How Appealing



Saturday, August 26, 2017

“Lawsuit over Subway ‘footlong’ subs was a ‘racket’ benefiting only lawyers, judge says”: Kim Janssen of The Chicago Tribune has this report.

Andrew Blake of The Washington Times reports that “Appeals court rejects ‘worthless’ Subway foot-long settlement between sandwich chain and customers; Lawsuit was ‘no better than a racket and should be dismissed out of hand’ writes judge.”

And Jonathan Stempel of Reuters has an article headlined “‘Worthless’ Subway ‘Footlong’ sandwich settlement is thrown out: U.S. court.”

My earlier coverage of yesterday’s Seventh Circuit ruling can be accessed here.

Posted at 9:44 PM by Howard Bashman



“Why Trump’s Pardon of Arpaio Follows Law, Yet Challenges It”: Adam Liptak will have this article in Sunday’s edition of The New York Times.

Posted at 9:32 PM by Howard Bashman



“En banc 11th Circuit rules 6-5 that Florida felony battery is a violent felony under the Sentencing Guidelines”: David Oscar Markus has this post at “The SDFLA Blog” on an en banc ruling that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit issued yesterday.

The opening line of the previously vacated majority opinion of the original three-judge panel in the case was memorable: “When I was growing up, my parents told me not to judge a book by its cover.”

Posted at 4:53 PM by Howard Bashman



“New SCOTUS brief in Dodd-Frank whistleblower case: SEC doesn’t deserve deference.” Alison Frankel’s “On the Case” from Thomson Reuters News & Insight has this post.

Posted at 4:06 PM by Howard Bashman



“Judges must decide when prisoner should be shackled”: Howard Fischer of Arizona’s Capitol Media Services has an article that begins, “An appeals court on Friday slapped down Arizona federal judges for ignoring their order limiting when prisoners can be shackled.”

You can access Friday’s order of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit granting a writ of mandamus at this link.

Posted at 4:02 PM by Howard Bashman



“D.C. Circuit Review — Reviewed: Unsolicited Advice to 2Ls and 3Ls.” Aaron Nielson has this post at the “Notice & Comment” blog of the Yale Journal on Regulation.

Posted at 8:46 AM by Howard Bashman