Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The U.S. government shutdown will affect the federal court system, but only after the money runs out. The government is generally ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio—In response to the shutdown of the federal government, the U.S. court system in northern Ohio has put on hold all non-essential civil lawsuits involving federal agencies and officials.
Federal courts across the United States have reached a critical juncture as they run out of money due to the ongoing government shutdown. This financial exhaustion has forced the courts to operate on ...
Many staffers of Minnesota’s federal courts have been directed to report for work next week despite an announcement on Friday that money has run out to pay for nonessential work amid the ongoing ...
WASHINGTON - The federal court system is cutting its services to a minimum beginning this week as the government shutdown continues. The Supreme Court ran out of money on Saturday. It is closed to the ...
The U.S. federal court system, starting on Monday, will begin curtailing non-essential functions and furloughing some employees after exhausting what funds the judiciary had left to sustain paid ...
The courts had said they had enough money to keep operations going until Friday, but the pace will slow beginning Monday. The federal court system — which has already paused filing deadlines and ...
The federal court system plans to spend $35 million less from its court security account in fiscal 2026 than it did the previous year unless Congress provides additional funding, at a time of ...
Donald Trump is a big client of the federal court system so he is likely to be irate when he learns the courts are running out of money, thanks to the government shutdown. The federal Judicial Branch ...