A suit on behalf of six undocumented immigrant mothers in Texas accuses the state's health department.
"What house of worship do you attend?" and "Do you have any relatives or friends who have been martyred fighting in the defense of your beliefs?" are among the questions.
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is under fire for selling counterfeit goods -- again -- but this time it plans to fight it with new bar codes.
Questions still surround the former secretary of state's electronic correspondence, the chairman of a Benghazi inquiry says.
United Airlines could refile its lawsuit against Skiplagged.com in another jurisdiction.
Regulators in the United States couldn't prove that Google was a monopoly. Now Europe will take a swing.
The company said the defendants are creating false, misleading and inauthentic 4- and 5-star customer reviews for products on Amazon.com.
A Los Angeles jury found Williams and Thicke guilty of copyright infringement for their "Blurred Lines" hit.
The proposed settlement would end an 11-year lawsuit aggressively pursued by three prior administrations.
United Policyholders, a consumer-advocacy group, filed a lawsuit to force FEMA to provide access to flood-insurance records.
A pro-marijuana group called for a nationwide boycott after the hotel filed a lawsuit against a weed business to end pot sales in Colorado.
The Missouri city's police department could reportedly be hit with a lawsuit for alleged discriminatory practices.
President Obama said his administration will appeal the Texas court's ruling to block his executive actions on immigration policy.
Erstwhile industry leaders like IBM, Microsoft and Qualcomm see intellectual property rights as their not so secret weapon.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s lawsuit against Sprint creates a larger regulatory footprint on the mobile payments space.
Plaintiffs named in an antitrust lawsuit against Apple over its iPods may not actually qualify for the suit.
A civil lawsuit would face some of the same obstacles that convinced a grand jury not to indict the Ferguson police officer.
The Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities is suing the U.S. Department of Education.
Feds accuse the for-profit college company of using unfair debt-collection practices against students who've taken out loans.
Federal prosecutors say St. Anthony Village is discriminating against Muslims, but city officials say its simply a matter of zoning.
Lawyers had agreed that tech firms should pay $324.5 million for alleged antitrust activities that hurt employees’ wages.
The natural and organic foods retailer apparently didn’t weigh the consequences of overcharging customers.