Pennsylvania State Capitol

The Trump campaign was dealt another blow in the 2020 election as Philadelphia has become the latest state to reject a lawsuit challenging the state's counting of what the campaign alleges are "illegal votes." Republican efforts led by U.S. Representative Mike Kelly allege that approximately 2.5 million mail-in ballots were... Read More »

Koyukuk River in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from Bush Plane during Winter

Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) enjoyed federal protections for more than six decades. The region is home to native animals, including polar bears, which are already a vulnerable species thanks to climate change. Caribou, gray wolves, migrating birds, and other creatures also roam on or soar above the pristine... Read More »

Pharmacist holding medicine

Two drug industry trade groups filed lawsuits to challenge the Trump administration’s finalized rule to lower drug prices. The administration’s policy will enforce the Department of Health and Human Services authority to create and implement a new payment model based on the “most favored nation” price that will lower the... Read More »

U.S. Supreme Court

In a case that challenged a 2019 Pennsylvania statute that permits no-excuse absentee voting, Pennsylvania representative Mike Kelly and seven other Trump supporters sued the Commonwealth on the grounds that the mail-in voting in last month’s election was unconstitutional. They argued that altering the existing election law (which allowed for... Read More »

Justice Martin J. Jenkins

Martin J. Jenkins, a former NFL defensive back, prosecutor, civil rights attorney, youth group mentor and award-winning public servant, was sworn in as the newest Associate Justice of the California Supreme Court last week. He is also openly gay and black, but there’s really no reason to focus on those... Read More »

Supreme Court

On Friday, December 4th, the Supreme Court announced plans to review the legal basis of mandatory work requirements for Medicaid participants. While work requirements for welfare programs were introduced in the 1990s under the Clinton Administration’s push to “end welfare as we know it,” controversy exists over imposing such conditions... Read More »

Passport in hand

The District Court of Nevada filed a decision in favor of a transgender man regarding his right to obtain a U.S. passport in his identifying gender. Oliver Bruce Morris had been denied a passport in 2018 for not submitting certification from a doctor that he had completed the medical treatment... Read More »

Capitol building in Frankfort, Kentucky

18 Kentucky bar applicants are recovering from whiplash after 15 of them were told they had passed the October Kentucky bar exam when they, in fact, had not. Conversely, three others were told they had failed the bar exam when they had actually passed. The erroneous results are being blamed... Read More »

A woman checks her cell phone as she waits in line to enter the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C on November 29, 2017 for a hearing on Carpenter v. United States.

The ACLU has filed a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The lawsuit alleges that under the Trump administration, these agencies purchased cell phone data that tracked the location of millions of immigrants. The ACLU filed the... Read More »

Assemblymember James C. Ramos and wife Terri Ramos

Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law three new laws authored by James Ramos, the first member of a Native American tribe to serve in the California state legislature. The three laws promote the rights of Native Americans in the state and will go into effect on January 1, 2021. James... Read More »

Kyle Rittenhouse, left, walks along Sheridan Road in Kenosha, Wis., with another armed civilian on Aug. 25

John Pierce, a California attorney representing 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse, has stepped away from the defense team after prosecutors raised ethical concerns about Pierce. Rittenhouse is facing murder charges after fatally shooting two people and wounding another during the Kenosha protest that gained national attention this past summer in Kenosha, Wisconsin.... Read More »

DACA Si Trump No

New York Federal Judge Nicholas Garaufis fully restored the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program on December 4, overturning Trump’s decision not to comply with the Obama-era initiative for children of illegal immigrants brought to the US. Under Obama’s plan, DACA children, previously known as DREAMers, were provided a... Read More »

A worker picks Cannabis inside a greenhouse on Nov. 10, in Kasese, Uganda.

Following last year’s recommendation from the World Health Organization (WHO), The United Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) voted last week to delete cannabis from its most “highly addictive and highly liable to abuse” category and reclassify it as a drug with potential for therapeutic medical use. CND’s categories, called... Read More »

woman opening bottle of legal marijuana from dispensary close up

A sweeping bill to decriminalize marijuana was passed on December 4 as the Democrat-led US House of Representatives voted 228-164 to approve the ‘Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act’ (MORE Act). The new law would reschedule cannabis and remove it from the long list of federally controlled substances while also... Read More »

MTA employees clean subway tracks at 96th street station, last stop of Q line during COVID-19 pandemic

Five New York Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) employees have been charged with extensive overtime fraud for filling out timesheets, stating they worked longer hours than they actually did. The four employees who worked for the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) included Thomas Caputo, 56, Joseph Ruzzo, 56, John Nugent, 50,... Read More »