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Mail-Order Abortion Pills Hit Pause as U.S. Appeals Court Steps In

Mail-Order Abortion Pills Hit Pause as U.S. Appeals Court Steps In

A federal appeals court in the United States has, for now, shut the door on a key pathway for accessing abortion medication—delivery by mail. The ruling, issued by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, puts a temporary halt to a regulatory shift that had allowed the abortion drug mifepristone to be prescribed …

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Big Law’s Cash Engine Keeps Roaring as 2026 Opens with Double-Digit Surge

Big Law’s Cash Engine Keeps Roaring as 2026 Opens with Double-Digit Surge

The money machine inside America’s largest law firms hasn’t slowed—it’s humming louder. Fresh figures from a Wells Fargo survey show that major U.S. firms kicked off 2026 with a striking 13.1% jump in revenue for the first quarter, outpacing the already-strong growth seen a year earlier. The data draws from more than 100 firms, including …

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Seashells, Numbers, and the Constitution: Why the Case Against Comey May Collapse

Seashells, Numbers, and the Constitution: Why the Case Against Comey May Collapse

A beach photo, a pair of numbers, and a criminal indictment—on paper, it sounds dramatic. In practice, legal scholars say the case against James Comey may be built on sand. The controversy traces back to a social media post showing seashells arranged to read “86 47.” Prosecutors argue the numbers carried a threatening message aimed …

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Bench vs. Brief: Maryland Judges Push Back Against Federal Lawsuit They Call a Dangerous First

Bench vs. Brief: Maryland Judges Push Back Against Federal Lawsuit They Call a Dangerous First

A courtroom clash is simmering far beyond any single case file. This time, it’s not a dispute between litigants—it’s judges themselves stepping into the fray. A group of 14 federal judges from Maryland has urged an appeals court to shut the door on a lawsuit brought by the administration of Donald Trump, describing the legal …

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Gavel and Gravity: How the Roberts Court Recast America’s Voting Rights Map

Gavel and Gravity: How the Roberts Court Recast America’s Voting Rights Map

The law once hailed as the crown jewel of the civil rights era is looking increasingly stripped of its shine. In a sharply divided 6–3 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court delivered another decisive blow to the Voting Rights Act of 1965, dismantling what many legal scholars describe as its last meaningful safeguard. The decision, driven …

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Big Law’s Golden Gates Still Guarded by Elite Campuses

Big Law’s Golden Gates Still Guarded by Elite Campuses

The promise of a more open road into America’s most lucrative law firms hasn’t quite materialised. Despite a shift in recruiting practices, the pipeline into “Big Law” remains tightly controlled by a small circle of prestigious law schools. Fresh data from the American Bar Association paints a stark picture: in 2025, just 16 law schools …

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In Court, Musk Shrugs Off the Details—Says He Trusted the Promise, Not the Paper

In Court, Musk Shrugs Off the Details—Says He Trusted the Promise, Not the Paper

The courtroom in Oakland turned into a battleground of memory and intent as Elon Musk faced sharp questioning over what he knew—and what he didn’t—about OpenAI’s evolution into a profit-driven enterprise. Pressed on a 2017 document outlining a structural shift, Musk offered a blunt admission: he skimmed the surface. The “headline,” he said, stuck. The …

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A Fragile Lifeline on Trial: Supreme Court Signals Openness to Ending Protections for Haitians, Syrians

A Fragile Lifeline on Trial: Supreme Court Signals Openness to Ending Protections for Haitians, Syrians

Outside the marble steps in Washington, chants rose in defense of a legal shield many immigrants have leaned on for years. Inside, the tone was more clinical—but no less consequential. The U.S. Supreme Court spent the day weighing whether a sitting president can pull the plug on Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for thousands who have …

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$5.5 Billion Reckoning: Purdue Pharma Sentenced, but Justice Still Feels Out of Reach

$5.5 Billion Reckoning: Purdue Pharma Sentenced, but Justice Still Feels Out of Reach

In a courtroom heavy with grief and memory, the company behind OxyContin was handed a $5.5 billion penalty—an outcome that closes one chapter of a sprawling legal saga while leaving many still searching for closure. The sentencing stems from Purdue Pharma’s earlier admission that it misled regulators and incentivized doctors to push opioid prescriptions. With …

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Silence Before the Storm: Lawsuits Claim Missed Warnings in Canada’s School Massacre

Silence Before the Storm: Lawsuits Claim Missed Warnings in Canada’s School Massacre

A cluster of lawsuits now winding through a U.S. courtroom has placed OpenAI and its chief Sam Altman at the center of a deeply unsettling question: what happens when a machine sees danger coming—but no one acts? Families shattered by the mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge have taken legal action, arguing that warning signs surfaced …

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