by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Feb 1, 2024 | Blog, Zhonette Brown
Photo: Michael Cargill, Central Texas Gun Works owner in front of the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas Later this month, NCLA’s second of three cases before the Supreme Court this term will be argued, Garland v. Cargill. Like the...
by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Jan 26, 2024 | Blog, Peggy Little
Photo: John J. Vecchione, NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel, Meghan Lapp, Fisheries Liaison & General Manager, Seafreeze, Ltd., Mark Chenoweth, President and Chief Legal Officer, and Roman Martinez, Latham & Watkins Partner, give their comments at the Supreme...
by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Jan 22, 2024 | Blog, Greg Dolin
One of the foundational principles of the United States is that we are a country of laws, not men—a place where the lowliest of the low are subject to the same laws and rules as the most exalted and powerful. Most of us learned in our middle school civics class...
by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Jan 16, 2024 | Blog, John J. Vecchione
This week, we go to the Supreme Court in Relentless v. Commerce for argument on whether Chevron deference—the deference given to agencies when they interpret an ambiguous or silent statute—continue or be abandoned by the Court. Both our briefs and those of the...
by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Jan 8, 2024 | Blog, Kara Rollins
Clickbaity titles and hyperbolic claims are, yet again, dominating the coverage of the Supreme Court’s docket. Among those are the suggestions that this term’s Relentless and Loper Bright cases are the “end” of everything from the environment to the government...
by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Dec 1, 2023 | Blog, Randy Quarles
“[i]f nothing more were required, in exercising a legislative trust, than a general conveyance of authority—without laying down any precise rules by which the authority conveyed should be carried into effect—it would follow that the whole power of legislation might be...