Controversial DC councilman faces bribery charge
WASHINGTON — A District of Columbia councilman known for promoting antisemitic conspiracy theories accepted over $150,000 in bribes in exchange for pressuring district employees to extend city contracts for violence intervention services, authorities alleged in court records unsealed Monday.
Ruling further narrows scope of public corruption law
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court overturned the bribery conviction of a former Indiana mayor on Wednesday, the latest in a series of decisions narrowing the scope of federal public corruption […]
Top Legal News
- District court denies California parks department bid to stop Sable Offshore pipeline
- Marketing partner may enforce arbitration agreement
- NC attorney general, DOJ reach settlement ending secret meat pricing data exchange
- Biden sues Justice Department to block release of audio recordings
- Trade secret claims survive restrictive covenant challenge
- Jury returns record award in tragic retaining wall failure case
- Justices revive $100M judgments against cruise lines
- US Supreme Court won’t hear Meta’s challenge to Vermont social media addiction lawsuit
- Adult store clerk sues former Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson
- AI divorce is real, but family law can still save itself
- US Justice Department seeks to lift injunction on ballroom project after shooting
Commentary
- AI divorce is real, but family law can still save itself
- ‘AI won’t take your job’ and other things CEOs say before the layoffs
- When not to believe (your lyin’ eyes)
- Conduct a technology audit to improve law firm efficiency
- When the client brings ChatGPT to the consultation
- Content Marketing: Where law firms lose referrals and how to prevent it
- Your best people are not leaving for more money — they are leaving because you stopped paying attention
- Best at Work Insights: The choice we’re making about AI
- New life for the noncompete
- 2026: The year of tech, both heroes and villains
- Beyond burnout: The case for workplaces where people thrive
- The December question every leader should anticipate





