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Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Nightly Brief

Top CNS stories for today including the Justice Department suing AT&T to stop its $85 billion purchase of Time Warner; outgoing Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen on Monday resigned her position as a member of the central bank’s board of governors, effective upon the swearing in of her successor; the Empire State’s highest court ruled Monday that a New York City anti-discrimination law allows for punitive damages in cases involving gross negligence; Swedish scientists find dog owners have a significantly lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease and other causes; Europe’s highest court on Monday again ordered Poland to immediately stop logging operations in what’s left of an ancient forest that once covered the European plain, and more.

Your Monday night briefing from the staff of Courthouse News

Top CNS stories for today including the Justice Department suing AT&T to stop its $85 billion purchase of Time Warner; outgoing Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen on Monday resigned her position as a member of the central bank’s board of governors, effective upon the swearing in of her successor; the Empire State’s highest court ruled Monday that a New York City anti-discrimination law allows for punitive damages in cases involving gross negligence; Swedish scientists find dog owners have a significantly lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease and other causes; Europe’s highest court on Monday again ordered Poland to immediately stop logging operations in what’s left of an ancient forest that once covered the European plain, and more.

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1.) In National news surrounded by pro-Trump slogans and chants against “commie scum,” a progressive activist trumpeted free-speech rights at a weekend rally organized by self-styled American nationalists.

 2.) Outgoing Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen on Monday resigned her position as a member of the central bank’s board of governors, effective upon the swearing in of her successor, Jerome Powell, as Donald Trump’s first Fed chairman.

3.) The Department of Justice on Monday filed an antitrust lawsuit against media giants AT&T and Time Warner in an attempt to block their proposed $85 billion merger.

 4.)  Prosecutors told a federal judge Monday that they no longer want a pretrial detention for a former soccer official accused of threatening one of the witnesses in the FIFA corruption case.

6.) In Environmental news, Harbor seals, sea lions and some fish-eating killer whales have been rebounding along the Northeast Pacific Ocean in recent decades. But that boom has come with a trade-off: They’re devouring more of the salmon prized by a unique but fragile population of endangered orcas.

7.) From the world of Science comes word from Swedish scientists that dog owners have a significantly lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease and other causes, giving new meaning to the expression “man’s best friend.”

8.) In International news, Europe’s highest court on Monday again ordered Poland to immediately stop logging operations in what’s left of an ancient forest that once covered the European plain, and threatened fines of $117,000 per day in a case that’s pitted the EU and environmentalists against Poland’s conservative government for most of the year.

9.) Representatives of the 27 remaining EU states on Monday selected new homes for two institutions currently housed in Britain, a clear signal the European Union is ready to move on with life post-Brexit.

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