Morning Docket: 12.10.25

* Sullivan & Cromwell argues that Trump’s state criminal charges — over behavior he undertook when he wasn’t president — belongs in federal court because jurors heard testimony about his attempts to cover up the crimes as president. [New York Law Journal]

* Big sanction for Goldberg Segalla over AI use in Chicago Housing case. [Chicago Sun-Times]

* ICE’s secret weapon? Databases of often anonymous and unsupported “gang” traits cited to keep people indefinitely detained. [Balls and Strikes]

* Trump’s proposed executive order to regulate AI will “face legal hurdles,” which is the nice way of noting that this is not how executive orders work. [The Hill]

* Lawsuit alleges Chipotle bowl delivered by DoorDash had a rodent in it. DoorDash immediately regrets not inventing rodent surcharge for the extra. [Law360]

* Department of Justice says evidentiary order is blocking their effort to reindict James Comey as opposed to the fact that it’s all clearly time-barred. [ABA Journal]

* Tax prosecutions fall precipitously. [Reuters]

* Supreme Court wants to know JD Vance’s political plans so they can bolt some kind of standing on his effort to erase campaign finance reforms. [Supreme Court Brief]

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