+ Judge to rule on Portland troop deployment.

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The Afternoon Docket

The Afternoon Docket

A newsletter by Reuters and Westlaw

 

By Sara Merken

What's going on today?

  • A judge is set to decide today whether President Trump violated federal law when he sent National Guard troops to Portland, Oregon, following a closely watched trial over the president's power to deploy the military on U.S. soil.
  • Democrats' victories in Tuesday’s elections have exposed potential vulnerabilities in Trump’s hardline immigration agenda and bid to stamp out diversity, equity and inclusion policies, analysts said.
  • Bankrupt auto parts maker First Brands received court approval for an additional $600 million in rescue financing, after resolving clashes with creditors that had previously opposed the loan.
 

More law firms boost office mandates as remote work fades

 

REUTERS/Andrew Kelly

Lawyers at a growing number of large U.S. law firms will be spending more time in the office by next year, as flexible attendance policies sparked by the pandemic continue to fade.

Cooley, Goodwin Procter and Dechert each said that at least some of their lawyers must come into the office four days per week beginning early next year, joining other major firms that have adopted similar policies since 2023.

"The pendulum is absolutely swinging back toward the majority of partners' and associates' time being in person, in the office," said Rachel Nonaka, a Washington, D.C.-based recruiter at Macrae.

Read more about law firms' evolving policies.

 

More top news

  • Cornell University, Trump administration say research funds to be restored
  • Trump administration seeks to block food aid funding order
  • Reprimand recommended for Massachusetts judge accused of helping man evade ICE
  • Stanley cup maker sues Five Below for allegedly ripping off design
  • Democrats' electoral sweep tests Trump’s anti-DEI and immigration agenda
  • First Brands gets $600 million in new funding after creditor ceasefire
  • US judge rejects Capital One $425 million settlement with depositors
  • Big Tech may win reprieve as EU mulls easing AI rules, document shows
  • Judge to rule on Trump's Portland troop deployment
 
 

When a pet goat becomes a constitutional question

When officials in Powell, Wyoming, refused to let a woman keep a miniature goat as a pet, they violated her constitutional right to due process, lawyers from the Pacific Legal Foundation argue in a new federal lawsuit. At first glance, pet goats might seem like an odd cause to champion for the high-powered public interest law firm, which has notched 18 wins at the U.S. Supreme Court, but there are bigger principles at stake than one small goat, Jenna Greene writes in On the Case.

 

Week in Review ... 

  • US Supreme Court casts doubt on legality of Trump's global tariffs
  • New Mexico lawyers stop accepting new court-appointed defense work over funding shortfall
  • One in five US law students reports disabilities, most linked to mental health
  • Washington sandwich-thrower cleared of assaulting US agent
  • Google proposes app store reforms in settlement with ‘Fortnite’ maker Epic Games
  • Law firm's AI experiment gives lawyers a break from billable hours
  • ABA drops 'minority' requirement from law student scholarship amid lawsuit
  • Law firm Simpson Thacher working with US Commerce Department
  • US appeals court says Florida can ban Chinese citizens from buying property
 

In other news ...

U.S. airlines scrambled to cut 4% of flights at 40 major airports after the government imposed an unprecedented cut to air travel … Typhoon Kalmaegi brought rain and destruction to Vietnam as the death toll neared 200 in the Philippines … Democratic victories this week have caught investors' attention, signaling a potential comeback after the party's bruising defeat during last year's election … As U.S. consumers tighten their wallets, budget-friendly restaurant chains such as McDonald's, Chili's and Domino's are emerging as winners. Plus, in China, wedding bells are ringing in nightclubs, a subway station and on snowy mountain peaks.