Kansas' attorney general is part of a lawsuit seeking to change the U.S. Census in 2030 to help the state avoid losing one of its four U.S. House seats.
Sen. Mike Thompson held a one-sided hearing to promote his resolution urging Gov. Laura Kelly to comply with federal immigration laws. (Sherman Smith/Kansas Reflector) TOPEKA — Sen. Mike Thompson’s hearing on symbolic legislation about immigration laws featured one-sided testimony with dehumanizing language,
Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach is suing SARJ LLC, the operator of 13 adult websites. According to a press release from Kobach’s office, the Kansas Attorney General’s Office filed the lawsuit in Shawnee Co.
SARJ, a Washington IT firm, is the first company charged under a new Kansas law requiring age verification processes on sites with adult content.
Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach, for the first time, deployed a 2024 state law requiring companies offering pornographic material online to deploy age-verification systems to prevent Kansans ...
Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach filed a lawsuit against SARJ LLC, alleging violations of a state law requiring age verification on adult websites. The law, effective July 2024, carries penalties of up to $10,
Voters gave Republicans bigger supermajorities in the Kansas Legislature. Can they resist the urge to go further to the right than voters are OK with?
WICHITA, Kan. (KWCH) - Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach has filed a lawsuit against SARJ LLC, an adult website company. On Tuesday, Kobach announced that the company failed to verify users ...
Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach today led a coalition of state attorneys general in a letter to the incoming Trump administration
Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe signed two executive orders aimed at combating illegal immigration as part of his official act in office.
Tim CarpenterKansas Reflector State law imposed in July mandates age verification to deter underage viewers The Kansas attorney general filed a lawsuit alleging a company… Login to continue reading Lo
Attorney General Kris Kobach said in an opinion that the law in question - enacted in 2002 - could present a "difficult task" to defend in court although he couldn't say for sure whether it was constitutional. Kobach said that the law would have to meet a "strict scrutiny" standard, meaning it would have to . . .