Other states can draw lessons from 2019 HCA deal, could give AGs more power to regulate sales, strengthen certificate-of-need laws, it notes.
North Carolina's Republican lawmakers passed a bill in December preventing Governor Josh Stein from filling appellate court vacancies with a judge from the political party of his choosing.
The legislation would continue GOP efforts to restrict what the attorney general may prosecute, which it began doing in December.
A North Carolina judge ruled Friday that a Black defendant’s capital trial was undermined by allegations of racial bias ...
The University of California College of the Law, based in San Francisco, commissioned a study by Wake Forest University Law ...
Three lawmakers in North Carolina have filed a bill that would restrict some actions of the state’s Attorney General.
Exclusive: While speculation grows about whether former Gov. Roy Cooper will challenge Sen. Thom Tillis, Cooper announces ...
In North Carolina and Georgia, Kamala Harris gained in some fast-growing suburban counties, but it was not enough to cancel ...
The 15-line bill, sponsored by Sens. Eddie Settle, Bobby Hanig and Tim Moffitt, would block the attorney general from joining ...
An emergency requires urgency, but apparently that doesn’t apply to the North Carolina General Assembly. The ...
As Stein concludes the first month of his term, The Chronicle analyzed the state government’s veto history from 1997 to 2024 ...
Today’s political climate is filled with division and disagreement — and North Carolina is no exception. Generally considered ...