By Tony Mauro | March 2, 2018
The new plan mirrors a policy that collapsed in 2013 when fiercely competitive individual judges ignored the rules.
By Marcia Coyle | February 28, 2018
"The problem is that so many things have political connotations, and the connotations are in the eye of the beholder," Justice Samuel Alito Jr. said in arguments Wednesday about a Minnesota law that prohibits political apparel in polling places.
By C. Ryan Barber | February 27, 2018
"He's not bashful," Gibson Dunn's Ted Olson said. "He knows he's in the middle of this thing. He knows that he's the vote that's going to tip it one way or the other. And he knows how he's going to come out. But he decided to be very coy."
By Marcia Coyle | February 27, 2018
"I think the starting point all would agree, in what was it, 1986, no one ever heard of clouds," Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said to the DOJ's Michael Dreeben on Tuesday in the data-privacy case United States v. Microsoft.
By Tony Mauro | February 27, 2018
Reading from his 33-page written dissent, Justice Stephen Breyer signaled alarm with the majority's holding that asylum seekers and other arriving aliens can be detained indefinitely without bond hearings. He called the DOJ's position that the immigrants aren't technically on U.S. soil a “legal fiction.”
By Marcia Coyle | February 26, 2018
Justice Neil Gorsuch didn't show any cards, and Justice Sonia Sotomayor called out the Justice Department's Noel Francisco for the abandoning earlier positions. Here are five moments from Monday's arguments in Janus v. AFSCME.
By Marcia Coyle | February 26, 2018
The Trump administration lost its bid Monday in the U.S. Supreme Court to terminate quickly an immigration program that allows hundreds of thousands of immigrant children, many now adults, to remain in the country lawfully.
By Mike Scarcella | February 23, 2018
Marcia Coyle, chief Washington correspondent at The National Law Journal, walks through some of the issues in Monday's big arguments in the union-fee case.
By Marcia Coyle | February 22, 2018
The Justice Department argues in the Supreme Court: "The president's proclamation and the executive orders that preceded it reflect a disturbing recent trend. Lower courts increasingly grant categorical injunctive relief barring enforcement of federal policies everywhere at the behest of individual litigants."
By Tony Mauro | February 21, 2018
The ruling put an end to a long-running effort by victims of a 1997 suicide bombing attack in Jerusalem to collect a default judgment against Iran by seizing Persian artifacts housed by the University of Chicago and Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History.
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