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The Long Conference & Beyond: What’s Next at the Supreme Court

September 20, 2023

NCLA leads the charge against the massiOur panel of expert appellate litigators discuss a few upcoming Supreme Court cases, as well as several where cert is still pending, each with profound implications on the lawless and unaccountable Administrative State.

NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth moderates a panel of experienced appellate litigators, including NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Russ Ryan, Rich Samp, and John Vecchione. The panel will preview CFPB v. CFSA, Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, and SEC v. Jarkesy, as well as several other cases that could be granted at the Long Conference or shortly thereafter (e.g., Cargill v. Garland, Lemelson v. SEC, and Murphy, Murphy, and Gounaud v. SEC).

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The Long Conference & Beyond: What’s Next at the Supreme Court

NCLA leads the charge against the massiOur panel of expert appellate litigators discuss a few upcoming Supreme Court cases, as well as several where cert is still pending, each with profound implications on the lawless and unaccountable Administrative State.

NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth moderates a panel of experienced appellate litigators, including NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Russ Ryan, Rich Samp, and John Vecchione. The panel will preview CFPB v. CFSA, Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, and SEC v. Jarkesy, as well as several other cases that could be granted at the Long Conference or shortly thereafter (e.g., Cargill v. Garland, Lemelson v. SEC, and Murphy, Murphy, and Gounaud v. SEC).

What Missouri v. Biden Means for Free Speech

July 26, 2023

Join NCLA for a timely discussion of the dramatic July 4 injunction handed down by Judge Terry Doughty of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Louisiana. The injunction comes in the case of Missouri v. Biden, a lawsuit brought by NCLA along with Missouri and Louisiana against a vast array of federal agencies for their invidious efforts to censor the free expression of Americans on social media. The facts we uncovered are incredible: a massive censorship enterprise of unparalleled scope coming from scores of bureaucrats and agencies throughout the Administrative State, all designed to crush dissent and stifle any ideas (even true statements) the government found inconvenient.

NCLA Senior Litigator John Vecchione moderates the discussion between Zhonette Brown, who have litigated this case on behalf of the individual clients represented by NCLA, and John Sauer, Principal at James Otis Law Group, LLC, originally represented Missouri in the case as the state’s Solicitor General, and now represents Louisiana. He previously also served as Deputy Attorney General for Special Litigation for Missouri.

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What Missouri v. Biden Means for Free Speech

Join NCLA for a timely discussion of the dramatic July 4 injunction handed down by Judge Terry Doughty of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Louisiana. The injunction comes in the case of Missouri v. Biden, a lawsuit brought by NCLA along with Missouri and Louisiana against a vast array of federal agencies for their invidious efforts to censor the free expression of Americans on social media. The facts we uncovered are incredible: a massive censorship enterprise of unparalleled scope coming from scores of bureaucrats and agencies throughout the Administrative State, all designed to crush dissent and stifle any ideas (even true statements) the government found inconvenient.

NCLA Senior Litigator John Vecchione moderates the discussion between Zhonette Brown, who have litigated this case on behalf of the individual clients represented by NCLA, and John Sauer, Principal at James Otis Law Group, LLC, originally represented Missouri in the case as the state’s Solicitor General, and now represents Louisiana. He previously also served as Deputy Attorney General for Special Litigation for Missouri.

SCOTUS 2023 Term Review

July 13, 2023

Our panel discusses some of the decisions from what has turned out to be the most epic term since…well, last term!

Hear from a variety of experts, including: NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth; Senior Litigation Counsel Peggy Little, fresh off a 9-0 victory in SEC v. Cochran (consolidated with Axon v. FTC): Litigation Counsel Sheng Li, leading NCLA’s charge against the unlawful student loans struck down by the Court in Biden v. Nebraska; and others.

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SCOTUS 2023 Term Review

Our panel discusses some of the decisions from what has turned out to be the most epic term since…well, last term!

Hear from a variety of experts, including: NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth; Senior Litigation Counsel Peggy Little, fresh off a 9-0 victory in SEC v. Cochran (consolidated with Axon v. FTC): Litigation Counsel Sheng Li, leading NCLA’s charge against the unlawful student loans struck down by the Court in Biden v. Nebraska; and others.

DOT Backs Down After NCLA Sues Over Unfair In-House Tribunals

June 7, 2023

NCLA successfully challenged the Department of Transportation’s unlawful and unconstitutional in-house tribunals. DOT subjected NCLA’s client, Polyweave Packaging Inc., to a six-year prosecution in one such tribunal for violating a law that does not exist. The prosecution flunked the most basic standards for fairness and impartiality because employees who shared an office acted as both prosecutor and judge.

NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth moderates a panel discussion with: Sheng Li, NCLA Litigation Counsel, who leads Polyweave’s lawsuits against DOT; Neil Werthmann, Polyweave’s Owner and President; and Jerry Cox, who has represented countless clients in DOT’s abusive administrative proceedings.

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DOT Backs Down After NCLA Sues Over Unfair In-House Tribunals

NCLA successfully challenged the Department of Transportation’s unlawful and unconstitutional in-house tribunals. DOT subjected NCLA’s client, Polyweave Packaging Inc., to a six-year prosecution in one such tribunal for violating a law that does not exist. The prosecution flunked the most basic standards for fairness and impartiality because employees who shared an office acted as both prosecutor and judge.

NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth moderates a panel discussion with: Sheng Li, NCLA Litigation Counsel, who leads Polyweave’s lawsuits against DOT; Neil Werthmann, Polyweave’s Owner and President; and Jerry Cox, who has represented countless clients in DOT’s abusive administrative proceedings.

SCOTUS Confirms Right to Challenge Agencies in Court

April 27, 2023

Focus Area:

Due Process Violations

The due process of law guarantees a right to be held to account only through the processes of an impartial court—something administrative tribunals violate every day.

Due Process Violations

After seven years of an uphill battle challenging the adjudicatory process at the Securities and Exchange Commission, Michelle Cochran’s backbreaking journey has paid off. In a historic and unanimous Supreme Court victory in Axon v. FTC consolidated with SEC v. Cochran, the highest court in the land declared earlier this month that Michelle can, indeed, challenge the constitutionality of the agency’s adjudicatory process (and even the constitutionality of the agency itself) before undergoing yet another administrative adjudication.

As Justice Gorsuch remarked after describing the long and painful path taken by NCLA’s client to get to this point: “This is what a win looks like.” But now what

NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth moderates a discussion with our expert panelists: Greg Garre, partner at Latham & Watkins, and Peggy Little, Senior Litigation Counsel at NCLA, to answer that very question.

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SCOTUS Confirms Right to Challenge Agencies in Court

After seven years of an uphill battle challenging the adjudicatory process at the Securities and Exchange Commission, Michelle Cochran’s backbreaking journey has paid off. In a historic and unanimous Supreme Court victory in Axon v. FTC consolidated with SEC v. Cochran, the highest court in the land declared earlier this month that Michelle can, indeed, challenge the constitutionality of the agency’s adjudicatory process (and even the constitutionality of the agency itself) before undergoing yet another administrative adjudication.

As Justice Gorsuch remarked after describing the long and painful path taken by NCLA’s client to get to this point: “This is what a win looks like.” But now what

NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth moderates a discussion with our expert panelists: Greg Garre, partner at Latham & Watkins, and Peggy Little, Senior Litigation Counsel at NCLA, to answer that very question.

The Surveillance State Suffers Defeat

March 29, 2023

Just because you work in a regulated industry doesn’t mean the government can watch you all the time. NCLA successfully challenged an unlawful and unconstitutional regulation by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), which required 24-hour GPS tracking of recreational charter boat fishing vessels and reporting of confidential economic data.

Essentially, this federal agency was forcing all charter boat captains to wear ankle monitors like convicted criminals, despite not having done anything wrong! Thankfully, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that NMFS violated the Administrative Procedure Act and, likely, the Fourth Amendment. But is the case over? Will NMFS simply reissue a substantively similar surveillance rule? How can we stop the federal government from spying on us with a massive regime of suspicion-less administrative search?

NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel John Vecchione moderates a panel discussion with Greg Grimsal, member of GAMB (Gordon Arata Montgomery Barnett), and Robert Alt, President and CEO of The Buckeye Institute, who submitted an amicus brief in support of the successful challenge.

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The Surveillance State Suffers Defeat

Just because you work in a regulated industry doesn’t mean the government can watch you all the time. NCLA successfully challenged an unlawful and unconstitutional regulation by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), which required 24-hour GPS tracking of recreational charter boat fishing vessels and reporting of confidential economic data.

Essentially, this federal agency was forcing all charter boat captains to wear ankle monitors like convicted criminals, despite not having done anything wrong! Thankfully, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that NMFS violated the Administrative Procedure Act and, likely, the Fourth Amendment. But is the case over? Will NMFS simply reissue a substantively similar surveillance rule? How can we stop the federal government from spying on us with a massive regime of suspicion-less administrative search?

NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel John Vecchione moderates a panel discussion with Greg Grimsal, member of GAMB (Gordon Arata Montgomery Barnett), and Robert Alt, President and CEO of The Buckeye Institute, who submitted an amicus brief in support of the successful challenge.

In NCLA Relentless Case, Supreme Court Overturns Chevron DeferencePress Release >>
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