by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Sep 20, 2023 | Lunch & Law Speaker Series
Our panel of expert appellate litigators discuss a few upcoming Supreme Court cases, as well as several where cert is still pending, each with profound implications on the lawless and unaccountable Administrative State. NCLA President and General Counsel Mark...
by trevor.schakohl@ncla.legal | Sep 19, 2023 | Opinion, Peggy Little
The Supreme Court’s opinion in Axon Enterprise Inc. v. FTC (Axon/ Cochran) is full of surprises, from its inception—launched despite a seemingly impenetrable barrier of five adverse circuit precedents (hereinafter the SEC ALJ Cases)—to conclusion in a unanimous...
by trevor.schakohl@ncla.legal | Sep 19, 2023 | Press Releases
Washington, DC (September 19, 2023) – Rule 8.4(g) of Pennsylvania’s Rules of Professional Conduct for attorneys establishes an unconstitutional speech code for lawyers, exposing them to discipline—including sanctions that threaten their livelihoods—if they knowingly...
by trevor.schakohl@ncla.legal | Sep 18, 2023 | Press Releases
Washington, DC (September 18, 2023) – Invoking the contentious “qualified immunity” doctrine, state courts in Rhode Island prevented Rhode Island College (RIC) officials from facing civil liability for violating a student’s First Amendment rights to free speech and...
by helen.taylor@ncla.legal | Sep 16, 2023 | In the News
..“There is no meaningful cap or calculation that ever really takes place,” said David Rosenfeld, a law professor at Northern Illinois University and former senior SEC enforcement official whose work examining SEC fines was cited by the New Civil Liberties Alliance in...