In today's edition of the KLJ Blog, newly-elected KLJ Editor-in-Chief Jordan Shewmaker discusses the recent case Honeycutt v. United States and the imminent resolution of a circuit split on the conflicting liability standards used by the circuits in interpreting federal criminal forfeiture statutes.
Read MoreIn this week's KLJ Blog, Staff Editor Sarah Quarles makes her case for supporting the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe of North and South Dakota in their protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Read MoreIn this edition of the KLJO Blog, Staff Editor Alexander Risman describes the troublesome constitutional issues relating to President Trump's attempts to back the United States out of the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Read MoreIn today's edition of the KLJ Blog, Staff Editor Linsey K. Hogg describes the Fourth Amendment implications of warrantless cell phone location tracking and its treatment among the circuits.
Read MoreIn today's edition of the KLJ Blog, Staff Editor Nathan R. Hardymon describes the problem that arises when police officers who do not speak Spanish attempt to give Spanish-speaking detainees their Miranda warnings.
Read MoreIn this week's edition of the KLJ Blog, Staff Editor Christopher Johnson discusses an upcoming Supreme Court case that will decide the quantum of educational benefits that must be provided to students with learning disabilities.
Read MoreIn today's edition of the KLJ Blog, staff editor Lydia Curtz describes the uncertain constitutionality of the continued conflict against Islamic State.
Read MoreIn this election season edition of the KLJ Blog, Staff Editor Rachel Taylor describes two recent cases striking down bans on ballot selfies and political yard signs as unconstitutional infringements on free speech.
Read MoreIn this week's edition of the KLJ Blog, Staff Editor Gabrielle Fulton compares the animal abuse laws of Illinois and Kentucky.
Read MoreIn today's KLJ blog, Staff Editor Victoria K. Boland describes legal avenues for property recovery in the context of conflicts between art museums and the descendants of Nazi spoliation victims.
Read MoreIn this week's edition of the KLJO blog, Staff Editor Christopher M. Barber describes the troubled advent of EMV chip-enabled credit cards and the contractually-enforced shift of fraud liability onto merchants that refuse to embrace the chip.
Read MoreIn this week's edition of the Kentucky Law Journal Blog, Staff Editor Katelyn Brown describes the historical implications of a recent unpublished Tax Court opinion finding that a filer could validly plead the Fifth Amendment to withhold the source of illegal income reported in his tax returns.
Read MoreIn today's edition of the Kentucky Law Journal Online, KLJ Articles Editor Cody S. Barnett describes the history of the Supreme Court's interpretation of the infamous SEC Rule 10b-5 in light of the upcoming insider trading case, Salmon v. United States.
Read MoreIn this season-opening blog post for the Kentucky Law Journal Online, staff editor Brandon Magner offers some historical perspective on the beleaguered Supreme Court nomination of D.C. Circuit Judge Merrick Garland.
Read MoreIn this week's edition of the Kentucky Law Journal Online, staff editor Benjamin Harris discusses a recent Kentucky Supreme Court decision allowing counsel in a medical malpractice suit to initiate ex parte contact with physicians who are treating the opposition.
Read MoreIn this week’s edition of the Kentucky Law Journal Online, Online Content Editor Mary Ann Lee discusses the legal status of the drug Kratom and its potential use as a treatment for drug addiction.
Read MoreIn this week’s edition of the Kentucky Law Journal Online, Staff Editor Lindsey Hale illuminates the legal thicket of on-demand employee classification.
Read MoreIn this week's edition of the Kentucky Law Journal Online, Staff Editor Jade Morgan describes the legal background of Seaworld's recent decision to halt its captive breeding program for orca whales.
Read MoreIn this week's edition of the Kentucky Law Journal Online, Editor in Chief R. Nicholas Rabold addresses the impact of new U.S. Treasury Regulations on the practice of corporate inversions.
Read MoreIn this edition of the Kentucky Law Journal Online, Staff Editor Parker DeAgano illuminates a wage discrimination dispute concerning the compensation of the U.S. Women's National Soccer Team.
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