FURTHER UPDATE Friday 12:34 a.m. The Supreme Court, without comment and with no noted dissents, denied all five of the new requests, thus allowing Ledell Lee’s execution to go ahead. (After that, his execution, a 12-minute procedure carried out without apparent incident, was completed four minutes before the death warrant expired.) It was not… Read More
Court eager to decide major religion case
The Supreme Court on Wednesday sent a very strong hint that it is eager, maybe even passionately so, to decide one of history’s most important cases on dealings between religion and government. And, almost as unmistakable was a signal that most of the Justices have a keen interest in giving churches more access to public… Read More
UPDATED: Court ponders what to do with church case
UPDATED Tuesday 3:28 p.m. The hearing on the case will go forward at 10 a.m. Wednesday, but at least part of the focus of the discussion will be on whether it will proceed to a decision on the church’s claim, lawyers involved said. The court has made no announcement of a change in the… Read More
Active — and comfortable — first day for Gorsuch
A very good test for a rookie on the Supreme Court is how well a new Justice can handle a deeply complex case that only a professor of legal arcana could love. On Monday, the court actually heard three mind-twisting cases, back to back, and the occupant of the most junior seat on the bench… Read More
Will major church-state case come to nothing?
The Supreme Court holds the view, dating all the way back to George Washington’s time, that it will not give legal advice, but will only decide lawsuits that involve a live controversy. That is the way it interprets the power given to it by the Constitution’s Article III. On Friday afternoon, the court raised the… Read More
New threat rising to Voting Rights Act
About four years after the Supreme Court took away the government’s strongest authority to protect minority voters’ rights, a backup power under the federal Voting Rights Act – weaker and harder to use – is now being threatened, just as federal courts have begun applying it. At issue now, as it was when the Supreme… Read More
Full Ninth Circuit urged to rule on Trump immigration order
The state of Hawaii and the Trump Administration have urged the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to bypass the usual step of a three-judge panel and assemble the full court to review President Trump’s revised immigration restrictions. If the court agrees, that could speed up review by that appeals court, and move… Read More
UPDATED: Transgender case going over to the Fall
UPDATED Thursday 9:55 a.m. The Fourth Circuit Court on Thursday approved the briefing schedule proposed by the two sides, with all briefs to be filed by June 2. —————————— Both sides in the high-profile case testing the rights of transgender students joined on Wednesday in proposing a schedule that would stretch out appeals court review… Read More
Full 4th Circuit to rule on Trump immigration order
The 15-judge U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit voted on Monday afternoon to review before the full bench, instead of a three-judge panel, the legality of President Trump’s 90-day suspension of entry into the U.S. of any foreign nationals from six Mideast nations. That action, taken by an unspecified majority vote, could speed up… Read More
Maryland judge won’t expand ruling against Trump order
A federal judge in Maryland who last month blocked enforcement nationwide of one key part of President Trump’s revised restrictions on immigration refused on Monday to prevent enforcement of two other significant parts — both dealing with refugees seeking to enter the U.S. District Judge Theodore D. Chuang of Greenbelt, MD, explained that he had no… Read More