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Ho is married to Allyson Paix Newton Ho (née Newton, formerly Heidelbaugh), a partner in the Dallas office of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and co-chair of the firm's appellate practice group. Ho met Allyson Newton when he was a law clerk for Judge Jerry Edwin Smith in Houston, Texas, and Newton had been a law student working for a Houston firm. [8]
Dale Edwin Ho (born 1977) [2] is an American lawyer serving as a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Prior to becoming a judge, he was the director of the American Civil Liberties Union 's voting rights project.
Now, it’s up to Dale E. Ho, a second-year federal judge in Manhattan, to decide if Adams' corruption case goes away. ... but the rules were changed in 1944 to require a judge to approve the ...
Dale Ho, the judge deciding whether to drop the corruption case against New York City mayor Eric Adams, is a former voting rights lawyer whose nomination to the bench by former Democratic ...
Ho's options for Adams' case appear limited, in part because the body that brought the case no longer wants to pursue it. But in a letter before her resignation last week, interim Manhattan U.S. Attorney Danielle Sassoon cited a 1977 case in which a judge in the same court rejected the government's dismissal request, finding that doing so was ...
In a concurring opinion in a dispute unrelated to birthright citizenship, Ho, a 2018 Trump appointee on the federal appellate court covering Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi, was receptive to ...
Hagan Scotten's resignation letter. The 2025 U.S. Department of Justice resignations also known as the "Thursday Night Massacre" or the "Valentine's Day Seven" refer to the resignations of seven prosecutors of the U.S. Department of Justice in February 2025 in response to orders from acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove to dismiss federal criminal corruption charges against New York City ...
Ho’s legal logic rests on the landmark 1898 Supreme Court case of U.S. v. Wong Kim Ark that interpreted birthright citizenship as applying to those born on U.S. soil to noncitizens, no matter ...