资讯

Expert Opinion Particularized Pleading of Underlying Illegal Acts in the Second Circuit A discussion of the Second Circuit securities case, 'Gamm v.
On . May 16, 2016, the Supreme Court of the United States issued its decision in Robins v.Spokeo, No. 13–1339, 578 U. S. ____ (2016), putting to rest months of speculation as to whether the ...
Officials contended that they were following the “particularized assessment” procedure laid out by the appeals court. The reduction would leave the CFPB with about 200 employees.
Where the appellants did not own or occupy real property in close proximity to the challenged location, and failed to ...
In declarations to federal court, CFPB employees describe a hasty process to eliminate most of the agency's staff. "[A]ll that matters is the numbers," one employee said they were told by leaders.
Officials contended that they were following the “particularized assessment” procedure laid out by the appeals court. The reduction would leave the CFPB with about 200 employees.
This blog post is the second in a series of posts that Baker & Hostetler LLP is devoting to the significant decision Robins v. Spokeo, No. 13-1339, 537 U.S. ___ (2016) (Spokeo). Monday’s post ...
The question is whether a party seeking to intervene as a plaintiff as a matter of right under Rule 24(a)(2) must show that he has standing to sue – that he has suffered a concrete, particularized, ...
If allowed to take effect, several divisions within the CFPB would be extremely reduced or eliminated under the RIF. For example, the 487-member Division of Supervision would lose 437 employees ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is sending out mass layoff notices that appear to be in defiance of a court order blocking further layoffs following DOGE-induced cuts.
The state’s highest court strengthened the right to privacy Wednesday, ruling that police who want to seize a cellphone cannot rely on a common-sense belief that criminals use cellphones to talk ...
Reporting from San Francisco — Police agencies generally must tell the public the names of officers involved in shootings, the California Supreme Court decided Thursday. The state’s highest ...