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.
President Trump’s Inauguration lunch brought together lawmakers, Cabinet nominees, Supreme Court justices and distinguished guests Monday afternoon, in a quadrennial tradition that takes
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.
Also seated prominently at the event are the Supreme Court Justices: Chief Justice John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh ...
Samuel Alito asked whether Pornhub is a modern day Playboy magazine during oral arguments over Texas age-verification law. The post ‘Is it like the old Playboy magazine?’: Alito asks if Pornhub has articles,
Keep Nine Amendment would enshrine in the U.S. Constitution a provision to keep the number of Supreme Court justices at nine members.
Supporters of charter schools and church-state separation describe a ‘tumultuous moment’ as the debate heads for April oral arguments.
The Supreme Court will consider whether to order new nationwide precedent about how lower courts will consider facts over police shootings.
Even by the normal standards of political chutzpah, president Joe Biden’s disgraceful minute-to-midnight pre-emptive pardons for his siblings and their spouses is a doozy. No charges have been laid against any of them.
The justices heard arguments over whether courts must limit their scrutiny of challenges to police shootings to “the moment of threat.”
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.
The Supreme Court heard arguments in a case on Wednesday that could make it easier to hold police officers accountable for use of deadly force.