DOJ, IT specialist and classified info
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Google and DOJ wrap up a historic tech monopoly case
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President Donald Trump on Wednesday nominated Emil Bove, a high-ranking official in the Justice Department and one of his former defense attorneys, to become a federal appeals court judge. In posts on Truth Special,
Judge Hannah Dugan's legal team expanded their motion to dismiss her case, citing judicial immunity. The judge is accused of helping an illegal immigrant evade ICE agents.
Amid ongoing policy shifts in Washington, the federal government’s interest in pursuing civil cyber-fraud cases appears to be here to stay.
The Justice Department is dismissing lawsuits against several local police departments and ending investigations into patterns of unconstitutional policing. In a statement, the Assistant Attorney General of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division,
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The Department of Justice has reportedly informed victims’ families of two fatal Boeing 737 MAX8 aircraft crashes that it is dismissing criminal fraud charges against the airplane manufacturer.
Attorney General Pam Bondi told the American Bar Association (ABA) on Thursday that the Trump administration would no longer cooperate as the organization vets its judicial nominees. In a letter,
Two foreign nationals were indicted by federal grand juries, accused exporting U.S. military technology back to China.
Donald Trump announced he will tap Emil Bove, his former personal lawyer-turned-top Department of Justice official, to serve as a federal appeals court judge.
The DOJ won the initial trial, securing a ruling that Google used anticompetitive practices to maintain its monopoly in general search. During the time this case has taken to meander its way through the legal system, the online landscape has been radically altered, making it harder than ever to envision a post-Google Internet.
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The Department of Justice charged Democratic Congresswoman LaMonica McIver on Monday for protesting at an ICE facility in New Jersey, the same day the DOJ decided to settle a wrongful death lawsuit with January 6th rioter Ashli Babbitt’s family for nearly $5 million.
In a letter, Senator Josh Hawley asks the DOJ to open a formal investigation into the autonomous truck company TuSimple Holdings, a Chinese-owned company that had operated in the U.S.