NEWS FROM WASHINGTON • Covington Snags DLA Piper's D.C. Managing Partner • Civil Liberties Group Backs Supreme Court Protester • Senate Unlikely to End Filibusters For Supreme Court, Professor Says • Ex-North Dakota Attorney General Drops Case Against Georgetown Law • NLRB Headed to New DC HQ • Special Report: Under Contract The managing partner of DLA Piper's Washington office, Frank "Rusty" Conner III, has jumped ship to Covington & Burling along with financial institutions M&A specialist Michael Reed. Read More » The American Civil Liberties Union of the Nation's Capital jumps into a First Amendment dispute in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, backing a protester who successfully challenged the federal law restricting certain expressive activity at the U.S. Supreme Court. Read More » The Senate is unlikely to eliminate the filibusters over U.S. Supreme Court nominees because the confirmation hearings are too high profile, Georgetown University Law Center Professor Victoria Nourse said last week. Read More » Nicholas Spaeth, the former attorney general of North Dakota, is dropping his appeal of a trial judge's order dismissing his age discrimination lawsuit against Georgetown University Law Center. Read More » The National Labor Relations Board this year will leave its headquarters in downtown Washington, D.C., for a building that is two blocks from Nationals Park, the U.S. General Services Administration announced Friday. Read More » The U.S. government has slashed spending on outside legal work for a third consecutive year, leaving law firms and other legal services contractors with the smallest pot of money since President Barack Obama took office. Read More » SUPREME COURT CASES |
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