Three Indiana Supreme Court oral arguments set for April 4
The Indiana Supreme Court will hear three oral arguments on April 4, including one for a case involving extensive damages and cleanup at a southwestern Indiana poultry processing plant.
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The Indiana Supreme Court will hear three oral arguments on April 4, including one for a case involving extensive damages and cleanup at a southwestern Indiana poultry processing plant.
In Indiana, Illinois and many other states, local homebuilders’ groups have been among the leading voices to curtail wetlands regulation. But many environmental advocates in Indiana say a new law’s supporters are understating its effects.
Allies of Gov. Ron DeSantis and Disney reached a settlement agreement Wednesday in a state court fight over how Walt Disney World is developed in the future following the takeover of the theme park resort’s government by the Florida governor.
NCAA President Charlie Baker on Wednesday urged lawmakers in states with legal wagering on sporting events to ban betting on individual player performances.
When the Supreme Court ended affirmative action in higher education, it left the college essay as one of few places where race can play a role in admissions decisions. For many students of color, instantly more was riding on the already high-stakes writing assignment.
The Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission voted unanimously to revoke a liquor license extension for 11:11 Bar & Grille on the city’s far-east side.
Most of the quips and jabs during the one-hour event were directed at frontrunner Sen. Mike Braun, with a focus on his track record in the Indiana General Assembly and Congress on topics including immigration policy, economic development and taxation.
Tweaks to tort law were among the Indiana Chamber of Commerce’s top legislative priorities this year, but not everyone was happy with all of the tort-related changes that came out of the Indiana General Assembly.
We’re in the early stages of embarking on some new approaches at Indiana Lawyer that align with the vision of our publisher and IBJ Media CEO Nate Feltman, who also happens to be an attorney.
Indianapolis criminal defense attorney Robert Hammerle gives us his take on “NYAD” and “Mean Girls.”
Although generative AI is able to collect and process massive amounts of content to generate new expressions, these systems often do not align with the rights granted to owners of the original content used to create such new expressions.
The great thing about Outlook is that it can handle so many important details of your work life. The bad thing about Outlook is that it handles so many important details of your work life and often wants to tell you all about it.
It’s a fine line to walk for applicants with artificial intelligence-assisted inventions who want to secure a patent.
Indianapolis attorneys Destiny Wells and Beth White will battle it out at the Democratic state convention this summer as they seek to become the party’s nominee for Indiana attorney general.
We have all come across counterfeit websites while scrolling the web, but what do you do as an attorney if your client or their goods are being impersonated on such a site?
Not feeling quite ready for law school, Greg Heller initially managed a trucking terminal in Wisconsin.
A new provision in House Enrolled Act 1047 makes the distribution of unauthorized and undisclosed “intimate” images generated or altered by AI a Class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in prison and a fine of up to $5,000.
If we are lucky to live long enough, we all struggle with the concept of aging.
I wanted to take this opportunity to shine a spotlight on some of their recent accomplishments and how those achievements are—and will continue–making a difference in the world around us.
Established during the fall 2023 semester, the Accessibility and Equity Student Union is led by president and student MacAna Gilkerson.