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By Jimmy Hoover | February 4, 2025
From "rookies" to "superstars," a new draft study looking at the win rates of Supreme Court advocates based on their experience uncovers some surprising results.
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By Jimmy Hoover | February 3, 2025
On Monday, the ABA adopted a resolution proposed by the New York City bar urging the high court to make its recent code of conduct "enforceable."
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By Jimmy Hoover | January 31, 2025
A steady supply of new cases has raised the stakes of the justices' 2024-2025 session.
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By Stephen A. Miller and Andrew D. Linz | January 31, 2025
The court has likewise narrowed the scope of criminal laws targeting public corruption, holding that bribery laws require an “official act,” and limiting the applicability of honest-services fraud offenses on several occasions.
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By Jimmy Hoover | January 30, 2025
The case is the latest—and arguably biggest—test of the conservative majority’s appetite to remove legal barriers for religious groups seeking to participate in taxpayer-funded programs, with religious schools currently excluded from every state charter school program around the country.
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By Jimmy Hoover | January 27, 2025
Plaintiff Curtrina Martin and her son were awoken to FBI agents smashing through their door in the early hours, wrongly believing their house to be that of a nearby suspected gang member.
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By Bennett L. Gershman | January 26, 2025
Trump’s pardons signaled that as far as Trump cares, the rule of law is an empty slogan, Law Journal columnist Bennett Gershman writes.
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By Michelle Morgante | January 24, 2025
In a case that was remanded back by the Supreme Court, a U.S. district court found the toy was a parody that did not infringe on Jack Daniel's trademark, but still tarnished the whiskey brand, noting “human consumption and canine excrement do not mix.”
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By Jimmy Hoover | January 24, 2025
The question now facing the justices is whether religious schools must be eligible to participate in a state's publicly funded charter school system.
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By Jimmy Hoover | January 24, 2025
"It's not a surprise that the Justice Department is going to be changing its position in voting rights cases and embracing more of the position of those who've fought against attempts to use the Voting Rights Act to expand minority participation," said one election law scholar.
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