Ohio law school purges Chief Justice John Marshall from its name because he owned slaves

Cleveland State University is purging the name of the legendary late Chief Justice John Marshall from its 125-year-old law school because he was a slaveowner. Critics say tearing down statues of America’s founders and early leaders, and removing their names … Continue reading Ohio law school purges Chief Justice John Marshall from its name because he owned slaves

Medical associations sue FDA over approving chemical abortion pills

A bloc of national medical associations and doctors focusing on caring for pregnant and post-abortive women is suing federal officials, claiming they illegally approved chemical abortion drugs that they say harm girls and women. Most abortions carried out in the United States … Continue reading Medical associations sue FDA over approving chemical abortion pills

White former Seattle city employee sues over racially discriminatory indoctrination

A white former Seattle city employee filed a federal civil rights lawsuit over the city’s racially discriminatory treatment of employees and its mandatory cultural sensitivity programs that he claims constitute racial indoctrination aimed against white people. Cultural sensitivity training sessions … Continue reading White former Seattle city employee sues over racially discriminatory indoctrination

3rd Circuit upholds federal ban on non-violent felons owning guns: First federal appeals court precedent since Supreme Court’s landmark Second Amendment ruling in June

Non-violent felons may be barred from owning guns, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit held on Nov. 16 in the first major federal appellate court ruling applying the Supreme Court’s new standard for reviewing Second Amendment cases. The Supreme … Continue reading 3rd Circuit upholds federal ban on non-violent felons owning guns: First federal appeals court precedent since Supreme Court’s landmark Second Amendment ruling in June

Supreme Court allows January 6 committee to pursue Arizona GOP leader’s telephone Records: Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissent, would have blocked congressional subpoena

The Supreme Court gave a green light on Nov. 14 to the congressional committee investigating the breach at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to obtain the telephone records of Kelli Ward, head of the Arizona Republican Party. Ward had … Continue reading Supreme Court allows January 6 committee to pursue Arizona GOP leader’s telephone Records: Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissent, would have blocked congressional subpoena

Justice Samuel Alito receives standing ovation for overturning abortion ruling

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito received a standing ovation from a hall full of lawyers at a black-tie dinner on Nov. 10 for authoring the landmark legal decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, the 1973 high court ruling that legalized abortion nationwide. … Continue reading Justice Samuel Alito receives standing ovation for overturning abortion ruling

Supreme Court agrees to hear Texas man’s appeal against identity theft conviction in Medicaid fraud case

The Supreme Court agreed Nov. 10 to hear the appeal of a Texas man convicted of health care fraud who argues that he was unjustly separately convicted under a federal aggravated identity theft law because a form he filed contained a patient’s … Continue reading Supreme Court agrees to hear Texas man’s appeal against identity theft conviction in Medicaid fraud case

Supreme Court’s Sotomayor denies NYC workers’ bid to halt vaccination mandate

Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor turned away an emergency application on Nov. 10 to halt New York City’s COVID-19 vaccination mandate that applies to firefighters, police officers, and other government employees. The appeal was from workers who were fired after the … Continue reading Supreme Court’s Sotomayor denies NYC workers’ bid to halt vaccination mandate

Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh

Biden administration defends racially discriminatory adoption law at Supreme Court

A federal law aimed at preventing non-Indian families from adopting Native American children is discriminatory and unconstitutional and should be struck down, parents told the Supreme Court on Nov. 9. The Biden administration supported the federal law at the court … Continue reading Biden administration defends racially discriminatory adoption law at Supreme Court

Indiana tells Supreme Court that nursing home patient on Medicaid had no right to sue over mistreatment

The Supreme Court seemed skeptical Nov. 8 of an Indiana-based government health care provider’s argument that the family of a Medicaid-eligible nursing home patient was barred by federal law from suing to enforce the man’s legal rights. Some legal commentators say … Continue reading Indiana tells Supreme Court that nursing home patient on Medicaid had no right to sue over mistreatment

Supreme Court receptive to pitch to allow court challenges to administrative state powers: Litigants say they should be able to challenge Federal Trade Commission and Securities and Exchange Commission tribunals

A security technology company and an accountant claiming unfair treatment at the hands of federal agencies’ in-house administrative tribunals urged a seemingly receptive Supreme Court on Nov. 7 to make it easier to challenge their structure. The Supreme Court could … Continue reading Supreme Court receptive to pitch to allow court challenges to administrative state powers: Litigants say they should be able to challenge Federal Trade Commission and Securities and Exchange Commission tribunals

Supreme Court refuses to hear challenge to 8-person juries in criminal trials: Conservative Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh say they would have heard the Arizona case

Over the dissent of two conservative justices, the Supreme Court refused on Nov. 7 to take up the case of a man who claimed that it was unconstitutional for Arizona to convict him using a jury made up of just eight people … Continue reading Supreme Court refuses to hear challenge to 8-person juries in criminal trials: Conservative Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh say they would have heard the Arizona case

Supreme Court agrees to hear Indian tribe’s bid to access water from the Colorado River: 9th Circuit previously sided with the Navajo Nation, allowing the lawsuit to proceed

The Supreme Court agreed Nov. 4 to hear a dispute about whether an Indian tribe has the right to draw water from the Colorado River. The case pits the Navajo Nation, a large Indian reservation occupying territory in Arizona, New … Continue reading Supreme Court agrees to hear Indian tribe’s bid to access water from the Colorado River: 9th Circuit previously sided with the Navajo Nation, allowing the lawsuit to proceed

NYC firefighters, police, teachers ask Supreme Court to halt vaccination mandate

New York City firefighters, police officers, and other government employees who were fired after the city refused their request to be exempted on religious grounds from the city’s COVID-19 vaccination mandate filed an emergency application with the Supreme Court late … Continue reading NYC firefighters, police, teachers ask Supreme Court to halt vaccination mandate

Supreme Court hears businessman’s appeal after IRS increases penalty for a paperwork mistake by 5,400%: Pro-abortion rights protesters who condemned reversal of Roe v. Wade disrupt the hearing

A businessman whose initial fine of $50,000 for violating an obscure tax-filing rule ballooned to $2.72 million at the insistence of the IRS urged the Supreme Court on Nov. 2 to reduce the fine. The case came as the Biden … Continue reading Supreme Court hears businessman’s appeal after IRS increases penalty for a paperwork mistake by 5,400%: Pro-abortion rights protesters who condemned reversal of Roe v. Wade disrupt the hearing