Federal judge orders release of family of man charged in Colorado firebomb attack
Read full article: Federal judge orders release of family of man charged in Colorado firebomb attackA federal judge has ordered the release from immigration custody of the family of a man charged in a fatal firebomb attack in Boulder, Colorado, last year.
Egyptian family of six who have spent 10 months in Dilley’s controversial detention center freed
Read full article: Egyptian family of six who have spent 10 months in Dilley’s controversial detention center freedThe family had been detained since June after the father was arrested and charged with attacking mostly Jewish protesters at a Colorado event.
Father of 5-year-old detained in Minnesota disputes government assertion he abandoned the boy
Read full article: Father of 5-year-old detained in Minnesota disputes government assertion he abandoned the boyThe father of a 5-year-old boy detained by immigration officers in Texas denies abandoning his son.
Judge orders 5-year-old Liam Ramos and his dad released from detention in Texas
Read full article: Judge orders 5-year-old Liam Ramos and his dad released from detention in TexasImages of Liam Conejo Ramos, with a bunny hat and Spiderman backpack being surrounded by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Officers, sparked even more outcry about President Donald Trump's administration's immigration crackdown.
Judge orders 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his dad released from ICE detention
Read full article: Judge orders 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his dad released from ICE detentionA judge has ordered the U.S. to release a father and 5-year-old son who were taken into custody during the immigration crackdown in Minnesota.
Judge issues temporary order barring removal of boy, 5, and father who were detained in Minnesota
Read full article: Judge issues temporary order barring removal of boy, 5, and father who were detained in MinnesotaA federal judge has issued a temporary order barring the removal of a 5-year-old Ecuadorian boy and his father whose arrest last week in Minnesota became another lightning rod for divisions on immigration under the Trump administration.
Federal court temporarily blocks Texas law requiring Ten Commandments in every public school classroom
Read full article: Federal court temporarily blocks Texas law requiring Ten Commandments in every public school classroomA federal judge has temporarily blocked Texas from enforcing a new law requiring the display of the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms.
Texas can't put the Ten Commandments in certain school districts' classrooms, judge says
Read full article: Texas can't put the Ten Commandments in certain school districts' classrooms, judge saysA federal judge has temporarily blocked Texas from requiring nearly a dozen public school districts across the state to post the Ten Commandments in every classroom.
As appeals court is poised to consider Texas’ Ten Commandments law, other legal challenges mount
Read full article: As appeals court is poised to consider Texas’ Ten Commandments law, other legal challenges mountThe judges opting to hear the cases together marks a significant development in a saga that many believe will reach the U.S. Supreme Court.
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U.S. Supreme Court rejects Texas Democrats' effort to expand voting by mail during pandemic
Read full article: U.S. Supreme Court rejects Texas Democrats' effort to expand voting by mail during pandemicThe United States Supreme Court in Washington on June 11. Reynolds Stefani/CNP/ABACA via REUTERSThe U.S. Supreme Court has rejected an initial bid by state Democrats to expand voting by mail to all Texas voters during the coronavirus pandemic. The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals stayed Biery's order while Texas appeals his ruling. In order for someone to vote by mail in the July 14 primary runoffs, counties must receive their application for a mail-in ballot by July 2. A favorable decision for Democrats by the Supreme Court by early October could still allow for a massive expansion in voting by mail during the November general election.
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Texas Democrats ask U.S. Supreme Court to weigh in on voting by mail
Read full article: Texas Democrats ask U.S. Supreme Court to weigh in on voting by mailMiguel Gutierrez Jr./The Texas TribuneAfter a series of losses in state and federal courts, Texas Democrats are looking to the U.S. Supreme Court to expand voting by mail during the coronavirus pandemic. The Texas Democratic Party on Tuesday said it asked the high court to immediately lift the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals' block on a sweeping ruling that would allow all Texas voters who are seeking to avoid becoming infecting at in-person polling places to instead vote by mail. The fight to expand who can qualify for a ballot they can fill at home and mail in has been on a trajectory toward the Supreme Court since Texas Democrats, civil rights groups and individual voters first challenged the state's rules months ago when the new coronavirus reached Texas. Under his order, voters under the age of 65 who would ordinarily not qualify for mail-in ballots would now be eligible. In their appeal, the Democrats are asking the Supreme Court to leave in place Biery's order and take up the case on the claim that the state's age restrictions for voting by mail violate the 26th Amendment's protections against voting restrictions that discriminate based on age.
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Federal appeals court extends block on voting-by-mail expansion in Texas
Read full article: Federal appeals court extends block on voting-by-mail expansion in TexasMiguel Gutierrez Jr./The Texas TribuneA three-judge panel of the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday extended its order blocking a lower courts sweeping ruling that would have allowed all Texas voters to qualify to vote by mail during the coronavirus pandemic. U.S. District Judge Fred Biery issued a preliminary injunction in late May expanding mail-in voting, but the appellate panel almost immediately put it on administrative hold while awaiting legal briefings from both sides. Thursday's ruling keeps Biery's ruling on ice while Texas appeals it. In his appeal to the 5th Circuit, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton argued that Biery's injunction threatened "irreparable injury" to the state "by injecting substantial confusion into the Texas voting process mere days before ballots are distributed and weeks before runoff elections." Siding with Paxton, the 5th Circuit panel in part found that requiring Texas officials to institute voting by mail for all against their will would present significant, irreparable harm on the state.
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Decision 2020: Battle over expanding vote by mail in Texas during coronavirus pandemic
Read full article: Decision 2020: Battle over expanding vote by mail in Texas during coronavirus pandemicHOUSTON – There's a big legal fight underway over whether voting by mail in Texas should be expanded. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton says no, but the Texas Democratic Party and several voting rights groups say yes. What is the state’s legal argument against expanding vote by mail? What are the legal arguments for expanding vote by mail in texas? The Texas Democratic Party and other voting rights and civil rights groups, like the Texas Civil Rights Project, are suing the state, arguing that the current eligibility requirements for mail-in ballots should be dropped because of the coronavirus pandemic.