Updates to our Terms of Use

We are updating our Terms of Use. Please carefully review the updated Terms before proceeding to our website.

Friday, April 19, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Nightly Brief

Top CNS stories for today including the Census Bureau’s chief scientist testifing that the addition of a citizenship question to the once-in-a-decade survey would be expensive, while also compromising data and response rates; the Justice Department releases an internal legal opinion that it says supports the legality of Matthew Whitaker’s appointment as acting attorney general; Florida’s recount madness continues one day before the state’s 67 counties must finish tallying ballots by machine; House Republicans select Rep. Kevin McCarthy as their next minority leader; a Utah county takes its fight of a federal judge’s redrawing of election maps to a 10th Circuit panel; a series of scientific surveys reveal a 19-mile-wide crater hidden under a half-mile of ice likely came from a kilometer-wide iron asteroid that crashed into Greenland perhaps in the last 12,000 years, and more.

Your Wednesday night briefing from the staff of Courthouse News

Top CNS stories for today including the Census Bureau’s chief scientist testifing that the addition of a citizenship question to the once-in-a-decade survey would be expensive, while also compromising data and response rates; the Justice Department releases an internal legal opinion that it says supports the legality of Matthew Whitaker’s appointment as acting attorney general; Florida’s recount madness continues one day before the state’s 67 counties must finish tallying ballots by machine; House Republicans select Rep. Kevin McCarthy as their next minority leader; a Utah county takes its fight of a federal judge’s redrawing of election maps to a 10th Circuit panel; a series of scientific surveys reveal a 19-mile-wide crater hidden under a half-mile of ice likely came from a kilometer-wide iron asteroid that crashed into Greenland perhaps in the last 12,000 years, and more.

Sign up for CNS Nightly Brief, a roundup of the day's top stories delivered directly to your email Monday through Friday.

National

1.) Over two grueling days on the witness stand, the Census Bureau’s chief scientist testified that the addition of a citizenship question to the once-in-a-decade survey would be expensive, while also compromising data and response rates.

2.) The Justice Department released an internal legal opinion Wednesday that it says supports the legality of Matthew Whitaker’s appointment as acting attorney general.

3.) Florida’s recount madness continued on Wednesday, one day before the state’s 67 counties must finish tallying ballots by machine.

4.) House Republicans selected Rep. Kevin McCarthy as their next minority leader on Wednesday in a landslide, 159 to 43.

5.) Despite a court order voiding efforts to delay Obama-era student borrower protections, the U.S. government continues to collect money from borrowers who are entitled to automatic debt relief, a consumer advocacy group claims in a new lawsuit.

6.) The White House said in a legal filing on Wednesday that President Donald Trump has “broad discretion” to determine journalists’ access, the administration’s first formal response to CNN’s effort to get back correspondent Jim Acosta’s press pass.

Regional

7.) A Utah county took its fight of a federal judge’s redrawing of election maps – done to remedy what the judge found as racial gerrymandering – to a 10th Circuit panel, arguing the “absurd results” included a historic takeover by Navajo Democrats in a special election.

8.) In a First Amendment case over press access to new court filings, a Seventh Circuit panel on Tuesday ruled that federal courts lack jurisdiction over such matters and refused to follow the circuit’s landmark 1994 opinion in favor of contemporaneous access.

9.) Kicking off the long-awaited trial Tuesday of drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, the defense leveled blockbuster bribery allegations against the current and former presidents of Mexico.

Science

10.) A 19-mile-wide crater hidden under a half-mile of ice likely came from a kilometer-wide iron asteroid that crashed into Greenland perhaps in the last 12,000 years, according to nearly two decades of surveys finally released Wednesday.

International

11.) The Italian government is pushing ahead with an anti-austerity spending plan that raises alarms it could spark a European financial crisis, while political turmoil deepens under the rule of anti-establishment and far-right parties.

12.) The Justice Department said Wednesday that three South Korean companies will pay a total of $236 million as part of a guilty plea and civil settlement over a scheme to rig prices for fuel sold to U.S. military bases in the Southeast Asian nation.

No longer interested in emails from Courthouse News? Please click here to unsubscribe.

Categories / Uncategorized

Subscribe to Closing Arguments

Sign up for new weekly newsletter Closing Arguments to get the latest about ongoing trials, major litigation and hot cases and rulings in courthouses around the U.S. and the world.

Loading...