Juliette Fairley News
As federal eviction moratorium ends, Airbnb is working with St. Louis landlords to provide Afghan refugees shelter
Nick Kasoff, who has one unit vacant in his 15 Ferguson rental properties, would roll out the red carpet if Airbnb contacted him about sheltering Afghan refugees.
Supreme Court ruling paves way for GOP clerk to resume duties at Lincoln County courthouse
Justice Callahan: 'Dysfunctional professional relationship and power struggle caused discord among staff at courthouse'
Lawyers spearhead effort to remove racial artwork from Boone County courthouse wall
When attorney Rusty Antel glances at the two murals located in the stairwell of the Boone County courthouse, it doesn’t make him fearful but he understands how they might scare others.
Eighth Circuit upholds $3.6 million judgment in favor of warehouse company, denies attorney fees
A limitation to the consequential damages between two parties is valid and enforceable in Missouri, according to an Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling.
Americans for Prosperity ranks lawmakers based on freedom-friendly policy votes
Americans for Prosperity-Missouri (AFP-MO) announced its 2021 legislative scorecard, grading lawmakers on whether their actions and votes were freedom-friendly.
Federal judge upholds hike in social carbon costs, Attorney General Schmitt vows to appeal
Attorney General Eric Schmitt intends to appeal a federal judge’s decision that supports the U.S.
Missouri Chamber opposes Pres. Biden's forced employer vaccination, AG Schmitt preps suit against U.S. government
Attorney General Eric Schmitt intends to sue the federal government over President Joe Biden’s federal vaccine mandate as soon as the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) publishes the new rule
Kirksville law firm seeks a contractor to rebuild after arson damaged the office
A lawyer's worst nightmare struck attorney Barry Cundiff on Aug. 22
State judge upholds law that bans police from enforcing federal gun restrictions
Missouri’s Second Amendment Preservation Act (SAPA) has secured another victory after the U.S. Department of Justice attempted to sway a Cole County judge with a statement of interest.
Missouri politicians urge federal energy chief to approve Spire STL pipeline
In a letter to the chief of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), two Missouri members of Congress urged approval of the Spire STL Pipeline, which supplies gas to the St. Louis region.
Cole County judge upholds Gov. Parson's decision to end federal unemployment benefits early
Gov. Mike Parson was misguided in his efforts to incentivize Missourians to return to work by refusing to accept federal unemployment benefits that would have partly provided for the jobless, according to an attorney who sued the state.
Public law professor weighs in on criticism of county Health Dept. for hiring NY firm at $2.3M to promote vaccinations
Political opponents are blasting the St. Louis County Health Department for hiring a New York public relations firm to help promote vaccinations, but a local professor of public law is accusing them of making highly politicized accusations.
Missouri Chamber urges employers to implement a COVID vaccination policy
With the recent FDA approval of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, more Missouri employers are considering whether to require their staff members to get vaccinated
Top election officer detects two people voted twice, sent ballots to Florida during 2020 presidential election
Two people voted at least twice during the 2020 general election and also sent mail-in ballots to Florida
St. Louis city judge denies NFL request to change venue of January 2022 Rams trial
The National Football League (NFL) was denied a change of venue this week by St. Louis City Circuit Judge Christopher McGraugh who is presiding over litigation that alleges it failed to comply with relocation rules when the Rams fled to Los Angeles
KC mayor accuses AG Schmitt of using mask mandate lawsuit to score points in run for Senate
When Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas issued an order requiring face masks, it was because business conventions and conferences had expressed trepidation about visiting the city.
Frontier Justice derides DOJ asking Cole County Court to ban enforcement of Gov. Parson's SAPA
When Frontier Justice gun shop clients in Lee’s Summit inquire about the legal challenge against House Bill 85, which created the Second Amendment Preservation Act (SAPA), Frontier Justice CEO Michael Brown tells them not to worry.
St. Louis County councilwoman proposes using some of Recovery Act's $50 million to treat mental illness, vaccine hesitancy
As pandemic statistics continue to rise and the Delta strain of COVID-19 sweeps the nation, St. Louis County Councilwoman Shalonda Webb is prioritizing one mitigation measure over another.
St Louis judge set to decide on summary judgment in Rams relocation lawsuit
St. Louis City Circuit Judge Christopher McGraugh is set to decide whether to grant a motion for summary judgment requested by the National Football League (NFL) in litigation alleging it failed to comply with relocation rules when the Rams fled to Los Angeles
Springfield Public Schools accused of equating Donald Trump with white supremacy in federal lawsuit
Attorney Kimberly Hermann is confident that her clients will be victorious in their First Amendment lawsuit against Springfield Public Schools (SPS).