Media Room
In the News
News Search
Landlord Challenges CFPB Rule on Eviction Moratorium Notices

A rental property manager in Tennessee has sued to block a U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule requiring notice be given to delinquent residential renters about a nationwide eviction ban, saying it runs counter to rulings finding the ban invalid. The Property Management Connection (PMC) and others filed the lawsuit in Nashville federal court on…
Read
Court-Packing Would Decimate the Court’s Credibility

NCLA’s Executive Director and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth joins “National Report” on Newsmax to discuss the dangers associated with the plan to expand the Supreme Court. Key points: The Court depends on the credibility that is established by making decisions based on law, not politics. A decision from Biden’s Presidential Commission on the Supreme…
Read
Crypto Crackdown Drives ‘John Doe’ Record Demands from IRS

The IRS is seeking swaths of records from cryptocurrency companies on anonymous taxpayers as part of its broader effort to crack down on tax evasion in the industry. The demands involve the potential tax liabilities of unnamed taxpayers, and for that reason are known as John Doe summonses. The agency recently secured court permission to issue…
Read
Federal Court in Wyoming Asked to Block RFID Technology

Livestock producers represented by the Billings, MT cattlemen’s group known as R-CALF say they have a “right” to use “traditional low-cost methods related to animal identification and traceability.” But USDA’s Animal Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) with growing support from such industry leaders as Tyson Foods wants to soon require “radio frequency identification (RFID) ear…
Read
Parents Defend Electric Shock as Extreme Tool for Extreme Cases

The D.C. Circuit appeared set Friday to reverse a federal ban on electric-shock devices, which are used to treat self-injurious or aggressive behavior in only one facility in the entire nation: the Judge Rotenberg Educational Center in Massachusetts. From Mother Jones and Mass Live to a 2012 video that shows a teenager being shocked and screaming for help, the center has…
Read
Justices Resolve Circuit Split on Challenges to Judge Appointments

WASHINGTON (CN) — The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Social Security applicants who challenge the appointment of administrative law judges are not required to first bring those claims to the agency before taking their case to court. The six individuals who brought the consolidated suit were denied disability benefits by the Social Security Administration. While they appealed…
Read