Uncategorized Archives - Page 2 of 2 - BNCL Law Firm

Blog

Trump’s January 6 Pardons: The Legal, Social, and Political Fallout

On January 20, 2025, President Donald Trump returned to office and immediately fulfilled one of his most controversial campaign promises: issuing a sweeping pardon for …

Read More
The End of Birthright Citizenship: What Trump’s Executive Order Means for America

On January 20, 2025, President Donald Trump began his second term with a controversial start, signing 26 executive orders, including one that reinterprets the Fourteenth …

Read More
Why Civil Rights Law Firms Like BNCL Are Essential in Upholding Democracy in Cases Like the Louisiana Voting Map*

  In June 2024, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in a pivotal case challenging Louisiana’s newly redrawn voting map, which adds a second Black-majority …

Read More
Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C.
Olmstead v. L.C.: A Milestone for Mental Health Rights and the Path Toward Community Integration

  The Impact of Olmstead v. L.C. on Mental Health and Disability Rights In the landmark case of Olmstead v. L.C. (1999), the United States …

Read More
Case Results

Reginald Oliver v. City of Oakland

Oakland Police keep fabricating evidence and lying about minorities to arrest and prosecute them for supposed “gang” crimes, in violation of a settlement that prohibits …

Read More
Named plaintiff Reginald Oliver claims the Oakland PD continues violating the Constitution, in defiance of the settlement in Delphine Allen e al. v. City of Oakland, USDC No. C-00-4599 TEH, also known as "The Riders" litigation. Read Full Course
John Burris
Jane Smith v. City of Oakland

Racial profiling of Asian women by police officer resulting in a class action complaint for damages, declaratory and injunctive relief

Read More
Finding evidence about defendant's post-conviction parole violation unfairly prejudicial "since the jury could have construed that parole violation as character evidence in violation of Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b)" Read Full Course
Rodney King
Rodney King v. City of Los Angeles

Rodney King has filed a petition for a writ of mandamus seeking to have Judge John G. Davies disqualified from presiding at the trial of …

Read More
Rodney King waited too long to file a malpractice suit against the first of 27 lawyers who represented him in connection with the infamous beating he suffered from Los Angeles police in 1991, this district’s Court of Appeal ruled yesterday. The ruling by Div. Two affirmed Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Ann Kough’s grant of summary judgment to Steven Lerman. King earlier this year dismissed his appeal of Kough’s ruling in favor of two other lawyers sued in the case, Federico Sayre and John Burris. Read Full Course
FEATURED News & Updates

Civil rights lawyer John Burris confronts police narratives

Written by Janie Har, AP researcher Rhonda Shafner also contributed to this report. To read on AP News click here OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Before …

Watch our video