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Weekly Quiz

Jun. 28, 2024

Test your knowledge of the Daily Journal's headlines.

1.
The California Supreme Court relaxed rules for pretrial detention in another effort to reform bail procedures in California.
False
2.
A U.S. Supreme Court justice warned that a ruling that it is not against federal law for public officials to accept gratuities for past official acts could imperil a public corruption case in San Francisco.
False
3.
A Los Angeles County judge wrote that it was up to a state regulator, not the courts, to tackle the problem of the illegal cannabis trade.
False
4.
A panel of the 2nd District Court of Appeal ruled that UC students who were forced to learn remotely in 2020 could not sue for reimbursement of fees and tuition because they had not sufficiently alleged a specific promise of in-person, on-campus education.
False
5.
Attorney General Rob Bonta said that a loophole in the law that governs charter cities appears to make it impossible to force them to comply with a state housing law.
False
6.
A federal judge in Sacramento held the state of California in contempt for inadequate mental health staffing in prisons.
False
7.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that employers cannot pass over U.S. citizens in favor of visa holders.
False
8.
Sheppard Mullin partner Brian D. Anderson predicted that the NCAA’s agreement to pay $2.75B in compensation to a class of former Division 1 athletes was a gamechanger.
False
9.
Superior Court Judge Alex Ricciardulli said in a profile that he is most proud of the body of work he has written on the Los Angeles County Appellate Division.
False
10.
Attorneys publishing articles in the Daily Journal couldn’t agree whether reforms to California’s Private Attorney General Act would cause more or less litigation.
False