Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
President Trump slammed the "fake news media" Tuesday morning on Twitter before following up with criticism of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling against the travel ban as well as former Attorney General Loretta Lynch. "The Fake News Media has never been so wrong or so dirty.
New York [U.S.], June 13 : Reacting furiously on twitter to the San Francisco-based 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling against reinstating his revised executive order limiting travel from six-Muslim majority countries, President Donald Trump emphasized that the travel ban is essential at such a dangerous time in America and the world. Trump tweeted "Well, as predicted, the 9th Circuit did it again - Ruled against the TRAVEL BAN at such a dangerous time in the history of our country.
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the the executive order singles out Muslims -- and points to the president's June 5 Tweet storm as evidence. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a Hawaii judge's order halting the centerpieces of President Donald Trump's executive order limiting travel from certain nations.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions says he disagrees with a U.S. appeals court's decision to keep blocking President Donald Trump's travel ban. Sessions said Monday that the ban is necessary to protect national security.
A second court upheld a Maryland judge's ruling that also blocked Trump's 90-day ban on travelers from Libya, Iran, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. Photo: Reuters President Donald Trump suffered another legal setback on Monday as a second federal appeals court refused to revive his travel ban on people entering the United States from six Muslim-majority nations in a dispute headed to the US Supreme Court.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld an earlier decision by a federal judge in Hawaii to block the government from enforcing Trump's executive order. Richard Jones spent 17 years in a Kansas prison before attorneys discovered doppelganger Ricky Amos and linked him to the crime.
The ruling from the liberal Ninth Circuit is the final step before the Supreme Court, which is receiving responses today to the Justice Department's request that it uphold the travel ban. President Trump's travel ban struck down by second appeals court The ruling from the liberal Ninth Circuit is the final step before the Supreme Court, which is receiving responses today to the Justice Department's request that it uphold the travel ban.
"Another federal court has ruled against President Trump's revised executive order limiting travel from six predominately Muslim countries," CNN reports.
The California Supreme Court issued its long awaited ruling in Mendoza v. Nordstrom, in which it clarified California's so-called "day of rest" rule, which guarantees employees "one day's rest therefrom in seven," prohibits employers from "causing" its employees to work more than six days in seven, and exempts employees when, inter alia , the total hours of employment do not exceed 30 hours in any week or six hours in any one day.
A federal appeals court has reinstated litigation against a pharmaceutical company in a young man's death, ruling a lower court had improperly excluded experts' testimony. Maxx Wendell, who died at age 21 in 2007 of hepatosplenic T-cell lymphoma, a very rare and aggressive cancer, had been treated for many years previously with a combination of drugs for inflammatory bowel disease, according to Friday's ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco in Stephen Wendell; Lisa Wendell et al. v.
An extraordinary stream of tweets Monday morning by President Donald Trump attacked his own Justice Department's revised travel ban as "watered down, politically correct," and pushed for expedited handling of the ban by the U.S. Supreme Court. "The courts are slow and political!" Trump wrote before 7 a.m. Eastern Time, also stating that "In any event we are EXTREME VETTING people coming into the U.S. in order to help keep our country safe."
Nineteen lawmakers are testing their luck at the Supreme Court, asking the justices to take up a case on whether military reservists' unfair dismissal claims can be forced into arbitration by their civilian bosses. Because the case involves veterans' rights, the legislators say they are hopeful the Supreme Court of John Roberts will temper its usual affinity for agreements waiving employees' right to sue.
But groups opposing the ban were confident the Supreme Court would eventually side with them and lower courts to strike down the executive order . While the Supreme Court is unlikely to hear the case before the fall since special summer sessions of the Supreme Court are rare, the Government has asked for an emergency stay of the current injunction so the travel ban can go into effect while awaiting a fall hearing.
President Donald Trump's administration asked the US Supreme Court on Thursday to reinstate its temporary ban on travellers from six Muslim majority nations despite repeated setbacks in the lower courts The administration said the travel ban was needed so it could evaluate existing screening methods protocols and set new ones. Given the case's high-profile nature, the full Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Virginia heard the arguments last week -- bypassing the usual initial three-judge panel -- for the first time in a quarter of a century.
The Trump administration on Thursday asked the Supreme Court to let it move forward with the president's plan to temporarily ban citizens from six mostly Muslim countries, elevating a divisive legal battle involving national security and religious discrimination to the nation's highest court. Department of Justice lawyers asked the court to overturn a decision of the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit that kept in place a freeze on President Donald Trump's revised ban.
Enigma Software Group pressing its claims against Malwarebytes for predatory business practices on appeal. Enigma Software Group preparing appellate filings to further prosecute its lawsuit.
A federal appeals court upheld Thursday a lower court's temporary block of key provisions of President Donald Trump's revised executive order banning travel from some Middle East and African countries. In the decision, Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals Chief Judge Roger Gregory writes that the executive order "in text speaks with vague words of national security, but in context drips with religious intolerance, animus, and discrimination."
In another legal setback for President Donald Trump, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals refused on Thursday to lift an injunction against his revised travel and refugee order, preventing the White House from suspending new visas for people from six Muslim-majority countries, as this decision took another step on the way to a likely showdown on the matter at the U.S. Supreme Court. As in earlier rulings, the judges cited the President's own words calling for a "Muslim ban," ruling that the order was basically an effort to target "Muslims for exclusion from the United States."
A three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Seattle Monday pressed attorneys for the Trump administration and the State of Hawaii on whether President Donald Trump's statements, both as a candidate and as president, render his revised travel ban unconstitutional, and whether Trump has disavowed his call for a "Muslim ban." Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey B. Wall asked the appeals court to reverse U.S. District Court Judge Derrick K. Watson's March 16 order that blocked the president's second travel ban just hours before it was to go into effect - a ruling the president called an "unprecedented judicial overreach" that made America "look weak."
A federal appeals court has rejected a lawsuit that aimed to cancel Google's trademark by arguing that "google" is now synonymous with searching the internet. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Tuesday it was not enough to show that people use the verb "google" generically to refer to searching the web.