As is common now, the supposed “conservative court” did not vote as a bloc, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett ... did with Justice Samuel Alito.
The U.S. Supreme Court has stayed the preliminary injunction in the Texas Top Cop Shop case, allowing FINCEN Beneficial Ownership Interest Reporting to proceed.
A top law firm is representing the president as he appeals his conviction in the one criminal case that went to trial before he won the 2024 presidential election.
Supporters of charter schools and church-state separation describe a ‘tumultuous moment’ as the debate heads for April oral arguments.
The court will address a lower court decision deeming the school's funding to be unconstitutional. Notably, a majority of the justices profess the Roman Catholic faith. Associate Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, and Sonia Sotomayor, as well as Chief Justice John Roberts, are all Catholic.
The porn industry’s sizable influence aside, it was easy to miss (with all the inauguration buzz) that its cynically named interest group, the Free Speech Coalition, challenged Texas’ age-verification law before the U.S. Supreme Court.
We will get a fair decision that provides helpful guidance and a path forward that allows states to protect children while honoring the First Amendment.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday grappled with the case of Patrick Daley Thompson, a former Chicago alderman and member of Chicago’s most storied political dynasty. Thompson served four months in a federal prison for making false statements to bank regulators about loans he took out and did not repay.
At oral arguments earlier this week the Supreme Court was skeptical of the Food and Drug Administration’s effort to block a North Carolina-based company from challenging the denial of its application to market e-cigarettes in the conservative U.
In his frenetic first week back at the White House, President Donald Trump allowed immigration raids at schools, sidelined federal employees focused on diversity and ended civil rights investigations into book bans.
The Trump administration’s Department of Justice is planning to take its fight on birthright citizenship all the way to the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) after a federal judge struck down the president’s recent executive order limiting the practice,
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