Can California reduce its public-employee pensions?; Changing post in immaterial ways — or to soften its allegations — does not restart statute of limitations; Cato scholars pose questions for final debate; ‘Law, Borders, and Speech’ conference at Stanford on Monday;
 
The Volokh Conspiracy
 
 
Can California reduce its public-employee pensions?
The L.A. Times has an article about the California Court of Appeal's recent Marin County pension ruling.
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Changing post in immaterial ways — or to soften its allegations — does not restart statute of limitations
An interesting and important new decision from a New Jersey appellate court.
Cato scholars pose questions for final debate
The folks at Cato have asked some of their resident and adjunct scholars – Tim Lynch, Michael F. Cannon, Ilya Shapiro, Thaya Brook Knight, Benjamin Friedman, A. Trevor Thrall, Matthew Feeney, and yours truly – to propose some questions for the candidates to answer during the debate tonight, and the results are posted in this video …
Can warrants for digital evidence also require fingerprints to unlock phones?
The government recently obtained such a warrant in Los Angeles. But is it legal? As with some other encryption workarounds, the answer is complicated.
‘Law, Borders, and Speech’ conference at Stanford on Monday
An upcoming conference at Stanford celebrating (I hope!) the 20th anniversary of publication of "Law and Borders."
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