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Even when Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson isn't writing opinions, she's still letting everyone know how little ...
Readers discuss Justice Jackson’s role on the Supreme Court. Also: Church endorsements of candidates; Voice of America, ...
Though a relatively soft rebuke, Sotomayor's singling out of Jackson marks the latest incident of a Supreme Court justice ...
WASHINGTON — Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black woman confirmed to the Supreme Court, will in one sense transform it. Once she replaces Justice Stephen G. Breyer, one of the 108 white ...
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, joined by her liberal colleagues Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, dissented from the court’s 6-3 decision not to hear the case. ... In the case at hand, ...
After watching the first day of hearings for Ketanji Brown Jackson (KBJ), I was struck by how much we had to “hear” about the Republican senators’ grievances and feelings of victimization.
On Saturday night, Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson fulfilled a childhood dream: making her Broadway debut.@vladduthiersCBS spoke with Justice Brown Jackson about taking on the one-time ...
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was sworn in Thursday as the first Black woman to serve on the Supreme Court, replacing the retiring Justice Stephen Breyer, who administered a judicial oath at her ce… ...
A framed copy of Clarence Gideon’s handwritten petition to the Supreme Court hangs Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s chambers in Washington, D.C. Gideon’s appeal led to a unanimous 1963 ruling ...
And, to be clear, you will not find a more qualified nominee than Judge (likely soon-to-be Justice) Kentaji Brown Jackson. She graduated from Harvard, both undergrad and law school.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. looks on as Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson signs the Oaths of Office in the Justices' Conference Room at the Supreme Court on June 30 in Washington, DC.
Jackson took the oaths with her hand on two Bibles held by her husband, Patrick: a family Bible, and the "Harlan" Bible, which Justice John Marshall Harlan donated to the court in 1906.