News

A Maryland judge ordered the Trump administration to reinstate thousands of probationary employees slashed from the federal workforce, stopping short of a nationwide injunction previously used against ...
The Baltimore Police Department is now facing delays in getting trainees out on the streets due to its reliance on a state-owned firing range.
The order came one day after the Supreme Court ruled on a separate federal lawsuit against the Trump administration related ...
The decision impacts workers at 20 federal agencies and follows a ruling by the Supreme Court on Tuesday to nullify a similar ...
The pause is limited to certain states while the case proceeds, narrowing the scope of an earlier order that had paused ...
Both judges separately found legal problems with the way the mass terminations were carried out and ordered the employees at least temporarily brought back on the job.
The decision nullifies a Northern District of California ruling that ordered thousands of fired probationary employees to be ...
A federal judge in Maryland has ordered the Trump administration to continue reinstating probationary federal employees that were fired from 20 federal agencies since the president took office ...
U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar, an Obama appointee, issued a 14-day stay in a case brought by 20 Democratic attorneys general representing the District of Columbia, Maryland, and 18 other states.
The Trump administration has moved to reinstate at least 24,500 recently fired probationary workers following a pair of orders from federal judges.
Maryland U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar ruled the workers must be reinstated by 2 p.m. on April 8, but only in the 20 specific jurisdictions that sued — contrary to plaintiffs’ requests ...