The move was preceded by wave of resignations of prosecutors, each refusing to sign the motion and some criticizing the Justice Department order to do so in scathing terms.
Opinion
Prosecutors’ mishandling of Miami Death Row case shows justice can’t take shortcuts | OpinionCorey Smith now faces only five more years in state prison, though he’s expected to remain in federal prison for at least another 25 years on a separate case. | Opinion ...
A morgue manager at Harvard Medical School is accused of stealing body parts and shipping them across the country. Was the ...
The revelations came in part from the top federal prosecutor in Manhattan, Danielle R. Sassoon, who resigned rather than heed ...
Julie Levinson Werner and Sandra Halbing of Lowenstein Sandler discuss current DEI-related practices among businesses and ...
Emil Bove sat in lower Manhattan, watching on television as a pro-Trump mob invaded the US Capitol, violently attacking police and temporarily causing Congress to suspend its certification of Joe ...
The Justice Department says it won't pull out of the Supreme Court case over Tennessee's ban on gender treatments for ...
On these facts, a full-time judge must decline to serve as a “core investigator” in a university’s health equity research ...
Former Beauty Queen, Civil Rights Attorney Killed In DC Plane Crash: Remembering Kiah Duggins The fight for justice does not end with Kiah Duggins. Friends, family, and supporters are coming together ...
Harvard University is violating Massachusetts law by paying employees monthly, according to a class action suit by an adjunct lecturer. Graduate School of Education adjunct Kimberly Topping claims ...
Harvard University agreed to use a broader definition of antisemitism in its nondiscrimination policies and will hire an administrator to consult on all complaints of antisemitism, under settlement ...
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