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Supreme Court Hints Eviction Moratorium Was Compensable Takings

September 2, 2021
Covid-19 Articlescategory_listSheng Li
  Last week, the Supreme Court released an eight-page per curiam opinion holding that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) lacked statutory authority to impose and repeatedly extend an eviction moratorium that covered most of the country. The Court reasoned that the public-health statute upon which CDC relied—which referenced measures such as “fumigation”…
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Administrative Surveillance Violates the Fourth Amendment

August 19, 2021
Max Hyams
Photo: The high-capacity freezer trawler, F/V Relentless. NCLA represents the owners in Relentless Inc. v. U.S. Dept. of Commerce Fourth Amendment rights are crucial in preventing government abuse and securing privacy. It is then of little import whether that abuse or invasion of privacy is perpetrated by local police or the IRS; in both cases,…
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The Securities and Exchange Commission Fails on 13 of 14 Counts Against NCLA Clients

August 6, 2021
John J. Vecchione
After a near decade-long Ahab-like pursuit alleging NCLA clients Spartan Securities Group, Island Stock Transfer, principals Carl Dilley, Micah Eldred, and Dave Lopez were knowingly involved in a massive fraud involving creating fake “shell” companies, SEC lost its entire case against Mr. Lopez, and all but one relatively minor civil charge against Spartan, Island, Mr.…
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Justice Kagan and Stare Decisis

July 29, 2021
Richard Samp
  Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan has staked out a position for herself as the Supreme Court’s foremost defender of stare decisis. That doctrine holds that today’s Court ought to stand by yesterday’s decisions. Respecting stare decisis sometimes means sticking to wrong decisions, because, as Justice Brandeis famously explained, it is usually “more important that…
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The Eleventh Circuit Helped Cement the Judiciary’s COVID Legacy in NCLA’s Challenge to the CDC Eviction Moratorium

July 23, 2021
Jared McClaincategory_listCovid-19 Articles
  Last week, a panel for the Eleventh Circuit in Brown v. Secretary of HHS determined that the U.S. Center for Disease Control likely lacked any power to issue its nationwide eviction moratorium, but two of the three judges still refused to block CDC’s unlawful order. The panel’s decision has the feel of a court…
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Deference Disregards Duty

July 16, 2021
Nathaniel Lawson
  Deference is ubiquitous in modern administrative law. Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC, Inc. is the most cited case in administrative law and one of the most cited Supreme Court cases in history, having been cited in more than 17,428 cases and 12,879 law review articles as of June 28, 2021. Many types of judicial…
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