In early February, the Supreme Court put a temporary hold on a Louisiana law that requires doctors who perform abortions in the state to have the authority to admit patients at a nearby hospital. Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court’s four more liberal justices in granting a request from abortion providers to bar the… Read More
No new grants today
Before returning to the bench this morning, the justices issued orders from last week’s private conference. They did not add any new cases to their merits docket for next term, and they asked the U.S. solicitor general to weigh in on an appeal filed by Arkansas attorney general Leslie Rutledge. Rutledge has requested review of… Read More
Deep divisions among the justices on the death penalty
The justices aren’t back on the bench until tomorrow, but early Friday morning they cleared the way for an Alabama execution to proceed. I cover last week’s order and look ahead briefly at next week at the court in this week’s podcast.
Justices clear the way for Alabama execution
Last week’s opinion in a Missouri inmate’s challenge to the state’s plan to execute him by lethal injection revealed deep divisions among the justices on capital punishment. Those rifts were on full display again early this morning, as the court’s conservative majority granted Alabama’s request to allow an execution in that state to go forward…. Read More
Justices will review challenge to census citizenship question: In Plain English
In March 2018, Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross announced that the 2020 census would ask whether each person being counted by the census is a U.S. citizen. Ross explained that the Department of Justice’s civil rights division wanted the data to better enforce federal voting rights laws, and he characterized the decision as routine: From… Read More
Opinion analysis: Divided court rejects lethal-injection challenge by inmate with rare medical condition
Today the Supreme Court rejected a claim by a death-row inmate that executing him by lethal injection would violate the Constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment because of the likelihood that he could wind up choking on his own blood. By a vote of 5-4, the court cleared the way for Russell Bucklew’s execution,… Read More
Justices grant one new case
The Supreme Court issued orders this morning from the justices’ private conference last week. The justices added just one new case to their merits docket for next term: Kansas v. Glover, in which the court agreed to decide whether, for purposes of an investigative stop under the Fourth Amendment, it is reasonable for a police… Read More
Supreme Court intervenes in execution of Buddhist prisoner
Last month the Supreme Court cleared the way for Alabama to execute a Muslim inmate after denying the inmate’s request to have an imam at his side in the execution chamber, even though the prison would allow a Christian chaplain to be present in the chamber. But tonight the justices blocked the state of Texas… Read More
Argument analysis: Justices divided on agency deference doctrine
The Supreme Court heard oral argument this morning in a dispute over veterans’ benefits that could become one of the most significant cases of the term. Although the case arose when the Department of Veterans Affairs refused to give James Kisor, who served as a Marine during the Vietnam War, benefits for his post-traumatic-stress disorder… Read More
Opinion analysis: Court rules for Sudan in dispute over service in USS Cole lawsuit
A lawsuit by victims of the bombing of the USS Cole received a setback today at the Supreme Court. The victims are trying to hold the government of Sudan responsible for providing support to the al Qaeda bombers who killed 17 sailors and injured 42 more in 2000, but the justices ruled that the plaintiffs… Read More