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Texas Judge Shoots Down Challenge to SEC 'Gag Order'

A Texas federal judge denied a former defendant’s bid to lift what his lawyers called a “gag order” in his settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday. U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor of Fort Worth said there had been no change in the law or violation of due process to justify modifying Christopher Novinger…
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Chamber Says NLRB Tesla Case Shows Union Speech Bias

A National Labor Relations Board ruling that Tesla CEO Elon Musk unlawfully discouraged unionizing in a tweet violates the First Amendment and signifies a trend toward the board favoring union speech over employer speech, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has argued in the Fifth Circuit. Published in Law360 TweetShareShare0 Shares
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Fed Circ Upholds VA Cutoff on Resuming Disability Benefits

Partially disabled veterans whose benefits are suspended when they are recalled to active duty are not automatically entitled to benefits once their tours of duty end, a divided federal appeals court held. In a 2-1 decision Friday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit upheld a Veterans Affairs regulation under which the veteran…
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EPA Sued Over Colorado Mine Catastrophe

The Environmental Protection Agency has been sued for taking over property adjacent to the 2015 Gold King Mine catastrophe in Colorado to stage cleanup equipment and projects, and keeping it, never paying for it or even for renting it. The case seeks millions of dollars in damages and has been submitted to the U.S. Court…
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Prominent Law Professor Sues His School Over Vaccine Policy

Imposing a constitutionally dubious vaccine policy at a public university that not only has some of the top classical liberal law professors in the country but is also intimately connected with a global network of freedom advocates is a recipe for a lawsuit. That’s exactly what George Mason University learned recently when it imposed a school-wide vaccine mandate for students, faculty,…
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Colorado mine owner seeks US compensation over 2015 spill

The owner of an inactive southwestern Colorado mine that was the source of a disastrous 2015 spill that fouled rivers in three Western states has sued the U.S. government, seeking nearly $3.8 million in compensation for using his land in its cleanup. Read the full article TweetShareShare0 Shares
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