Lyle Denniston

Mar 27 2022

The Court, words and meanings

The Supreme Court continues its current round of hearings on Monday with a pair of cases on down-to-earth issues of how law affects workers who toil at blue-collar jobs. Both cases turn on seemingly mundane questions of law: is a railroad train being used when a worker is injured on it while it is temporarily… Read More

Mar 22 2022

The Court, law and lawyers’ zeal

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court returns to the never-ending project – of judges, legislators, lawyers and legal scholars – to make lawsuits less expensive, fairer and, candidly, less subject to manipulation by crafty lawyers. This case, the only one set for hearing tomorrow, projects that endeavor onto the international stage, involving both U.S. federal courts… Read More

Mar 21 2022

Supreme Court: A focus on family feuds

The one case on the Supreme Court’s hearing calendar for Tuesday involves the meaning of a four-decades-old international treaty that seeks to sort out in which country a child will live, when the parents feud over that issue. That treaty has grown more important as globalization has led to more marriages of spouses from different… Read More

Mar 20 2022

Supreme Court: Back to basics

The Supreme Court opens its next round of hearings tomorrow by examining anew two basic legal questions: how does a court decide if a legal right has been forfeited, and who speaks for a state government when its laws are challenged in federal courts?  The first grows out of workers’ claim that they were cheated… Read More

Mar 13 2022

A January 6 constitutional question

Can Congress, by passing a new law, nullify a part of the Constitution? The answer would seem to be obvious, since Article V’s provisions for the amending process do not allow any such thing. But that appears to be a question looming in a case now making its way through the federal courts – possibly… Read More

Mar 3 2022

Trump’s potential crimes: An analysis

The prospect that former President Trump could face criminal charges for his efforts to stay in office, including his role in encouraging the violent attack on the Capitol last year, has gained new impetus as a result of the work of the January 6 investigating committee. It was only a first step, but lawyers for… Read More

Mar 1 2022

The Constitution and the Border Patrol

The Supreme Court on Wednesday holds the final hearing of the current sitting. It will be a test of whether Border Patrol agents can be sued for damages based on claims that they violated a person’s constitutional rights.  After tomorrow, the Court next holds hearings on March 21. The “live” audio (no video) of the… Read More

Feb 28 2022

A day focused on health law

Tuesday will bring a study of health law at the Supreme Court, in two unrelated cases.  The first hearing arises out of the opioid epidemic; it focuses on prosecution of doctors for over-prescribing pain-killing drugs.  The second examines the legal duty of health insurance plans to cover treatment of patients with kidney disease. The “live”… Read More

Feb 27 2022

A look at air pollution and energy policy

The Supreme Court’s hearings this week begin on Monday with four combined cases raising core questions about how the federal government today regulates air pollution in a strategy to reduce global warming as a hazard to human health and the environment. The “live” audio (no video) can be heard at Quick Links on the Supreme… Read More

Feb 22 2022

Will a Trump policy on immigrants be revived?

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court will hear a plea by a group of conservative state governments seeking to revive a Trump Administration anti-immigrant policy that actually has its origins in a dark era in American history, 140 years ago.  The case is the only one scheduled for hearing tomorrow. The “live” audio (no video) can… 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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