by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Dec 22, 2023 | Blog, Sheng Li
NCLA lawsuits have forced the Department of Transportation to abandon an abusive administrative enforcement action against a small family-owned business for the third time this year. These cases provide a roadmap for others to follow when DOT drags them...
by trevor.schakohl@ncla.legal | Jul 11, 2023 | Opinion, Sheng Li
The Supreme Court typically waits until the end of a term before releasing its most impactful and controversial decisions. This term’s final decision was Biden v. Nebraska, which held that President Biden lacks authority to spend half a trillion dollars to cancel...
by helen.taylor@ncla.legal | Apr 15, 2023 | Opinion, Sheng Li
The Biden administration’s attempt to forgive $400 billion in outstanding student loan debt through administrative fiat has come under richly deserved fire, with its fate now in the hands of the Supreme Court. But an equally unlawful companion giveaway has thus far...
by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Oct 13, 2022 | Blog, Sheng Li
They say that an oral argument cannot predict a case’s outcome, but NCLA’s October 5, 2022 argument in Mexican Gulf v. U.S. Department of Commerce may prove to be an exception to that advice. There, a Fifth Circuit panel comprised of Chief Judge Richman and...
by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Feb 11, 2022 | Blog, Sheng Li
Photo: Plaintiffs in Schemel v. Marco Island: Stephen Overman, Michael Tschida, and Shannon Schemel. NCLA filed a lawsuit against the City of San Marco, Florida, on February 7, 2022, challenging the use of Automatic License Plate Readers (ALPRs) to track all drivers...
by judy.pino@ncla.legal | Jan 19, 2022 | Covid-19 Articles, Jenin Younes, Opinion, Sheng Li
Any statute in a storm appears to be the Biden administration’s approach to imposing a vaccine mandate. The Procurement Act of 1949 was created “to provide the Federal Government with an economical and efficient system for” procurement. Like the OSHA statute that the...