A newsletter by Reuters and Westlaw |
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REUTERS/Gabriel V. Cardenas |
Today, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in a challenge to Colorado’s ban on "conversion therapy" intended to change a minor's sexual orientation or gender identity. Here’s what to know: |
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Colorado's law prohibits licensed mental healthcare providers from engaging in "conversion therapy" with patients younger than age 18, with violations punishable by disciplinary action before a state licensing board. Read more about the law here.
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Colorado Governor Jared Polis, the nation's first openly gay man to be elected as a state governor, signed the bill into law. Polis has called conversion therapy "a tortuous practice that has long been widely discredited by medical and mental health professionals."
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Kaley Chiles, a Christian therapist, is appealing a lower court decision that rejected her claim that the 2019 statute unlawfully censors her communications with clients in violation of First Amendment protections against government abridgment of speech. Read the 10th Circuit decision here.
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Chiles is represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative legal group that has challenged other LGBTQ+ protections. The Trump administration filed an amicus brief supporting Chiles, which you can read here.
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Colorado has said it is regulating professional conduct, not speech. It is among more than two dozen states and D.C. that restrict or prohibit conversion therapy for minors.
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In 2022, the 9th Circuit upheld a Washington state ban against a similar challenge, in which the plaintiff was also represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom. In 2023, SCOTUS declined to take up that case.
- The “conversion therapy” case is just one of several major cases on the Supreme Court docket this term where the justices will wade back into the nation's “culture wars.” Read more about that here.
| Court calendars are subject to last-minute docket changes. |
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U.S. District Judge Mary Rowland in Chicago sentenced David Lira, the son-in-law of convicted California attorney Tom Girardi, to four months in prison after he was charged alongside Girardi with misappropriating millions of dollars in client settlement funds. Find out more.
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The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal by a former Locke Lord partner who sought to overturn his conviction tied to a nearly $400 million fraudulent cryptocurrency scheme. Read more.
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Orrick hired a group of 37 lawyers to its debt finance team from Cadwalader. More on that here.
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More moves: Former Amazon lawyer Kieran Dwyer moved to Greenberg Traurig’s corporate, innovation and AI practice … Baker McKenzie added litigator Dale Bish from Wilson Sonsini … Former Texas AG privacy enforcer Tyler Bridegan moved to Womble’s privacy and cybersecurity practice … Corporate partner Nathan Hertzog
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