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May 06, 2026
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's acting director, Russell Vought, chided the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission for asking federal agencies about gender identity and diversity and inclusion for annual reports on their equal employment opportunity programs.
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May 06, 2026
Banks and fintechs continued to clash over whether crypto firms should be able to pay yield and rewards on stablecoins in competing comments on the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's plans to implement the federal stablecoin law known as the Genius Act.
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May 06, 2026
A Ninth Circuit panel determined Wednesday that federal tobacco regulators acted appropriately when placing the Twenty-Nine Palms Band of Mission Indians on a noncompliance list, concluding the tribe's remote cigarette sales to retailers of other tribes count as "off-reservation" activities covered by California state tax and licensing laws.
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May 06, 2026
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. has some new tire sensors in the works that would provide safety and performance but require special permission from the Federal Communications Commission for the devices to work properly without breaking agency rules.
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May 06, 2026
Two Bronx landlords must pay $31 million in court-ordered penalties for running residential buildings that New York City's government alleges have persistent problems such as pest infestations and lack of indoor heat, the city's mayor's office announced Wednesday.
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May 06, 2026
Major wireless carriers are looking toward a future driven by artificial intelligence, but say its full potential can only be reached if policymakers give them more access to exclusive airwaves in the prime midband range.
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May 06, 2026
A Connecticut Department of Children and Families attorney on Wednesday challenged an economist's estimate that a baby tossed to his death in a river would have earned $2 million to $3 million over the course of a normal life, questioning whether artificial intelligence could have diminished the slain 7-month-old's earning capacity.
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May 06, 2026
Kilmar Ábrego García said discovery into the Trump administration's communications with the governments of Costa Rica and Liberia should begin in district court even while the U.S. Department of Justice's appeal of an order barring his redetention moves forward in the Fourth Circuit.
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May 06, 2026
The Trump administration asked a Colorado federal judge Wednesday to declare a state law banning large-capacity magazines unconstitutional, arguing in its complaint filed against the state of Colorado and the Colorado Department of Public Safety that the law violates the Second Amendment.
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May 06, 2026
Safeway Inc. broke Washington state law by denying employees required meal and rest breaks and failing to adequately compensate them for missed or interrupted breaks, a former worker has claimed in a proposed class action filed in King County Superior Court.
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May 06, 2026
The Sixth Circuit has ruled that a Michigan man cannot receive an injunction to stop prosecutors from charging him with making terroristic threats in the future after he made remarks related to an elections official he believed was incorrectly conducting an election recount.
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May 06, 2026
The Colorado Republican Party continues to push for a Colorado federal judge to abolish the unaffiliated voter mandate in state primary elections, asking the court through a motion for reconsideration to review its prior summary judgment ruling denying a challenge to the mandate.
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May 06, 2026
A Minnesota federal judge Wednesday refused to block the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's 2025 guidance that rescinded a policy barring federal agencies from carrying out immigration enforcement actions near public schools, ruling that the educators challenging the policy have failed to show they are likely to establish standing.
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May 06, 2026
A Massachusetts federal judge on Wednesday pushed back on arguments by the Trump administration that federal agency grants are subject to termination at any time based solely on a change in priorities — a situation, she suggested, that would essentially render any contracts with the government "illusory."
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May 06, 2026
A Massachusetts federal judge said Wednesday she doubted she could restore humanitarian parole for hundreds of thousands of migrants whose legal status was recently canceled by the Trump administration for a second time.
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May 06, 2026
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday proposed increasing the cost for a stay of deportation application from $155 to $755, noting it has not adjusted the fee in nearly 40 years.
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May 06, 2026
U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, R-Florida, waited too long to file a lawsuit over the leak of his personal tax returns, according to federal contractor Booz Allen Hamilton, which moved to dismiss the suit Tuesday.
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May 06, 2026
The full Eleventh Circuit concluded that the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act does not provide a remedy for a woman's claims that she was improperly discharged from a Florida hospital without being treated for malnutrition.
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May 06, 2026
The First Circuit has reversed the dismissal of an indictment against an unauthorized immigrant charged with firearm possession, holding that the federal ban on unauthorized immigrants possessing firearms is consistent with the nation's tradition of firearm regulation.
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May 06, 2026
New Jersey adopted regulations codifying a test for determining whether workers are employees or independent contractors, establishing a classification framework set to take effect Oct. 1, the state has announced.
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May 06, 2026
A Patent Trial and Appeal Board program to resolve appeals of rejected patent applications faster will be extended through 2028, the board announced Wednesday.
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May 06, 2026
A group advocating for wider broadband access has urged a federal judge to not toss its lawsuits challenging the cancellation of a grant program, arguing it has brought "straightforward constitutional claims."
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May 06, 2026
Michigan Supreme Court justices heard arguments Wednesday over whether the Republican-controlled House can refuse to present bills passed by the previous Democratic majority in the chamber to the governor, as attorneys for the House and Senate clashed over whether this presentment is a constitutional duty or a legislative process beyond judicial control.
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May 06, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected Apple's request to pause a mandate in the case from Epic Games that directs a lower court to determine what commission Apple can charge developers for purchases made outside of its app store through links.
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May 06, 2026
A federal judge in Washington has partially sided with immigration officials' decision to not provide some information about border searches of electronic devices that a First Amendment group at Columbia University requested, finding the documents contained privileged, decision-making details.