DOJ Jettisons Its Last Criminal No|Poach Prosecution
Fresh Off the Grill: No-Poach Agreements May Lead to Per Se ...
... the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Antitrust Division.2 Although the DOJ's four criminal prosecutions stemming from no-poach ...
Seventh Circuit: No-Poach Agreements May Be Per Se Illegal
As the Department of Justice Antitrust Division (DOJ) has spent the past ... jettisoned the per se rule too early.” Slip op. at 4. The ...
A Distant Mirror: American-Style Plea Bargaining Through the Eyes ...
American courts have largely jettisoned the constitutionally prescribed mechanism for adjudicating criminal charges in favor of an informal, unregulated, and ...
22-451 Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo (06/28/2024)
that the final “interpretation of the laws” would be “the proper and peculiar province of the courts.” The Federalist No. 78, p. 525 (A. Ham-.
Project 2025 Would Destroy the U.S. System of Checks and ...
The high court effectively rewrote the American constitution by deciding that presidents are largely immune from criminal prosecution and ...
Reinvigorating Criminal Antitrust? - UF Law Scholarship Repository
the criminal statutes from the DOJ in the late 1970s,224 and no fed- eral civil enforcement of any sort of Robinson-Patman cases by the. FTC,225 along with ...
Supreme Court sounds conflicted over Trump criminal immunity
The Supreme Court appeared conflicted over how to handle Donald Trump's claim that his presidency shielded him from federal prosecution during oral arguments ...
ALLEGATIONS OF SELECTIVE PROSECUTION - GovInfo
... the politicizing of Federal criminal investigations and prosecutions by the U.S. Justice Department. ... Well, no, the Justice Department will not release the ...
Justice Department says Boeing violated deal that avoided ...
Prosecutors will tell the court no later than July 7 how they plan to proceed, department said. New 737 Max jets crashed in 2018 in Indonesia ...
Constitutional Questions in Corporate Internal Investigations
Enforcement Implications,. N.Y.L.J. (Jan. 5, 2016). Two recent criminal prosecutions illustrate the potential consequences of corporate internal ...
Boeing accepts plea deal to avoid criminal trial over 737 Max crashes
The Justice Department says Boeing has agreed to plead guilty to a criminal fraud charge stemming from two deadly crashes of 737 Max ...
... the notable criminal justice rulings from last Term in SCOTUS issue · Bureau ... The Death Penalty Information Center's 1994 review of federal prosecutions found ...
Brian J. Smith - The National Law Review
DOJ Jettisons Its Last Criminal No-Poach Prosecution, but Antitrust Scrutiny of Labor Markets is Here to Stay - (Posted On Thursday, December 21, 2023); FTC ...
Employer Update: DOJ Drops Final No-Poach Prosecution Case
On November 13, 2023, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) moved to drop its last remaining no-poach criminal prosecution case, US v. Surgical Care Affiliates ...
Supreme Court ruling on Trump immunity could alter impeachment
... the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel in the 1970s. “Keep in mind that the criminal prosecution of a president prior to ...
Elkins v. United States | 364 U.S. 206 (1960)
"no suggestion that the defendants were committing, at the ... its history, formulated rules of evidence to be applied in federal criminal prosecutions.
US prosecutors recommend Justice Department criminally charge ...
US prosecutors are recommending to senior Justice Department (DOJ) officials that criminal charges be brought against Boeing after finding the planemaker ...
Environmental Crimes Bulletin - May 2024 - Department of Justice
On May 23, 2024, a jury convicted Tracy Coiteux on one count of conspiracy to violate the Clean Air Act (CAA) (18 USC § 371) and 11 counts of tampering with a ...
The Radical Strategy Behind Trump's Promise to 'Go After' Biden
Trump responded to his latest indictment by promising to appoint a special prosecutor ... the Justice Department no differently than any other ...
The Justice Department's dilemma over prosecuting politicians ...
The so-called 60-day rule requires federal prosecutors to delay public actions during the final stages of an election to avoid influencing the perceptions of a ...