By Colby Hamilton | August 9, 2018
A split panel ruled twice that Martoma's insider trading conviction should be upheld, despite the minority's critique that it undermined U.S. Supreme Court and circuit law on insider trading.
By Angela Morris | August 9, 2018
The doll's features include the justice's signature jabot, righteous robe and a hardwood gavel "to bring order to your life."
By Tony Mauro | August 8, 2018
What accounts for the larger number of Supreme Court clerks? The answer seems to be Anthony Kennedy's retirement on July 31 and its impact on the allocation of his clerks.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Michael V. Puppio Jr. | August 8, 2018
On June 27, the U.S. Supreme Court overruled more than 40 years of established precedent by handing down a decision in favor of nonunion member public employees.
By Ian Lopez | August 8, 2018
Also in store this week - a look at some need to know info from the cryptocurrency world.
By C. Ryan Barber | August 7, 2018
Brett Kavanaugh, the U.S. Supreme Court nominee, put on black robes and returned to the D.C. Circuit on Tuesday to deliver the oath to a former clerk: Britt Grant, newly confirmed to the Eleventh Circuit.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Robert L. Maier | August 7, 2018
In his Intellectual Property column, Robert L. Maier discusses 'Helsinn Healthcare v. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA,' in which the U.S. Supreme Court will address the scope and impact of the 'on sale bar' of the patent statute as it applies under the America Invents Act.
By Marcia Coyle | August 7, 2018
Since 2010, according to a newly updated study, female justices have been disproportionately interrupted in every term. In the 2016 term, for the first time, the ratio of female to male interruptions exceeded 2:1.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By John A. Thomson Jr. | August 6, 2018
The Lakeridge decision actually stands for the larger overarching conclusion that there is no fixed, pre-ordained answer as to which standard of review an appellate court should apply when an appeal presents mixed questions of law and fact
By Tony Mauro | August 6, 2018
Most of the U.S. Supreme Court edits this term, as in past ones, fall in the categories of typographical or grammatical errors, or inadvertent word mix-ups. Here's a look at some of the fixes.
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