Recent Articles from The Associated Press
Mississippi judge orders newspaper to remove editorial
A Mississippi judge ordered a newspaper to remove an editorial criticizing the mayor and city leaders after the officials sued, sparking complaints from press advocates that it violates the First Amendment.
Trump halts support for legal aid for unaccompanied migrant children
The Trump administration on Tuesday stopped support for legal representation in immigration court for children who enter the United States alone.
Wisconsin justices rule GOP lacked standing to challenge mobile voting
The lawsuit sought to ban the use of mobile voting vans in any future election in the presidential battleground state.
DOJ fires 20 immigration judges from backlogged courts
The Trump administration fired 20 immigration judges without explanation, a union official said Saturday amid sweeping moves to shrink the size of the federal government.
Ellison joins other AGs in challenging Musk
Attorneys general from 14 states challenged the authority of billionaire Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency to access sensitive government data and exercise "virtually unchecked power" in a lawsuit filed Thursday.
Wisconsin justice rejects Republican call to step down in union case
Justice Janet Protasiewicz decided against recusing herself after Republican legislative leaders filed a motion saying she should not hear the case because she voiced opinions about the law during her 2023 campaign.
Feds investigate Minnesota State High School League’s trans athletes policy
The U.S. Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights announced the investigations Wednesday into the Minnesota State High School League and the California Interscholastic Federation.
LSU told to reinstate law prof removed for vulgar political comments
The ruling allows tenured law professor Ken Levy to return to his classroom this week.
Parties, donors drop money on Wisconsin Supreme Court race
The winner of the April 1 election will determine whether the court will remain under liberal control or flip to a conservative majority.
Religious groups sue over threat of arrests in houses of worship
The suit says the fear of raids infringes on the groups’ ability to minister to migrants, including those in the United States without documentation.
Wording in most state constitutions still assume officials are male
The Minnesota Constitution uses male pronouns when referring to the governor and other officeholders.
Question before court: Can charter school be religious?
If affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court, an Oklahoma school would be the nation’s first faith-based charter — a sea change in education law, expanding the boundaries of government aid to faith-based schools.
Top News
- Wisconsin judge allows use of ex-Trump attorney’s statements in fake elector case
- Court of Appeals rejects increased sentence after case remanded
- Commentary: What can we learn from a secret act of judicial tyranny?
- Supreme Court approval dips amid tariff ruling divide
- Three recommended for 1st District bench
- Court of Appeals revives fire restoration lawsuit
- DOJ has cut law-enforcement jobs while vowing to get tough on crime
Expert Testimony
- Commentary: What can we learn from a secret act of judicial tyranny?
- Perspectives: Actor’s death recalls key defamation case here
- Best at Work Insights: Why employee growth matters more than salary
- Legally Speaking: April showers don’t wait, neither do difficult conversations




















