
"* Federal judiciary can stay open until October 17 amid shutdown. After that? Have you guys ever seen The Purge? [ Reuters] * Lawyer giving out roadside legal advice. Did you know lawyers could provide pro bono work without a corrupt quid pro quo? [ Axios] * E-Verify goes down after government shutdown in perfect encapsulation of how the administration doesn't care about immigration beyond authorizing masked vigilantism. [ Law360]"
"* AI threatens data privacy, which is somehow something that we need to keep telling people. [ Bloomberg Law News] * Barrister apprenticeships coming to the UK. [ Legal Cheek] * Judge suspended for showing leniency to defendant to make sure she wouldn't lose her baby while her claim was handled. [ ABA Journal] * DOJ asking for stays in antitrust cases in light of the shutdown. [ National Law Journal]"
Federal judiciary can remain open until October 17 despite a government shutdown, creating uncertainty afterward. A lawyer offered roadside legal advice and noted that attorneys can provide pro bono services without corrupt quid pro quo. E-Verify went offline after the shutdown, illustrating administrative neglect toward immigration beyond authorizing vigilante actions. Artificial intelligence poses renewed threats to data privacy and triggers ongoing warnings. Barrister apprenticeships are being introduced in the United Kingdom to expand legal training pathways. A judge was suspended for showing leniency to preserve a defendant's pregnancy while her claim was processed. The Department of Justice sought stays in antitrust cases because of the shutdown.
Read at Above the Law
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]