The California 4th District Court of Appeal, Division Two, upheld Redlands’ eviction of hangar rental company Coyote Aviation from their municipal airport in a June 5 published opinion. The ruling does not end the ongoing legal battle between the company and the city. A separate lawsuit from Coyote Aviation challenges
Government defendant
* Ruben Mejia v. The State of California (5:25-cv-01396): Civil Rights Act. California Central District Judge Fernando Olguin presides.
* Lillie Palush v. County of Riverside (5:25-cv-01410): Civil Rights Act. California Central District Judge David Bristow presides.
Civil Rights Act
* Kevin Realworldfare v. Naji Doumit (5:25-cv-01357): Civil
A judge threw out California’s lawsuit against President Trump’s tariffs this week, but the case will keep going because the state itself asked for the dismissal.
The California Supreme Court announced May 30 that it will review the Riverside case Maniago v. Desert Cardiology Consultants’ Medical Group.
The announcement of the case acceptance posed the following question: "Is a voluntary dismissal with prejudice an appealable order if it was entered after an adverse ruling by
Sheriff’s deputies can be found guilty of negligence in civil tort cases even if they do not use excessive force, a published April 29 ruling from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal found.
The ruling comes from the case of Kevin Niedzialek, who died July 30, 2019, a day
Businesses with outstanding wage theft claims would not be able to receive permits or licenses under a bill passed by the California Assembly June 3.
AB 485, authored by Assm. Liz Ortega (D-Hayward) passed with 56 ayes to 7 noes and 16 no-votes- recorded. It will need to pass the
A San Bernardino jury has awarded victims more than $100 million seven years after a firearm-brandishing state employee caused a fatal crash off the I-215.
The jury found the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation responsible for the actions of their correctional officer, Michael William Becker, who ran Glenn Bolden
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.
Round 2 of California vs. Trump is well underway.
President Donald Trump signed a flurry of executive orders moments after being inaugurated president, and many of them could directly affect California.
These orders include revoking licenses for offshore
The California 4th District Court of Appeal, Division Two, upheld Redlands’ eviction of hangar rental company Coyote Aviation from their municipal airport in a June 5 published opinion. The ruling does not end the ongoing legal battle between the company and the city. A separate lawsuit from Coyote Aviation challenges
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It is September 7th. As a reminder, all articles published Aug. 24 are now free to read. Find those stories here.
Attorneys: Prosecutor made mistakes in past Haro case
Murder defendant Jake Haro was not placed in prison for his past child abuse conviction due to prosecutorial mistakes,
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It is Sunday, Aug. 17.
Street vendors sue Fontana, claim illegal seizure of property
Fontana has been illegally throwing away street vendors’ property, a lawsuit filed Aug. 11 by the Inland Coalition for Immigrant Justice claims.
The suit charges Fontana with intentionally making it burdensome to get a
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Two Ontario medical center staff have been charged in federal court for allegedly interfering with an Immigrations and Customs Enforcement arrest.
The United States’ Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California announced the charges
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Inland Counties Legal Services celebrated 67 years of operations on July 17. Staff and supporters gathered in Rialto’s Uptown Downtown Nightclub to celebrate.
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We’re having a Fourth of July sale: one month of access for 40¢. That’s the same value as $15 in 1776. You can redeem the sale here.
In standing with the policy of lifting paywalls for old news, the articles from June
The California 4th District Court of Appeal, Division Two, upheld Redlands’ eviction of hangar rental company Coyote Aviation from their municipal airport in a June 5 published opinion. The ruling does not end the ongoing legal battle between the company and the city. A separate lawsuit from Coyote Aviation challenges
Government defendant
* Ruben Mejia v. The State of California (5:25-cv-01396): Civil Rights Act. California Central District Judge Fernando Olguin presides.
* Lillie Palush v. County of Riverside (5:25-cv-01410): Civil Rights Act. California Central District Judge David Bristow presides.
Civil Rights Act
* Kevin Realworldfare v. Naji Doumit (5:25-cv-01357): Civil
A judge threw out California’s lawsuit against President Trump’s tariffs this week, but the case will keep going because the state itself asked for the dismissal.
The California Supreme Court announced May 30 that it will review the Riverside case Maniago v. Desert Cardiology Consultants’ Medical Group.
The announcement of the case acceptance posed the following question: "Is a voluntary dismissal with prejudice an appealable order if it was entered after an adverse ruling by
Sheriff’s deputies can be found guilty of negligence in civil tort cases even if they do not use excessive force, a published April 29 ruling from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal found.
The ruling comes from the case of Kevin Niedzialek, who died July 30, 2019, a day
Businesses with outstanding wage theft claims would not be able to receive permits or licenses under a bill passed by the California Assembly June 3.
AB 485, authored by Assm. Liz Ortega (D-Hayward) passed with 56 ayes to 7 noes and 16 no-votes- recorded. It will need to pass the
A San Bernardino jury has awarded victims more than $100 million seven years after a firearm-brandishing state employee caused a fatal crash off the I-215.
The jury found the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation responsible for the actions of their correctional officer, Michael William Becker, who ran Glenn Bolden
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.
Round 2 of California vs. Trump is well underway.
President Donald Trump signed a flurry of executive orders moments after being inaugurated president, and many of them could directly affect California.
These orders include revoking licenses for offshore