform proposal, it is likely that it will remain high on the congressional agenda — especially given its potential to transform authorizations and reviews for electric transmission projects, say attorneys at Steptoe & Johnson.

  • Risk Mitigation In Face Of Rising Legal Malpractice Claims

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    As the recent rise in frequency and cost of legal malpractice claims is expected to continue amid global high inflation and economic uncertainty, law firms and insurers would be wise to evaluate key risk areas and consider six steps to minimize exposure, say Nicole Shapiro and Cory Stumpf at Atheria Law.

  • Opinion

    Justices' Clean Water Act Queries Hint At Search For Balance

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    While some predict that the U.S. Supreme Court's conservative majority will use Sackett v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to strike a blow against the Clean Water Act, the justices' scrutiny of simplistic industry assertions during oral argument offers hope that they may render a more nuanced verdict, says Sambhav Sankar at Earthjustice.

  • Series

    Keys To A 9-0 High Court Win: Look For Common Ground

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    When arguing for the petitioner in Golan v. Saada before the U.S. Supreme Court earlier this year, a focus was placed on appealing to multiple judicial philosophies with the aim of not only winning each justice’s vote, but also achieving clear guidance from the court’s opinion, says Karen King at Morvillo Abramowitz.

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