By Jimmy Hoover | March 27, 2024
When the text of the Constitution "does not tell us the answer...we usually look to history," Justice Brett Kavanaugh said. "We might not like it, but unless we're just making it up, I don't know where else we're going to look."
By Kate Brumback and Russ Bynum | The Associated Press | March 27, 2024
A panel heard oral arguments Wednesday in a case that followed a national outcry over the Black man's killing. The appellants' lawyers argued that evidence of past racist comments they made didn't prove a racist intent to harm.
By Riley Brennan | March 26, 2024
Ohio had two definition of "motor vehicle," one that applies to traffic laws, and one that applies more broadly to various chapters of state law and criminal laws, the opinion said.
By Cedra Mayfield | March 25, 2024
As the appointed incumbent seeks to retain his Supreme Court of Georgia seat through election, a former congressman is relaunching his race to become a justice.
By Jimmy Hoover | March 21, 2024
Trump's supporters at the high court include more than 20 Republican states, 28 members of Congress and two former U.S. attorneys general.
By The Associated Press | March 20, 2024
The planned lethal injection of pentobarbital is set for 7 p.m. at the state prison in Jackson. In their request for clemency, the condemned man's lawyers called his trial "a shocking relic of the past" and said the local public defender system had severe shortcomings in the 1990s.
By Alanna Durkin Richer and Sudhin Thanawala | The Associated Press | March 20, 2024
The Fulton County Superior Court judge has granted a request by defense attorneys seeking permission to ask the Georgia Court of Appeals to review his decision to allow the district attorney to remain on the case.
By Kate Brumback and Sudhin Thanawala | The Associated Press | March 19, 2024
The filing asks Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee to grant a certificate that would allow his decision to be reviewed by the Georgia Court of Appeals.
By Jimmy Hoover | March 15, 2024
The dispute centered on a grammatical debate over the meaning of the word "and" in the safety-valve provision of the federal First Step Act.
By Mason Lawlor | March 14, 2024
High court declares the police practice of taking overhead pictures using telephoto lenses without a warrant to be an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth Amendment's and Alaska Constitution's protections of privacy.
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