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July 14, 2026
Allegheny Reproductive Health Center and other healthcare providers on Tuesday asked a Commonwealth Court judge to unfreeze money for Medicaid-funded abortions in Pennsylvania following the court's landmark ruling that the state's coverage exclusions for such abortions were unconstitutional.
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July 14, 2026
Connecticut is urging a federal court to toss the federal government's lawsuit challenging recently enacted state laws relating to law enforcement's use of face coverings and the investigation of cases involving deadly force, arguing the laws don't unconstitutionally hamper federal enforcement efforts.
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July 14, 2026
Holland & Knight LLP has hired the chief counsel for oversight at the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, who worked on that committee under Illinois Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin and who joins the firm's regulatory practice to fortify its bench with more than a decade of senior-level Capitol Hill experience.
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July 14, 2026
A Georgia federal magistrate judge has recommended that a jury hear a whistleblower suit against the city of East Point, finding that neither the former municipal court administrator nor the city should be handed an early win.
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July 14, 2026
Hawaii will take the authority away from counties to grant general excise tax exemptions to affordable housing projects and give it to the state under a bill signed by the governor.
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July 14, 2026
Dozens of broadcasters and emergency responders converged Tuesday on Capitol Hill to push for passage of a bill requiring automakers to continue manufacturing vehicles with AM radio capability.
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July 14, 2026
The U.S. government issued tariff refunds totaling more than $49.2 billion in June, dragging down customs duties to account for a monthly net loss of $25.5 billion in the federal accounts, according to the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
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July 14, 2026
California extended the sunset date for a tax credit program that allows qualifying businesses to claim income tax credits if the business hires workers and invest in the state under a bill signed by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom.
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July 14, 2026
Three Venezuelan asylum-seekers who say they were lured by Florida officials onto a plane bound for Martha's Vineyard as a publicity stunt in 2022 argued that they should be allowed to sue in Massachusetts federal court anonymously because they are likely to face harassment if their names are exposed.
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July 14, 2026
A single zoning board member's objection to tree clearing cannot be the basis for a small Massachusetts town to deny a permit for a solar array, the state's highest court ruled Tuesday.
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July 14, 2026
The State Bar of California has reached a settlement with the administrators of its "disastrous" February 2025 bar exam, whose array of highly publicized technical glitches prevented hundreds of aspiring lawyers from completing the test.
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July 14, 2026
The IRS' nonprofit donor disclosure rule violates the First Amendment, a conservative youth group told a D.C. federal court, arguing that a now-convicted contractor's theft of donor records and those of high-ranking government officials demonstrates that the agency cannot safeguard sensitive information.
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July 14, 2026
The Senate voted 50-45, along party lines, on Tuesday to confirm Matthew Schwartz, one of President Donald Trump's personal attorneys and a partner at Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
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July 14, 2026
While the U.S. Court of International Trade refused to preliminarily block imports of New Zealand fish that are caught in a manner that a conservation group said harms dolphins, the court also refused to dismiss the case altogether because the group has standing to bring the suit.
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July 14, 2026
A Chicago resident has been sentenced to three years in prison for threatening to kill President Donald Trump and burn a courthouse whose judge was handling his state foreclosure case, federal prosecutors announced Monday.
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July 14, 2026
A dozen Democratic attorneys general are seeking an emergency temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to block Paramount Skydance's controversial proposed $110 billion acquisition of Warner Bros while litigation continues.
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July 14, 2026
A split Second Circuit panel ordered a detained Jamaican man facing deportation to be released on bail, and criticized a dissenting judge's conclusion that the man's life-threatening kidney disease and need for regular dialysis treatments were not an "extraordinary circumstance."
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July 14, 2026
A North Carolina city asked a federal court to dismantle a collective action brought by police officers alleging they were not properly compensated for pre- and post-shift work, arguing the officers' claims are too individualized to proceed as a group.
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July 14, 2026
The Eighth Circuit won't vacate a man's conviction for possession of a firearm while being an unlawful drug user, finding that the government produced enough evidence to show that he fit historical laws disarming those who created "terror of the people."
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July 14, 2026
In one of the most-watched races for the five Washington State Supreme Court seats on the ballot this election season, a state appellate judge and a Seattle-area superior court judge are competing to succeed the high court's longest-sitting justice.
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July 13, 2026
Albertsons and Safeway ignored signs of problematic opioid prescriptions in Washington for years, an attorney for the state told a Seattle judge Monday during opening statements in a bench trial over allegations that the pharmacy chains failed to prevent the diversion of opioids that fueled the state's long-running overdose crisis.
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July 13, 2026
The Ninth Circuit Monday affirmed a temporary block on a Trump administration rule that singles out cash-moving businesses along the southwest border for heightened anti-money laundering reporting, agreeing that a plaintiff money service business will likely suffer irreparable harm.
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July 13, 2026
The Second Circuit held Monday that a lower court was correct to refuse to preliminarily block a New York City law prohibiting certain landlord broker fees, ruling that the city has pointed to legitimate government interests that warrant the law.
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July 13, 2026
New Jersey regulators won't immediately enforce a sweeping data broker law that took effect in June, announcing Friday covered businesses have to register and pay a potentially hefty registration fee until spring, and it would consider complaints about the law's lack of clarity in policing its sensitive data sales ban.
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July 13, 2026
A former Yale University student has sued a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement deportation officer and six unidentified federal agents in Connecticut state court, saying his 2025 lawsuit to force the adjudication of his 2016 asylum application may have triggered his detention in Hartford's federal courthouse last year.