Wash U Expert: Law professor calls for do-over in Ferguson case
The St. Louis County Circuit Court has the authority to
seek and appoint a special prosecutor to present the case involving
Michael Brown’s death to a new grand jury — and should do so, a law
professor at Washington University in St. Louis said.
Wash U Expert: Obama within rights to proceed on immigration reform
With Republicans gaining control of Congress after
the midterm elections, Speaker of the House John Boehner insists that
President Barack Obama could get “burned” if he uses executive action to
move forward on immigration reform during the remainder of his
presidency. Obama is well within his rights to proceed with the
temporary measures he is considering, says an immigration law expert at
Washington University in St. Louis.
Wash U Expert: HBO is changing the game of à la carte streaming
This week’s announcement that HBO will begin offering new video streaming service without a cable subscription is likely to have significant impact on the television industry. And the ripple effect could happen fast, according to Raphael Thomadsen, PhD, associate professor of marketing in Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis.
Wash U Expert: Ebola quarantines essential for public health
Recent revelations that NBC News’
chief medical correspondent violated an Ebola quarantine after
returning from Africa, and that a Dallas health care worker infected
with the virus boarded a commercial jet have focused the nation’s
attention on Ebola and what can be done to protect citizens. While measures like quarantine do restrict the freedom
of exposed individuals, they do so to protect the public’s health, says a
Washington University in St. Louis expert on biomedical ethics.
Wash U Expert: Regulations on tax inversions a move in the right direction
The U.S. Treasury Department has taken action to
curb corporate tax inversions, making it more difficult to for U.S.
companies to merge with international firms and move abroad to reduce
their taxes. This move attempts to combat specific abuses within a
flawed framework, according to an international tax law expert at
Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.
Wash U Expert: Adrian Peterson and child abuse
On Sept. 11 — just one week into the 2014 NFL season — running back Adrian Peterson was indicted on charges of beating his four-year-old son with a tree branch. In the uproar that followed, Peterson was suspended from professional football and pilloried by pundits left and right. Washington University in St. Louis Associate Professor Jeffrey Q. McCune Jr., PhD, who writes about masculinity, performance studies and popular culture, shares his thoughts.
Wash U Experts: Law professors discuss Missouri’s new abortion waiting period
On Sept. 10, the Missouri legislature overrode a veto by Gov. Jay Nixon and enacted one of the United States’ strictest waiting periods for women seeking abortion. The law will require a 72-hour delay, and that delay won’t make women safer or improve health outcomes, said two experts on health and family law from the School of Law at Washington University in St. Louis.
Wash U Expert: Missouri lawmakers expand gun rights
Missouri lawmakers recently overrode a veto by Gov. Jay Nixon and passed a bill allowing school districts to designate teachers or administrators as school protection officers, able to carry concealed firearms into schools. The measure also lowered the age to apply for a conceal-and-carry permit to 19 from 21 and prohibits cities from banning open carry laws. Gregory P. Magarian, JD, constitutional law expert and professor of law, weighs in from the point of the view of the Second Amendment.
WashU Experts: Faculty available to comment on Ferguson unrest
As the St. Louis community grapples with recent events in the nearby suburb of Ferguson, Mo., a number of Washington University in St. Louis faculty members are offering their expertise, commentary and insight in hopes of promoting constructive dialogue on a number of challenging issues.
Wash U Expert: States should have some power over criminal laws of marijuana
A bill introduced July 28 in the U.S. House of
Representatives would amend the controlled substances act – the federal
law that criminalizes marijuana – to exempt plants with an extremely low
level of THC, the part of marijuana that makes users high. Following closely on the heels of a call by the New York Times editorial board for the federal government to legalize marijuana, this could mark a turning point of sorts in the campaign for legalization. Gregory
P. Magarian, professor of law, sees two reasons for leaving states with some power over the criminal law of marijuana.
View More Stories