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CDC’s Unlawful Eviction Moratorium Puts Problem Squarely on Shoulders of Property Owners

June 17, 2021
  NCLA Litigation Counsel Caleb Kruckenberg joins “The Steve Gruber Show” on 1240 WJIM to discuss NCLA’s case against CDC’s unlawful eviction moratorium. The unlawful order, meant to curb the spread of Covid-19, has hit mom-and-pop housing providers across the country particularly hard, as they struggle to pay the mortgages and taxes related to their…
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Gulf of Mexico charter operators fight back against lawsuit mandating electronic monitoring

June 15, 2021
A week after receiving class-action status in its lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Commerce, NOAA, and NOAA Fisheries, a nonpartisan civil rights group has filed an amended lawsuit regarding NOAA Fisheries plan to monitor charter boats in the Gulf of Mexico. Read the full article TweetShareShare0 Shares
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Suit challenging new charter boat rules OK’d as class action

June 14, 2021
Six captains and five companies from Florida and Louisiana can represent others in a lawsuit challenging new federal regulations for nearly 1,300 charter boats across the Gulf of Mexico, a federal judge has ruled. U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan certified the suit early this month as a class action for the people who take small…
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Charter boat captains win class action certification against federal government

June 11, 2021
Charter boat captains in Southwest Florida and around the Gulf are now part of a class action lawsuit against a federal agency over mandatory electronic monitoring. Last year, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s marine fisheries created the For-Hire Electronic Reporting Amendment mandating that charter and head boats with federal permits needed to buy and…
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No ‘Twitter Exception’ for Federalist Publisher, NLRB Argues

June 8, 2021
The National Labor Relations Board defended before a federal appeals court its decision that the publisher of the conservative online magazine The Federalist illegally threatened employees when he tweeted he would send them “back to the salt mine” if they tried to form a union. Read the full article TweetShareShare0 Shares
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Deja Vu as Ed Department Once Again Revisits the Contentious Landscape of Title IX

June 7, 2021
Reversing the rule could “once again force schools to deprive accused students and faculty of constitutionally guaranteed safeguards like the right to confront the evidence used against them,” said Caleb Kruckenberg, an attorney with the New Civil Liberties Alliance. He added that despite multiple federal courts upholding due process in campus disciplinary hearings, “the department…
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