by NCLA | Jul 17, 2019 | Lunch & Law Speaker Series
The Constitution vests Congress—and Congress alone—with the power to make law. However, for decades now, the so-called nondelegation doctrine has been rendered weak and useless by a Court reticent to enforce the Constitution’s separation of powers and the...
by NCLA | Jul 17, 2019 | Press Releases
Washington, D.C. —The New Civil Liberties Alliance, a nonprofit civil-rights organization and public-interest law firm, filed an amicus brief supporting the appellant in the case of Goldwater Institute v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services before the U.S....
by NCLA | Jul 17, 2019 | Case Documents
Brief of the New Civil Liberties Alliance as Amicus Curiae in Support of Plaintiff-Appellant and ReversalThe Constitution requires federal judges to exercise independent judgment and refrain from bias when interpreting the law. These are foundational constitutional...
by NCLA | Jul 17, 2019 | In the News
FORT WORTH — U.S. District Court judge John McBryde dismissed a Coppola, Texas, woman’s complaint against the Security and Exchange Commission but one of her attorneys said there is some light at the end of the tunnel. Michelle Cochran should not have been put...
by NCLA | Jul 16, 2019 | Blog
David Hamilton is an engineer by training and colorful by nature. He likes to build things and has spent his adult life creating successful natural gas processing companies and utilities in two states, as well as buying and improving farms around his hometown of...