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Search resuls for: "Brian Boynton"


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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on infrastructure during an event at the Amtrak maintenance facility in Bear, Delaware, U.S., November 6, 2023. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsNov 7 (Reuters) - A lawyer for the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden on Tuesday told an appeals court that a judge was wrong to block a rule imposing new restrictions on asylum seekers at the U.S.-Mexico border. The challenge to the rule was brought by immigrant advocacy groups represented by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Through September, 12% of migrants who had applied for an exception under the rule had received it, Boynton said. But two of them noted that federal immigration law appears to give the government broad discretion to consider any relevant factors in deciding who ultimately receives asylum protections.
Persons: Joe Biden, Leah Millis, Biden, Donald Trump, Brian Boynton, Boynton, Spencer Amdur, Amdur, Lawrence VanDyke, Daniel Wiessner, Deepa Babington Organizations: Amtrak, REUTERS, U.S, Circuit, American Civil Liberties Union, ACLU, Democrat, Republican, U.S . Department of Justice, Thomson Locations: Bear , Delaware, U.S, Mexico, Pasadena , California, Albany , New York
The Biden administration on Tuesday urged an appeals court to allow sweeping new asylum restrictions to stay in place, warning that halting them would be “highly disruptive” at the border. The government is urging a panel of judges in Pasadena, California — two appointed by President Bill Clinton and one by President Donald Trump — to overturn a July ruling that sought to block the new asylum restrictions. Courts blocked similar measures under Trump but the Biden administration says its approach differs because it is coupled with new legal pathways to enter the country and creates exceptions. Blas Nuñez-Neto, assistant Homeland Security secretary for border and immigration policy, said in filing in a separate case last week that the asylum restrictions were critical. Figures show approval rates on initial asylum screenings fell sharply after the new restrictions were put to use.
Persons: Biden, Bill Clinton, Donald Trump —, Joe Biden's, Brian Boynton, Boynton, Spencer Amdur, ” Amdur, “ That's, haven't, Blas Nuñez, Neto Organizations: Trump, American Civil Liberties Union, Center, Gender & Refugee Studies, National Immigrant Justice Center, Justice Department Locations: Pasadena , California, Mexico, Ukraine, Israel, Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Trump
WASHINGTON — The White House on Tuesday held a roundtable examining potential harmful data broker practices as part of an overall strategy to protect Americans' privacy. The CFPB's new rule proposals will build upon the FCRA to hold data brokers that sell highly sensitive information more accountable. One proposal, said Chopra, will define a data broker dealing in certain types of consumer data as a consumer reporting agency and the brokers' sale of data as a consumer report. Another will clarify whether credit header data, the portion of a credit report that contains identifying information, can be considered a covered consumer report. "We applaud the steps the Consumer Protection Financial Bureau is taking to stop data brokers from unlawfully collecting and selling millions of Americans' sensitive data," she said.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Chopra, There's, Arati Prabhakar, Lael Brainard, Lina Khan, Brian Boynton, Khan, Brainard Organizations: Consumer, Fair, White, Office of Science, Technology, National Economic Council, Federal Trade, Justice Department's Civil, FTC, Protection
The Justice Department is no longer defending Donald Trump in a lawsuit brought by E. Jean Carroll. But the Justice Department intervened. There is also the fact that the jury found Trump sexually assaulted Carroll well before he ever assumed office. "A jury has now found that Mr. Trump sexually assaulted Ms. Carroll long before he became President," Boynton wrote. While the jury found that Trump sexually abused Carroll by inserting his fingers into her vagina, it didn't find him liable for rape.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jean Carroll, Trump, Carroll, Goodman, Westfall, Brian Boynton, , Boynton, Trump's, Jean Carroll's, Roberta Kaplan, Kaplan, Trump's countersuit, Andy Borowitz Organizations: DOJ, Service, Justice Department, Elle, Trump's, Justice, Trump, Department, United, Carroll Locations: Wall, Silicon, Manhattan, United States, Carroll, York
That effort, if it had been approved, would have killed Carroll's lawsuit because the government can shield itself from civil liability under the doctrine of sovereign immunity. The DOJ had not played a role in that lawsuit, as the alleged actions occurred outside of Trump tenure in the White House. "We are grateful that the Department of Justice has reconsidered its position," Carroll's lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, said in a statement. "Now that one of the last obstacles has been removed, we look forward to trial in E Jean Carroll's original case in January 2024." The letter also said: "Moreover, the circumstantial evidence of Mr. Trump's subjective intent in making theallegedly defamatory statements does not support a determination in this case that he wassufficiently motivated by a desire to serve the United States Government."
Persons: Jean Carroll, Donald Trump, E, Carroll, Trump, Westfall, Donald J, Brian Boynton, Boynton, Roberta Kaplan, Kaplan, Jean Carroll's, Bergdorf Goodman, Bill Barr, District Judge Lewis Kaplan, Joe Biden Organizations: The, Justice, Trump, DOJ, Washington , D.C, ., White, Department, United States Government, Department of Justice, CNBC, U.S, District, 2nd Circuit U.S, of Appeals Locations: Manhattan, New York City, United States, New York, Trump, Washington ,, Washington, Columbia
WASHINGTON, April 13 (Reuters) - Photoshop maker Adobe Inc (ADBE.O) has agreed to pay $3 million to settle U.S. kickback allegations involving federal software sales, the U.S. Justice Department said in a statement on Thursday. The settlement resolves allegations that Adobe made improper payments under its Solution Partner program to companies that had a contractual or other relationship with the government that allowed them to influence federal purchases of Adobe software, the Justice Department said. Between January 2011 and December 2020, Adobe allegedly paid the companies a percentage of the purchase price of the software, according to the Justice Department. The United States contends that these payments constituted prohibited kickbacks that resulted in Adobe causing false claims for payment to be submitted to federal agencies. "We will continue to use all appropriate tools to safeguard the integrity of the federal procurement process," Boynton said.
CNN —As the Supreme Court prepares for yet another controversial abortion case to come its way, the justices will pore over District Court Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk’s ruling last week to block the government’s approval of the key medication abortion drug at issue. “There are serious questions on whether the Supreme Court is willing to endorse the district’s court’s very broad approach to those questions,” he said. As he often does, Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote separately last June to explain his thinking in voting to overturn Roe v. Wade. The Supreme Court might also take issue with the relief that Kacsmaryk ordered. None other than the liberals on the Supreme Court who dissented in Dobbs.
Biogen will pay $900 million to settle a lawsuit that alleged the company gave doctors kickbacks to encourage them prescribe its drugs, the Justice Department announced on Monday. Bawduniak alleged Biogen paid kickbacks to doctors in the form of speaking fees, consulting fees and meals from 2009 through 2014 to encourage them to prescribe its multiple sclerosis drugs. Biogen will pay more than $843 million to the federal government and $56 million to 15 states to settle the case. "Biogen believes its intent and conduct was at all times lawful and appropriate and Biogen denies all allegations raised in this case," the company said. Biogen disclosed in its second quarter report that it had reached an agreement in principle to pay $900 million to resolve the lawsuit.
Un farmacist american sceptic cu privire la vaccinare a fost condamnat la trei ani de închisoare după ce a pledat vinovat de faptul că a deteriorat cu bună ştiinţă sute de doze de vaccin împotriva covid-19, anunţă Departamentul american al Justiţiei, relatează AFP. Steven Brandenburg, în vârstă de 46 de ani, ”a scos în mod deliberat” fiole de vaccin anticovid Moderna din frigider, la spitalul în care muncea, în Wisconsin (nord), precizează într-un comunicat Departamentul Justiţiei. El a fost condamnat la plata unor compensaţii în valoare de 83.800 de dolari spitalului. Farmacistul a scos o cutie cu vaccinuri, în timpul a două servicii de noapte, în decembrie, şi le-a lăsat timp de mai multe ore afară din frigider, după care le-a pus din nou în frigider, pentru a fi administrate în ziua următoare. În total, 57 de persoane au fost vaccinate cu dozele de vaccin deteriorate, precizează Departamentul Justiţiei.
Persons: AFP, Steven Brandenburg, Brian Boynton Organizations: Moderna Locations: Wisconsin
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