
Ready to head straight to your holiday weekend? The lucky folks are already there. Before the rest of us head out, check out today’s LXBN story of the day about the Supreme Court’s recent foray into voters’ rights, and our top 10 in law blog from the LexBlog Network:
- OCR Publications Clarify District Obligations to Student with ADHD under Section 504 – Attorney John Khalil writing on Berchem, Moses & Devlin’s Connecticut Education Law Blog
- FBI Director Comey Takes Baton in DOJ’s Continuing Push for Access to Encrypted Data – Chicago lawyer Christopher O’Malley of Perkins Coie on the firm’s White Collar Briefly blog
- Pesticide Testing of Cannabis Retailers – Harris Moure attorney Alison Malsbury writing out of Seattle on their Canna Law Blog
- Federal Cannabis Laws Don’t Impede Patentability – Minnesota attorney Jessica Gutierrez Alm from Winthrop & Weinstine on the firm’s DuetsBlog
- Why Do We Celebrate Labor Day? – Hartford lawyer Daniel Schwartz of Shipman & Goodwin on his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- FDA Announces Dates for Long-Awaited Public Hearing on Its Regulation of Off-Label Communications – Mintz Levin attorneys Joanne Hawana and Joseph Lichitz on the firm’s Health Law & Policy Matters
- Spying on an employee in France breaches his right to privacy, even where he is committing breaches of his employment contract – London lawyer Claire Lintingre from Squire Patton Boggs writing on their Employment Law Worldview
- How to make the EEOC love you (retaliation edition) – Winston-Salem attorney Robin Shea writing from Constangy Brooks, Smith & Prophete on her Employment & Labor Insider blog
- Employers Have New Guidance for Avoiding Retaliation Claims – Michigan lawyer Jason Shinn of Shinn Legal writing on his Michigan Employment Law Advisor
- Marketing: The “Make it Work” Department – Greenberg Glusker’s Director of Marketing Heather Morse writing out of Los Angeles on her blog The Legal Watercooler