Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated late Thursday a nationwide injunction that had been issued this month by a federal judge in Texas who had concluded the Corporate ...
Two days after the appeals court issued its stay, NetChoice and CCIA petitioned the Supreme Court to vacate the stay and reinstate the district court's injunction. They argued that the Fifth Circuit's unexplained order deprived them of "careful review and a meaningful decision" and that reinstating the district court's stay would preserve the ...
The ATF appealed O'Connor's orders to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, but the Fifth Circuit upheld the injunction. [10] [better source needed] After both the District Court ruling and Fifth Circuit appeal, the Supreme Court has issued stays pending appeal to delay a nationwide injunction on the ATF's regulations until it decides the case.
On June 10, 2021, California Attorney General Bonta and Bureau of Firearms Director Luis Lopez appealed the ruling to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. [10] [16] On June 21, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit – Barry G. Silverman, Jacqueline Nguyen, and Ryan D. Nelson – granted their request to extend the stay as appeals are litigated.
Hours later the 5th Circuit reversed its previous ruling and kept the lower court's injunction in place, putting SB 4 back on hold while the merits of the sweeping immigration policy are hashed ...
The 5th Circuit is seen by many as the most conservative U.S. appeals court while the 9th Circuit, which covers California, has the reputation of being among the most liberal.
The clinics sought an emergency stay on the Fifth Circuit's decision from the Supreme Court, which granted the stay on March 5, 2016, [15] halting enforcement and allowing the clinics to continue. The Supreme Court, which had just heard the oral arguments in WWH , stated that the courts should wait on its decision in WWH and rehear the case ...
Justice Kagan voted to deny the stay as well, but did not write to explain her decision. On September 16, 2022, a panel of the Fifth Circuit ruled that the district court erred in issuing its injunction, saying that the First Amendment does not protect social media companies' editorial discretion over what user generated content to publish. [13]