The U.S. Supreme Court said people who file housing-discrimination suits dont have to show they were victims of intentional bias, in a blow to lenders and insurers and a surprise legal victory for the Obama administration.
DebugScreen: mobile
{
"author": {
"name": "Greg Stohr Bloomberg",
"webUrl": "/author/profile/greg-stohr-bloomberg/",
"description": "",
"imageLarge": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f16d6fc2845f417ea0e93a3f2b6cd37d?s=136&d=mm&r=g",
"estimate": 1,
"social": [],
"articles": [
{
"uri": "/2015/06/25/housing-discrimination-lawsuits-backed-by-u-s-supreme-court/",
"title": "Housing-discrimination lawsuits backed by U.S. Supreme Court",
"byline": "Greg Stohr, Bloomberg",
"kicker": "News",
"prettyDate": "June 25, 2015",
"timeToRead": "1 minute",
"image": {
"uri": "",
"width": "",
"height": ""
},
"authors": [
{
"webUrl": "/author/profile/greg-stohr-bloomberg/",
"name": "Greg Stohr, Bloomberg"
}
],
"kickerNode": [
{
"uri": "/news/",
"sectionName": "News"
}
],
"summary": "The U.S. Supreme Court said people who file housing-discrimination suits dont have to show they were victims of intentional bias, in a blow to lenders and insurers and a surprise legal victory for the Obama administration.",
"body": null
}
]
}
}