While the court’s politics have veered right, the justices’ prose has arguably shifted left, becoming more liberal and accessible. Today’s Supreme Court unanimously and actively embraces a progressive ...
While the High Court today stayed one Texas judge's injunction blocking the Corporate Transparency Act’s beneficial ownership ...
The Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to reinstate a federal anti-money laundering law at the federal government’s request as a legal challenge proceeds in a lower court. The court’s ...
The U.S. Supreme Court appeared inclined on Wednesday to revive a Texas woman's civil rights lawsuit against the Houston ...
Brenda Andrew told the Supreme Court that Oklahoma prosecutors used sexist stereotypes like waving her underwear before the ...
Senator Harry Reid triggered the so-called "nuclear option," which eliminated the filibuster for lower court nominees. At the time, Senator Mitch ...
The US Supreme Court announced on Jan. 17 that it will review a decision by the Richmond-based US Court of Appeals for the ...
The US Supreme Court on Tuesday signaled it would likely limit whether district courts must accept adjudications from the ...
Donziger was subsequently prosecuted by Chevron’s law firm in a case that Supreme Court Neil Gorsuch said “broke a basic ...
The Supreme Court has upheld the federal law banning TikTok beginning Sunday unless it’s sold by its China-based parent ...
While considering a First Amendment case about access to explicit websites online, Supreme Court Justices Neil Gorsuch and Samuel Alito appeared to be unfamiliar with websites such as PornHub, asking ...
Justice Gorsuch wrote a brief concurring, joined by Justice Thomas: Sometimes, the Constitution or Congress provides a particular standard of proof. See ante, at 4–5. If not, courts must find one.