RIO GRANDE INTERNATIONAL STUDY CENTER et al v. TRUMP et al

  1. March 28, 2022

    US Agrees To Eco-Remediation In Border Wall Settlements

    In a trio of settlements with conservation and tribal groups, the U.S. government has agreed to stop using existing military funds to build the southern border wall and to address environmental and infrastructure damage caused by that project.

  2. February 11, 2022

    Feds Zeroing In On Settlements In Border Wall Disputes

    The federal government told a D.C. federal court it has reached a tentative agreement to end advocacy groups' lawsuit over the diversion of federal funds for the southern border wall and is nearing an agreement with environmental groups and tribes bringing similar claims.

  3. April 02, 2020

    Trump Escapes Border Wall Funding Suit As Claims Trimmed

    President Donald Trump won an exit on Thursday from advocacy groups' legal challenge to the White House's diversion of federal funding for the southern border wall, with a D.C. federal judge also trimming claims against other elements of the administration.

  4. January 07, 2020

    Feds Say Enviro Issues Can't Back Border Wall Funding Case

    The Trump administration urged a D.C. federal court to toss lawsuits from advocacy groups challenging the diversion of federal funding for the southern border wall, saying that the groups' environmental and recreational challenges aren't covered by funding laws.

  5. September 17, 2019

    DOD Runs Out Of Funds For 3 Border Wall Projects

    The U.S. Department of Defense won't proceed with 20 miles of barriers along the southern border after running out of money for the project, it told a Washington, D.C., federal court Monday as part of several disputes over the use of military funds for the contentious border wall.

  6. March 15, 2019

    Enviro Groups, Landowners Fight Border Wall Declaration

    The construction of a southwestern border wall could threaten endangered species in the region, devalue property and even cut off a long-standing ancestral burial site, a group of nonprofits, advocacy organizations and landowners told a D.C. federal court in a new suit on Thursday.