Featured Stories

Supreme Court Rejects Heightened Standard for “Reverse Discrimination” Claims

The ruling will make it easier for employees who are members of majority groups to succeed in claims of intentional discrimination under Title VII. Read More.


Supreme Court Declines to Hear Case Related to Student Speech

On Tuesday, May 27, 2025, the United States Supreme Court issued an opinion denying writ of certiorari in a lawsuit related to a Massachusetts public school student's t-shirt opining on gender identity. Read More.


NPR and Colorado Radio Stations Sue Over Funding Executive Order

NPR and three Colorado public radio stations have sued the Trump administration over an executive order cutting federal funding to public media, alleging it violates the First Amendment and exceeds presidential authority. Read More.

Recently Featured Dockets

Abrego Garcia et al v. Noem et al (filed 3/24/25)
U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland

Other Legal News

Originalism Unites but Also Divides the Supreme Court’s Conservatives
The New York Times, June 9, 2025

Originalism is not just a unifying philosophy.


Justice Jackson Just Helped Reset the D.E.I. Debate
The New York Times, June 8, 2025

How much should the law treat a person as an individual rather than as a member of a group?


Supreme Court adds four new cases to 2025-26 docket
SCOTUSblog, June 7, 2025

The Supreme Court on Friday evening released orders from the justices’ private conference on Thursday. The justices added four new cases, involving issues such as federal sentencing, the death penalty,…


Justice Jackson’s Dissent in Noem v. Doe: Long on Heart, Light on Legal Reasoning
Justia's Verdict, June 3, 2025

UC Davis Law professor Vikram David Amar analyzes the Supreme Court’s decision to allow the Department of Homeland Security to reinstate efforts to end a parole program for migrants from four countries, focusing on legal standards for granting a stay and the broader constitutional and policy implications of executive immigration authority. Professor Amar argues that the federal government does indeed suffer irreparable harm when prevented from enforcing duly enacted laws and policies, and criticizes Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s dissent for undervaluing these harms and overlooking legal precedent and practical consequences.


A Fiery Brief Fueled by Conservatives Helped Put Trump’s Tariffs in Peril
The New York Times, June 2, 2025

A coalition including leading figures on the right said the president’s program did violence to the Constitution. One judge cited it eight times.