Legislative history can be extraordinarily useful for determining the intent behind a law, whether you're trying to determine why the law was changed or what Congress meant by a specific phrase. Legislative history is typically found in documents created during the legislative process, including reports, hearings, records of debates, and different versions of the bill.
If you need to find information on cases, statutes, or regulations from another state and are unsue where to start, check out one of these sources:
EDGAR: Maintained by the SEC, EDGAR (the Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval system) contains publicly filed documents, including companies’ notices of material changes (8-Ks), annual reports (10-ks), prospectuses (S-1s), and many others.
Although EDGAR can be accessed from the SEC website and is free to use, Lexis+, and Westlaw offer a more user-friendly search interface. Follow the path below to access this database: