Supreme Court, Trump
Digest more
The class-action lawsuit claims DeWine should belated pay $300-per-week federal COVID jobless benefits to 320,000 eligible Ohioans.
1don MSN
Can Marijuana Smokers Legally Own Guns in the U.S.? What to Know as Supreme Court Set to Deliberate
The case was brought by a Texas man who was prosecuted for violating a federal statute that bars people who use illegal drugs from gun possession. Attorneys representing the man argued that the ban was unconstitutional in its application. Both a district judge and the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in his favor.
The Supreme Court may revisit Obergefell as Kim Davis, jailed for refusing same-sex marriage licenses, seeks review, sparking debate.
The Trump tariff cases will receive special treatment so the Justices can address multiple cases at the same time.
The Supreme Court is halting public access to its building for lack of funding during the government shutdown, but justices are still hearing cases.
The Times editorial board critiques the Supreme Court’s overuse of the emergency docket to deliver consequential decisions without explaining its reasoning.
An Alabama man convicted of murder at 14 had an appeal rejected by the Alabama Supreme Court but the court’s chief justice disagreed with the decision. Evan Miller’s writ of certiorari was denied by the court on Friday. Miller was convicted of the 2003 slaying of Cole Cannon and was the youngest person sentenced to life without parole in the state.
For decades courts have used section two to protect the voting power of racial minorities when legislatures draw electoral-district maps. That era may soon end, however, and if it does, the change may offer Republicans new and potent possibilities for partisan gerrymandering to entrench party power.