Archives

    September 22, 2017

    Feature

    1. Panelists discuss civil forfeiture during Constitution Day event at WMU-Cooley
    2. Scholar to speak at labor law symposium Oct. 19 at Wayne Law
    3. Wayne County Probate Court 2017 Attorney Training
    4. Daily Briefs
    5. Know more. Understand better.

    Column

    1. Summer internship in Dubai serves as a real eye-opener
    2. Now is the time to diversify internationally
    3. Cutting federal Great Lakes funding would not be an environmental and economic crisis
    4. Texas mandates on the enforcement of immigration laws unconstitutional
    5. The end of an era
    6. New York Bar on ethically using online legal marketing services

    Business

    1. The ATM at 50: How it's changed consumer behavior
    2. When nearly everything's a winner, gold investors get antsy
    3. Chew on this: Dental coverage gives protection within limits
    4. On the Money Chew on this: Dental coverage gives protection within limits
    5. Sunshine Laws Request denied: States try to block access to public records Freedom-of-information advocates bracing for more fights next year
    6. Florida Ex-prosecutors unsure if nursing home deaths involved crimes
    7. Washington Manafort offered to brief wealthy Russian during campaign
    8. Texas Investigators in Fort Worth review hundreds of cold cases Police increased emphasis on cold cases in 2002, solving an estimated128
    9. Of Mutual Interest When nearly everything's a winner, gold investors get antsy
    10. 'Medicare for all' could be cheaper than you think
    11. Texas mandates on the enforcement of immigration laws unconstitutional
    12. New York Bar on ethically using online legal marketing services
    13. How the government can steal your stuff: 6 questions about civil asset forfeiture answered

    Nation

    1. Request denied: States try to block access to public records
    2. Manafort offered to brief wealthy Russian during campaign
    3. National Roundup
    4. ABA News

    Courts

    1. Ex-prosecutors unsure if nursing home deaths involved crimes
    2. Investigators in Fort Worth review hundreds of cold cases