TOPEKA -- On Friday the District of Columbia court of appeals left intact a ruling against a new clean-air policy from the Environmental Protection Agency. Under the rule, states were required to reduce air pollutants from sources like power plants to protect the health of people living in the area. In august, a three judge federal panel ruled against the EPA. Kansas was one of more than a dozen states that challenged the regulation. State attorney general Derek Schmidt said had the rule been enacted, it would have imposed additional costs to utility rate payers. The court of appeals ruling will stand unless the US Supreme Court takes up the case.
Text messages are at the center of legal issue regarding a citizens constitutional right against unreasonable search and seizure. Attorney Aaron Sachs discusses how safe your text messages are in...
As the weather starts to get a little warmer, more and more motorcycles will hit the road. Attorney Aaron Sachs looks into motorcycle safety in this week's Legally Speaking....
The US Food and Drug Administration proposes a plan that would require tanning beds to have a warning label alerting users of the risk of skin cancer....