Report: Alito accepted vacation from GOP donors
Alito vigorously disputed the findings in a Wall Street Journal opinion article
Amazon is accused of enrolling consumers into Prime without consent and making it hard to cancel
Amazon was sued Wednesday by the Federal Trade Commission.
Microsoft, U.S. regulators head to court over $69 billion deal that could reshape video gaming
The hearings will also be another test of the FTC's amped-up oversight of Big Tech.
U.S. approves first ‘lab-grown’ meat
Could America's Dairyland become obsolete? Will California's "happy cows," become irrelevant?
Evers signs Dairy Month bill to expand local roads improvement program and focus on improving agricultural roads
The bipartisan bill will create a program for WisDOT to give financial aid to communities with deteriorated agricultural roads and projects left out of other state aid programs.
McCarty Law Hires Sara Micheletti as a contract partner
Micheletti earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of St. Thomas School of Law in 2009 and has a bachelor’s degree in English and Political Science from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Wisconsin school district weighs banning ‘safe space’ signs that LGBTQ students find supportive
Leaders of a southeastern Wisconsin school district could vote next month to ban “safe space” signs in their buildings.
Wisconsin Assembly to vote on allowing pharmacists to prescribe birth control
The Wisconsin Assembly is scheduled to vote Wednesday on a Republican-authored, bipartisan bill opposed by anti-abortion groups that would allow pharmacists to prescribe and dispense birth control.
Aaron Rodgers is set to speak at a psychedelics conference
The conference and the thousands expected to attend it is an indication of the creep, or perhaps leap, of cultural acceptance for psychedelic substances.
Native American tribes say Supreme Court challenge was never just about foster kids
They say the case conservative groups raised on behalf of four Native American children was a stalking horse for legal arguments that could have broadly weakened tribal and federal authority.
Scent like marijuana enough to warrant police search, Wisconsin Supreme Court rules
To justify searching someone, police need enough evidence to believe that person has likely committed a crime.
Legal News
- Milwaukee County District Attorney, UWM police address Jewish threats
- With GOP convention over, Milwaukee weighs the benefits of hosting political rivals
- Secret Service head resigns as Congress formally investigates
- Milwaukee Police Department issues statement regarding video release policy
- GOP convention sets the stage for the Democratic convention in Chicago, activists and police say
- Survey: Harris has enough delegates to be nominee
- Outside the RNC, small Milwaukee businesses and their regulars tried to salvage a sluggish week
- Biden called to resign immediately after the president announces he won’t seek reelection
- Biden drops out of 2024 presidential race, endorses Harris
- Local PA cops allegedly thought Trump’s would-be assassin was Secret Service
- Biden-Lead Secret Service admits agency denied past requests by Trump’s campaign for tighter security
- Class action filed against Walgreens
Case Digests
- Ineffective Assistance of Counsel; Double Jeopardy; Sentencing
- Ineffective Assistance of Counsel; Sexual Assault-Prosecutorial Misconduct
- Contract-Negligence
- Criminal Law; Juvenile Law; Discovery
- Family Law; Child Support; Property Division First paragraph(s)
- Ineffective Assistance of Counsel- Exclusion of Evidence of Witness Bias
- Postconviction Relief-Sentencing-Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
- 14th Amendment – Due Process
- Criminal-Sentencing Guidelines – Enhancement
- Bankruptcy-Tax
- Civil Rights – 14th Amendment-Jury Instructions
- Contract; Foreclosure and Property