Lyle Denniston

Mar 26 2023

Unscrambling patent law

The Supreme Court continues tomorrow its recent study of laws that protect “intellectual property” – creative inventions of the mind or the laboratory.  This time, the Court will be applying in a modern setting a legal principle it spelled out in 1888, when it upheld the patents on Alexander Graham Bell’s invention of the telephone…. Read More

Mar 21 2023

The Court and trademarks — again

The Supreme Court on Wednesday completes this week’s hearings with a single case, another look at trademark law.  This time, the case grows out of a dispute over a humorous spoof of the famous trademarks on Jack Daniel’s whiskey. The Court will broadcast “live” the audio (no video) of the hearing on its homepage, supremecourt.gov … Read More

Mar 20 2023

Will big voting rights case collapse?

The Biden Administration, implying that the Supreme Court may have jumped too hastily into the middle of a historic constitutional dispute over federal elections, told the Justices on Monday that they may now have lost the power to decide it. The government’s position, filed by the Justice Department legal office that the Court regularly relies… Read More

Mar 20 2023

Globalization, cryptocurrency and the Court

In world commerce, the U.S. is a dominant player — but do its laws apply to businesses in other countries?  That is the issue the Supreme Court will consider in a hearing on Tuesday.  In a second case, it will take its first look at the get-rich-quick scheme of investing in cryptocurrency, focusing on one… Read More

Mar 19 2023

Drought, water and the Court

The Colorado River, vital to life in America’s parched West, is in crisis: it is – literally – running out of water after two decades of drought.  On Monday, the Supreme Court will examine the latest legal dispute over how to ration what is left of that dwindling resource. The Court will broadcast “live” the… Read More

Mar 2 2023

Big test for voting rights case

The Supreme Court on Thursday asked lawyers for advice on whether the Justices still can decide the most important voting rights case in years – a basic test under the Constitution of who in state government controls federal elections. In a new order, the Justices called for new legal briefs discussing the impact of the… Read More

Feb 28 2023

Dockworkers, crime and the Constitution

In a Supreme Court hearing Wednesday that may bring back memories of the famous 1954 movie, On the Waterfront, the Justices will examine a constitutional idea that had its origins even before the Constitution existed. The Court will broadcast “live” the audio (no video) of the hearing on its homepage, supremecourt.gov  To listen, click on… Read More

Feb 27 2023

Student loan debt and the Court

The Supreme Court on Tuesday takes on the complex puzzle over President Biden’s plan to forgive more than $400 billion of college loan debt owed by students and graduates.  Two cases raise core constitutional questions about presidential power and the authority of the courts against a background of intense political and cultural controversy. The Court… Read More

Feb 26 2023

Identity theft and the Court

The Supreme Court will be on the bench tomorrow for a single hearing, examining what Congress meant when it outlawed identity theft and added extra punishment when that crime occurs along with another crime. The Court will broadcast “live” the audio (no video) of the hearing on its homepage, supremecourt.gov  To listen, click on “Live… Read More

Feb 21 2023

The Internet and terrorism

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court will continue its examination – begun today – of the legal rules governing the operation of some of the biggest social media platforms.  The Justices will next hear a case involving Twitter, reviewing the scope of anti-terrorism laws when used to challenge those platforms’ hosting of terrorist propaganda. The Court… Read More

Lyle Denniston continues to write about the U.S. Supreme Court, although he “retired” at the end of 2019 following more than six decades on that news beat. He was there for three revolutions – civil rights, women’s rights, and gay rights – and the start of a fourth, on transgender rights. His career of following the law began at the Otoe County Courthouse in his hometown, Nebraska City, Nebraska, in the fall of 1948. His online, eight-week, college-level course – “The Supreme Court and American Politics” – is available from the University of Baltimore Law School, and it is free.

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