Native American

  • January 26, 2024

    Don't Tax Broadband Deployment Money, Telecom Groups Say

    A group of telecommunications trade associations are asking Congress to grant their members tax breaks for broadband deployment costs, saying that without the proposed legislation, money intended to help bring broadband to currently out-of-reach households would return to the government in tax payments.

  • January 26, 2024

    Biden Admin Pauses LNG Reviews Over Climate Concerns

    The Biden administration on Friday said it would pause its approvals of liquefied natural gas exports to countries that don't have free-trade agreements with the U.S., and revise its export policy to greater account for LNG's impacts on climate change and energy prices.

  • January 25, 2024

    Opioid Nuisance Query Better For W.Va. Court, 4th Circ. Hints

    A Fourth Circuit panel asked repeatedly Thursday why no one had sought help from West Virginia's high court in a bellwether legal clash over whether anti-nuisance laws can be used to target the drug companies that supplied pharmacies amid the opioid crisis.

  • January 25, 2024

    Seattle Settles BLM Protesters' Police Brutality Suit For $10M

    The city of Seattle has agreed to a $10 million settlement to end a lawsuit brought by more than 50 protesters who say they were brutalized by its police force during Black Lives Matter demonstrations in the summer of 2020.

  • January 25, 2024

    ACLU Says Native American Inmate Denied Religious Rights

    The ACLU of Rhode Island is asking a federal district court for an order that will allow a Native American inmate to wear an Apache headband as part of his religious beliefs, arguing in a lawsuit that the state's Department of Corrections' refusal of the requests violates his rights under federal law designed to protect the religious freedom of incarcerated individuals.

  • January 25, 2024

    States, Industry Back Feds' Land Swap Fight At 9th Circ.

    The states of Idaho and Utah, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Mining Association have joined the federal government in urging the Ninth Circuit to overturn a lower court ruling in favor of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes' challenge to a land transfer intended for the expansion of a fertilizer plant.

  • January 25, 2024

    Alaskan Guide Co. To Pay $900K For Fire On Native Lands

    An Alaskan fishing guide service will pay $900,000 to resolve claims brought by the U.S. Department of the Interior accusing one of its guides of lighting an illegal campfire that ultimately burned through 176 acres of Native and federal public lands, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

  • January 25, 2024

    Calif. Judge Says States' Trump Water Rule Challenge Is Moot

    A California federal judge dismissed Democrat-led states' challenge to a Trump-era Clean Water Act rule the Biden administration has since replaced, saying because there is no present controversy, the case is moot.

  • January 25, 2024

    Judge Won't Revisit Stay Issued In Gila River Water Fight

    An Arizona federal judge said the U.S. government, San Carlos Apache Tribe and Gila Indian River Community failed to convince him to reverse a decision to deny their summary judgment motions and hit pause on a suit over Gila River water usage.

  • January 24, 2024

    J&J Agrees To $150M Deal Ending Wash. Opioid Litigation

    Johnson & Johnson will pay almost $150 million to end Washington's lawsuit accusing it of pushing opioid painkillers and understating the risk of addiction, according to a settlement filed in state court on Wednesday, adding to the tally of states that have gotten a payout from the pharmaceutical giant for its alleged role in the opioid epidemic. 

  • January 24, 2024

    Bid To Swap Chevron For An Old Standby Raises Doubts

    Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court debated whether a World War II-era doctrine encouraging courts to strongly consider agency statutory interpretations could replace the court's controversial so-called Chevron doctrine that requires judges to defer to those interpretations if a statute is ambiguous.

  • January 24, 2024

    Enviro, Tribal Orgs. Claim Calif. Botched Delta Tunnel Reviews

    Conservation groups are taking aim at the California Department of Water Resources' review and approval of the Delta Conveyance Project, claiming it glossed over harms that would stem from an estimated $16 billion push to augment the State Water Project with a 45-mile water diversion tunnel under the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.

  • January 24, 2024

    La. Wins Injunction Against EPA On Disparate Impact Rules

    A Louisiana federal judge will allow the state to temporarily block the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency from imposing certain environmental justice requirements on permitting and grant decisions, finding the state is likely to prevail in its challenge.

  • January 24, 2024

    Mohawk Council Wants To Withdraw From 1796 Land Dispute

    The Mohawk Nation Council of Chiefs says a recent decision to withdraw from a land settlement agreement with the state of New York over a decadeslong lawsuit involving more than 2,000 acres of illegally purchased land was not easy but was made in the interest of protecting the territorial integrity of the Mohawk Nation.

  • January 24, 2024

    Campground Operator Must Pay $1M Bond, Judge Says

    A Montana campground operator has until early March to post a $1 million surety bond, a federal district court judge determined while rejecting the company's bid to cut the amount in half pending an appeal to the Ninth Circuit.

  • January 23, 2024

    States Fear For Rights As Feds Press High Court Water War

    The U.S. Supreme Court's decision to consider whether the federal government was inappropriately excluded from a Rio Grande water sharing agreement between Texas, New Mexico and Colorado raises novel questions about the United States' interests and role in such interstate deals, an important issue as water concerns increase across the nation.

  • January 23, 2024

    Feds Say Tribal Leaders Lack Standing In Banishment Suit

    Three former Oklahoma Native American government leaders seeking to overturn tribal laws that banned and sanctioned them haven't exhausted their administrative remedies, the federal government said, arguing that the trio never challenged the results of an election that ultimately allowed their punishments to be reinstated.

  • January 23, 2024

    W.Va. County To Face Off With Opioid Distributors At 4th Circ.

    A Fourth Circuit panel will hear oral arguments Thursday morning in an appeal brought by a West Virginia county that lost the first bench trial in multidistrict litigation over the opioid epidemic, kicking off the first appellate arguments this year over verdicts in the MDL.  

  • January 23, 2024

    Voting Rights Groups Trim Claims In Ga. Election Law Dispute

    Voting rights groups have dropped accusations that a controversial Georgia election law violated their free speech rights and narrowed claims that the measure infringed voters' right to participate in elections, according to an amended complaint.

  • January 23, 2024

    Court Will Rethink Tribes' Claims In Railroad Dispute

    An Idaho federal judge has reinstated two Quiet Title Act claims the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes of the Fort Hall Reservation lodged against the federal government in a dispute over land once used by a railway, agreeing that a Supreme Court ruling requires the reversal of a prior order dismissing the claims.

  • January 22, 2024

    Officer's Conduct A Departure From BIA Policy, 9th Circ. Told

    The Bureau of Indian Affairs has said that despite one of its former officer's "reprehensible abuse of authority" in sexually assaulting a Northern Cheyenne woman, the federal government isn't responsible for his actions because it was a clear departure from any conduct authorized by his employer.

  • January 22, 2024

    Native Group Urges Court To Keep NFL Conspiracy Bid In Play

    A Native American organization is urging a federal district court to deny a motion by Washington Commanders owner Josh Harris seeking to dismiss its $1.6 million civil conspiracy and defamation lawsuit, saying that for an organization that promotes inclusivity, it is unacceptable to defame a minority group for sharing a different viewpoint.

  • January 22, 2024

    Feds Defend Ability To Take Land Into Trust For Alaska Tribes

    The U.S. government is urging an Alaska federal judge to reject the state of Alaska's arguments that the Interior Department's decision to take a 787-square-foot piece of land in downtown Juneau in trust for the Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes oversteps its authority or threatens state jurisdiction.

  • January 22, 2024

    Motley Rice Fights DQ Bid In Opioid MDL

    Law firms representing governments suing over the opioid epidemic on Monday told an Ohio federal judge that "corporate wrongdoers" don't get to pick who sues them, in response to a pharmacy benefit manager's bid to disqualify Motley Rice LLC over its representation of other governments in prescription drug disputes.

  • January 22, 2024

    Ariz. 'Fintech Sandbox' Regulator Joins Greenberg Traurig

    Greenberg Traurig LLP's newest shareholder is an experienced financial technology regulator who has joined the firm's Phoenix office after nine years of government service.

Expert Analysis

  • 4 Proactive Strategies For 'Rocket Docket' Discovery In SDNY

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    With more than half of Southern District of New York judges now allowing four or fewer months for fact discovery, civil litigators in this aspiring "rocket docket" jurisdiction should prioritize case management methods that make the most of this compressed timeline, say Jaclyn Grodin and Nicholas Cutaia at Goulston & Storrs.

  • Opinion

    Increasing Law Firm Polarization Will Degrade Rule Of Law

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    As evidenced in recent instances of law firms separating from attorneys who represented certain industries or espoused certain views, firms and the legal practice itself have grown troublingly polarized and intolerant of dissent, says Rebecca Roiphe at New York Law School.

  • How To Deal With Difficult Clients, Practically And Ethically

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    Meredith Stoma at Lewis Brisbois discusses common obstacles for counsel working with difficult clients and provides guidance on ethically managing or terminating these challenging relationships — as, for example, counsel for Ye have recently done.

  • Opinion

    Federal Courts Should Adopt Supreme Court's Amicus Stance

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    The federal courts of appeals should adopt the U.S. Supreme Court's new approach to amicus curiae briefs, which allows the friend-of-the-court submissions to be filed without consent from the court or the parties, says Lawrence Ebner at Atlantic Legal Foundation.

  • 3 Pricing Trends In Law Firm Use Of Litigation Funding

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    As BigLaw firms increasingly include litigation funding as a financing option for clients, internal pricing groups are taking the lead on standardizing and centralizing firm processes, and aggregating risk budgets, says Brendan Dyer at Woodsford Group.

  • Safeguarding Attorneys' Greatest Asset: Our Mental Health

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    Attorneys who understand that mental fitness is their most valuable characteristic should prioritize mental health care accordingly, including with certain activities they may not realize qualify as self-care, says Wendy Robbins at Holland & Knight.

  • Why The EPA Has Made Little Progress On EJ Litigation

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    Although the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has taken numerous steps to promote environmental justice goals, recent court cases show little progress in achieving those goals through judicial enforcement — and the lack of such cases may not be the agency's fault, says Jeffrey Corey at Parsons Behle.

  • Pending High Court ICWA Decision Holds Broad Implications

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    Oral argument in Brackeen v. Haaland — a child welfare case currently before the U.S. Supreme Court — has called attention to complex interplay between the case and other tribal and racial issues, indicating that consequences will affect Congress' ability to fulfill its trust obligations to tribes, as well as diversity programs that include Native Americans, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.

  • Opinion

    Law Schools Are Right To Steer Clear Of US News Rankings

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    By opting out of participating in the U.S. News & World Report annual rankings, law schools abandon a profoundly flawed system and free up their resources to adapt to the tsunami of changes overtaking the profession, says Nicholas Allard at Jacksonville University College of Law.

  • Opinion

    Litigation Funders Seek Transparency In Disclosure Debate

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    Litigation funders want to correct the record on calls for funding disclosure in the name of transparency, as this purported justification obscures the disclosure's adverse effects — prejudicing plaintiffs' cases and discouraging the assertion of meritorious legal claims, say Dai Wai Chin Feman and William Weisman at Parabellum Capital.

  • 5 Principles For Better Professional Development Programs

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    The pandemic and ensuing "great resignation" have resulted in a more transient legal work force, but law firms can use effective professional development programs to bridge a cultural gap with new associates and stem associate attrition, says Matthew Woods at Robins Kaplan.

  • Series

    My Favorite Law Prof: How I Learned To Practice With Passion

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    First Circuit Judge Gustavo Gelpí recalls how Suffolk University Law School's Joseph Glannon taught the importance of the law as both a tool and a profession, and that those who wish to practice law successfully must do so with love, enthusiasm and passion.

  • Questions To Ask Before Making A Lateral Move As Partner

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    Law firm partners considering lateral moves should diligently interview prospects — going beyond standard questions about compensation to inquire about culture, associate retention and other areas that can provide a more comprehensive view, says Lauren Wu at VOYLegal.

  • Series

    My Favorite Law Prof: How I Learned To Argue Open-Mindedly

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    Queens College President Frank Wu reflects on how Yale Kamisar’s teaching and guidance at the University of Michigan Law School emphasized a capacity to engage with alternative worldviews and the importance of the ability to argue for both sides of a debate.

  • ABA's No-Contact Rule Advice Raises Questions For Lawyers

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    The American Bar Association's ethics committee recently issued two opinions concerning the no-contact rule — one creates an intuitive and practical default for electronic communications, while the other sets a potential trap for pro se lawyers, say Lauren Snyder and Deepika Ravi at HWG.

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