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Loper Bright Enterprises, et al., Petitioners v. Gina Raimondo, Secretary of Commerce, et al.
Case Number:
22-451
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2899 Other Statutes APA/Review Agency
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August 04, 2023
The Biggest Enviro Cases To Watch In 2023: Midyear Report
Courts around the U.S. will be weighing important environmental legal issues over the rest of 2023, including how much courts should defer to agency expertise, whether young plaintiffs can sue the U.S. over its energy policies and whether the Biden administration has overstepped in its efforts to enforce its environmental justice priorities.
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July 24, 2023
Pro-Business Interests Press Justices To End Chevron
Dozens of conservative think tanks, pro-business groups and U.S. lawmakers have sided with New Jersey's herring industry in a U.S. Supreme Court case that could roll back the deference courts grant to executive agencies to interpret unclear federal laws.
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July 21, 2023
The Litigation Jolting Health & Life Sciences In 2023's 2nd Half
A head-spinning spree of rulings and new lawsuits in 2023's first half is reverberating across the health care industry and auguring a dizzying denouement in the year's final months that may well upend assumptions about drug prices and approvals, the False Claims Act and the powers of federal regulators.
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July 21, 2023
Energy Litigation To Watch In The Second Half Of 2023
From climate change torts to fights over greenhouse gas emissions policymaking, federal and state courts will provide plenty of compelling theater for the energy industry in the second half of 2023. Here's a look into the litigation that energy attorneys will be watching closely in the second half of the year.
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July 20, 2023
IP Groups Urge Justices To Keep Chevron, But Amend It
The U.S. Supreme Court should reaffirm a decades-old precedent that instructs lower courts to defer to federal agencies' interpretations of ambiguous laws, but amend its scope, two nonprofit groups said in response to a group of New Jersey herring fishers' attempt to upend the prior ruling.
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July 17, 2023
NJ Fishers Urge Justices To Overrule Chevron
A group of New Jersey herring fishers on Monday told the U.S. Supreme Court it should overrule a decades-old precedent that instructs lower courts to defer to federal agencies' interpretations of ambiguous laws as they challenge regulations requiring the fishing industry to pay for federal inspectors onboard.
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May 25, 2023
Chevron Deference In Limelight As DeSantis Joins 2024 Race
Appearing on a powerful social media network owned by one of the world's wealthiest individuals, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has formally jumped into the 2024 presidential race and delivered a clear message to a nationwide audience: The U.S. Supreme Court should revise its jurisprudence affecting administrative law litigation.
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May 02, 2023
How Justices' Chevron Review Could Imperil Wage Rules
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision to weigh nixing Chevron deference could ultimately result in a ruling that would give ammunition to challengers of federal wage and hour regulations and chill future rulemaking by the government, attorneys said. Here, Law360 explores the impact of a potential ruling.
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May 01, 2023
'Momentous Day' As Justices Eye Chevron Deference Demise
The U.S. Supreme Court moved unmistakably Monday toward toppling its towering precedent providing legislative leeway to regulators, but the fall of the so-called Chevron deference wouldn't trigger the collapse of important agency policymaking, a BigLaw veteran who specializes in drafting legislation and challenging agency rules told Law360.
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May 01, 2023
Chevron At The High Court: Scalpel Or Sledgehammer?
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday once again showed its appetite for unsettling long-established legal theories by accepting a case challenging a nearly 40-year-old doctrine that requires judges to defer to federal agencies' expertise. The only question now is how far the justices will go in rethinking the framework.