Trump administration reverses course on law firms appeal

The Justice Department has reversed its course and vowed to appeal a decision involving four major law firms. These firms had challenged President Trump's punitive executive orders. The move comes after an initial effort to abandon the appeal was withdrawn.

The Trump administration's Justice Department has taken a significant step by reversing its earlier decision to abandon an appeal against four prominent law firms. These law firms had previously mounted a legal challenge against what they described as President Trump's punitive executive orders.

According to reports, the department initially sought to drop the appeal but has now retracted that effort, committing to pursue it further. This development highlights ongoing tensions between the administration and legal entities opposing its policies.

The reversal underscores the administration's determination to defend its executive actions in court. No specific details on the timeline of the appeal or the identities of the four law firms were provided in the available information. The story was covered by NPR correspondent Carrie Johnson, emphasizing its political implications.

This action reflects broader patterns in the Trump administration's approach to legal challenges, though further proceedings remain pending.

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Illustration of Supreme Court vacating D.C. Circuit ruling in Steve Bannon contempt case, clearing path for dismissal.
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Supreme Court vacates D.C. Circuit ruling in Steve Bannon contempt case, clearing path for dismissal

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The U.S. Supreme Court on April 6 vacated a federal appeals court decision upholding Steve Bannon’s criminal contempt of Congress conviction and sent the case back to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, a move that—at the Justice Department’s request—could allow the Trump administration to seek dismissal of the prosecution. Bannon previously served a four-month prison sentence for defying a subpoena from the House committee that investigated the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.

The US Department of Justice has appealed a district court's dismissal of criminal cases against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James. The appeal centers on the validity of interim US Attorney Lindsey Halligan's appointment and Attorney General Pam Bondi's retroactive ratification of her actions. The DOJ argues that any flaws were harmless and do not warrant dismissal.

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President Donald Trump and his business entities have pursued legal claims and lawsuits seeking hundreds of millions to billions of dollars from the U.S. government over past federal investigations and the leak of his tax information, moves that critics and ethics specialists say create unusually direct conflicts of interest for an administration that would help oversee any response or settlement.

A Biden-appointed federal judge in Oregon issued a verbal ruling Thursday blocking a Trump administration HHS declaration that deemed transgender medical procedures for minors unsafe and ineffective. The decision sides with Democratic attorneys general who sued over the December 2025 policy from HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

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A federal judge in Florida dismissed President Trump's $10 billion defamation lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal and Rupert Murdoch over a story linking him to Jeffrey Epstein. U.S. District Judge Darrin P. Gayles ruled that Trump failed to adequately allege actual malice, but allowed an amended complaint. The decision came Monday following a July lawsuit prompted by the newspaper's report on a 2003 letter.

In the latest development of the Anthropic supply chain risk controversy, a U.S. federal appeals court on April 9 denied Anthropic's emergency motion to block the Trump administration's blacklisting of its AI technology. The court expedited oral arguments for May 19 but ruled the balance of equities favors the government, marking a setback following a prior district court injunction.

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Lawyers Defending American Democracy, joined by former White House lawyer Ty Cobb, filed an ethics complaint with the D.C. Bar against DOJ Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign. The group accuses Ensign of making false statements to U.S. District Judge James Boasberg during a hearing on Alien Enemies Act deportations. The complaint stems from a mid-March 2025 emergency order that the government allegedly ignored.

 

 

 

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