A divided Supreme Court ruled on Monday, more clearly than it had done before, that city government may sue home loan companies for racial discrimination against minority buyers. However, it put a new and strict limit on that right, saying that a city must offer direct proof that the local government itself had actually been… Read More
Broader threat to Trump on “sanctuary cities”
President Trump’s lawyers have told a federal judge that, at least temporarily, they will not seek permission to enforce a presidential order that threatens to cut off federal funds for so-called “sanctuary cities” – local governments that won’t help round up undocumented immigrants. But the president’s policy faces an even broader threat that will be… Read More
Can the public now watch the famous same-sex marriage trial?
In all of the court cases that led up to the Supreme Court’s ruling in favor of same-sex marriage two years ago, only one was a real trial, with dramatic testimony by witnesses on the stand. That was the famous “Proposition 8” trial in California in 2010, testing the constitutionality of a state ban on… Read More
UPDATED: Court allows fourth Ark. execution in 8 days
UPDATED Thursday 11:12 p.m., Arkansas time. Kenneth Dewayne Williams was put to death by lethal injection in a 13-minute procedure with less than an hour remaining before his death warrant would run out. ———————— For the fourth time in the past eight days, the Supreme Court on Thursday night refused to delay an execution in… Read More
Judge blocks cutoff of federal funds to “sanctuary cities”
Declaring that President Trump probably acted unconstitutionally in attempting to cut off federal funds to city and county governments that do not help enforce federal immigration law, a judge in San Francisco on Tuesday temporarily blocked enforcement of the policy anywhere in the nation. In the latest action by a federal court against the Trump Administration’s… Read More
9th Circuit refuses initial full court review on immigration
The federal appeals court reviewing President Trump’s revised immigration order in a case from Hawau refused on Friday to send the dispute at the outset to a full court — either one of 11 judges or one of 24. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit said the state’s plea for en banc review… Read More
FUTHER UPDATE: Gorsuch casts first votes, joins majority to allow executions
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