The Justice Department on Friday asked a federal appeals court to overturn a lower court ruling that invalidated President Trump's executive orders targeting four major law firms.
Four different district court judges found President Trump's executive orders targeting the law firms were unconstitutional.
The surprising surrender comes nearly a year after the administration sought to punish law firms he viewed as adversaries.
The Trump administration had moved to drop its defense of President Donald Trump’s executive orders sanctioning law firms. A day later, it abruptly backpedaled.
By Mike Scarcella and David Thomas March 2 (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department has dropped a legal bid to revive ...
A day after dropping its appeal against court rulings striking down orders targeting law firms, the Trump administration ...
Yesterday, the Justice Department gave up trying to justify President Donald Trump's executive orders targeting law firms. Now it wants another shot.
The Justice Department on Monday dropped the fight over President Donald Trump's executive orders targeting firms he disliked, conceding to unanimous rulings from federal judges that found the orders ...
The Justice Department reversed course on Tuesday and told a federal appeals court it will continue defending President Donald Trump’s executive orders targeting several major law firms — less than 24 ...
Government lawyers have not explained why they reversed course after abandoning their defense of the president ...
In a dramatic reversal, the Justice Department Tuesday told an appeals court it wanted to continue its battle over executive orders targeting law firms targeted by President Donald Trump.
In proceedings filed with the U.S. appeals court in Washington, D.C., the Trump administration said it would voluntarily dismiss its appeals of four trial-court decisions that struck down President ...