5/2
Penn in the News
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Filter Stories
Penn In the News
Philadelphia lawyer connects at risk youth to at risk animals, together they help each other
Penny Ellison of Penn Carey Law leads Hand2Paw, a Philadelphia nonprofit founded by Penn alum Rachel Cohen that connects youth experiencing homeless or in foster care to animals in need.
Penn In the News
There’s no way the Georgia prosecutions of Donald Trump and Mark Meadows belong in federal court
In an Op-Ed, Claire Finkelstein of Penn Carey Law explains why the Hatch Act prevents Donald Trump and Mark Meadows from transferring their criminal cases in Georgia to federal court.
Penn In the News
Will Georgia case against Trump end up in federal court?
Claire Finkelstein of Penn Carey Law doesn’t believe that Donald Trump can prevail in arguing that he was acting in his capacity as president while trying to win an election.
Penn In the News
The case for why the Constitution blocks Trump being president again
In an Op-Ed, Kermit Roosevelt of Penn Carey Law argues that a long-neglected part of the 14th Amendment prevents Donald Trump from being on the 2024 presidential ballot.
Penn In the News
Georgia indictment to ‘solidify’ Trump’s support for now, analysts say
Claire Finkelstein of Penn Carey Law says that the large number of Trump confidants indicted alongside him in Georgia increases the likelihood that some may turn on the former president.
Penn In the News
Yellow is having an odd bankruptcy as new loan offers pour in
David Skeel of Penn Carey Law says that the prospect of multiple bids for Yellow is a good thing, despite the irony that they’re funding a business that’s completely shutting down.
Penn In the News
Trump’s First Amendment defense
Seth Kreimer of Penn Carey Law explains why Donald Trump’s charges of agreeing with and encouraging others to take illegal actions aren’t protected by freedom of speech under the First Amendment.
Penn In the News
Digital replicas, a fear of striking actors, already fill screens
Jennifer E. Rothman of Penn Carey Law says that lower-profile performers might not realistically be able to say no to studio demands if limits on digital replicas aren’t hammered out at the bargaining table.
Penn In the News
Police searching for Kwik Trip car thief
Data from the Quattrone Center at Penn Carey Law suggests that COVID-19 has caused crime in the U.S. to drop across the nation’s largest cities.
Penn In the News
Race-based medicine is not the solution to health disparities
PIK Professor Dorothy Roberts says that race is a social category affected by inequality, not a biological category that naturally produces health disparities.