The latest from NLJ.com: Supreme Court
- Citing Orwell, justices appear wary of GPS surveillance by police
- An angry Court gives New Orleans prosecutors a scolding
- In passport clash, a question of the president's powers
- Justices struggle over strip-search case
- Busy first week in a big term
Citing Orwell, justices appear wary of GPS surveillance by police | Top |
Police use of GPS surveillance and society's expectations of privacy clashed in the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday as justices weighed new technology and its impact on Fourth Amendment rights. | |
An angry Court gives New Orleans prosecutors a scolding | Top |
The Supreme Court took the New Orleans prosecutor's office to the woodshed on Tuesday, scolding its lawyer for what one justice said was a long history of accusations that the office has ignored the right of defendants to receive exculpatory evidence before trial. | |
In passport clash, a question of the president's powers | Top |
A seemingly narrow-gauge dispute over the wording used on certain U.S. passports triggered a broad-ranging discussion at the Supreme Court on Monday about the separation of powers in matters of foreign policy. | |
Justices struggle over strip-search case | Top |
The Supreme Court on Wednesday struggled with whether jail officials may conduct intrusive strip searches of all arrestees, even of those detained for minor offenses, or whether the Constitution demands something more. | |
Busy first week in a big term | Top |
In just one week, the Court heard from some of the leading lawyers of the Supreme Court bar and nationally recognized legal scholars. It was a big start to a potentially huge term encompassing health care, affirmative action, and immigration. | |
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