Juliette Fairley News
City of San Diego sues 20 companies alleging water contamination
DuPont, 3M and Raytheon are among the companies accused in a lawsuit of concealing their knowledge of deadly toxic chemicals, which they allegedly spread in firefighting foam
Federal judge set to rule on gun owners disclosing personal information to UC Davis researchers
A federal judge is set to rule on a lawsuit filed against the State of California over legislation that would require a gun buyer to reveal an abundance of personal information to research institutions.
Jan. 6 suspect appeals dismissal of FBI lawsuit, advances out of primary election for District 43 Assembly seat
A suspect accused of participating in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, and who's also campaigning for a California Assembly seat, has appealed a federal court’s dismissal of his lawsuit against the Federal Bureau of Investigations for allegedly confiscating some of his belongings after entering his North Hollywood home.
Disbarred attorney Tom Girardi ordered to pay $2.2 million-plus interest to clients
A judge allegedly granted one family permission to collect against Girardi's estranged wife Erika Jayne
Parent group vows to sue LA charter high school over graduation that banned the unvaccinated
Parent choice groups are angry that unvaccinated Granada Hills Charter School seniors were excluded on graduation day instead of being allowed to walk the stage.
LA Superior Court court reporter accuses union of forging her signature on membership card
A Santa Clarita court reporter is asking for a preliminary injunction against Los Angeles Superior Court
State Senate-approved CARE Court expected to reduce homelessness, smash-and-grab incidents
CARE Court endorsed by business coalition, 21 Chambers of Commerce
Embattled San Diego school district delays COVID-19 vaccine mandate until July 2023
San Diego Unified School District has voted to delay their COVID-19 vaccine mandate until July 2023, but a parental rights group wants the school district to do away with the mandate entirely
AB 2098 would de-license doctors for hydroxychloroquine, Ivermectin 'COVID misinformation'
Among the 20 California lawmakers who voted against AB 2098 were Republicans and one Democrat
NFIB reacts to Gov. Newsom's proposed $300.7 billion state budget
Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed a $300.7 billion budget, which includes the largest small business relief program in the nation.
GOP Congressional candidate questions 'Surrendering Vote-by-Mail Ballot' process
The state’s Surrendering Vote-by-Mail Ballot procedure is rife with opportunities for election fraud, according to a candidate for Congress.
Gov. Newsom signs law that loosens non-economic damages, restructures limit on attorney fees
AB 35 was proposed to modernize the medical malpractice system for awarding damages
Senate taps the brakes on bill limiting minor traffic violations after fierce pushback
The Senate Appropriations Committee approved Senate Bill 1389, which would ban police officers from ticketing motorists for low-level infractions but Sen. Anna Caballero inactivated it
Prof: Cooperation between Gov. Newsom and New Zealand is just a 'gesture'
California, New Zealand climate agreement prioritizes electric vehicles
State judge rules against requiring Controller Yee to 'open the books'
OpentheBooks.com, Adam Andrzejewski, and American Transparency sued California Controller Betty Yee last year
San Diego approves ban on flavored tobacco products, menthol cigarettes
Prompted by local teens who oppose vaping, the San Diego City Council approved a ban on the sale of menthol cigarettes and other flavored tobacco products last week, including e-cigarettes.
LA District Attorney sues over copycat ADA complaints targeting small business
Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascón and San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin sued a California law firm alleging it was shaking down small businesses using serial filers under provisions of the federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
LA County Sheriff's employee sues union over inability to opt out of membership
A Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department employee filed suit against a government labor union last week, an organization that he once served as vice president.
OC Congresswoman Michelle Steel's baby formula legislation enacted into law
Legislation designed to ease the baby formula shortage that was introduced by Congresswoman Michelle Steel (R-CA) of Orange County was approved by both the House and the Senate
NFIB: 'Proposed climate action plan will overload the electric grid, shutdown small businesses with blackouts
NFIB state director: A plan to reduce fossil fuels and hasten carbon neutrality will impact the state’s electric grid and shut down small businesses