“Case before Alabama Supreme Court could shut down fertility clinics, medical group warns”: Amy Yurkanin of Alabama Media Group has this report.
And Gabriel Tynes of Courthouse News Service has an article headlined “Alabama Supreme Court considers fundamental question: What is life? The case may hinge on the fact that Alabama law — which affords strict protections to embryos in utero — says nothing about embryos that exist in a tank of liquid nitrogen.”
“Anti-Affirmative Action Group Sues West Point Over Admissions Policy; The Supreme Court ruling barring race-conscious admissions at civilian colleges should apply to the U.S. Military Academy as well, the lawsuit argues”: Anemona Hartocollis of The New York Times has this report.
Nick Anderson of The Washington Post reports that “Affirmative action opponent sues West Point over race in admissions; Students for Fair Admissions filed the suit in federal court in New York.”
Zachary Schermele of USA Today reports that “West Point sued for using ‘race-based admissions’ by group behind Supreme Court lawsuit.”
And Nate Raymond and Phil Stewart of Reuters report that “US anti-affirmative action group challenges West Point admissions policy.”
“Wisconsin redistricting fight focuses on the recusal of a key justice as impeachment threat lingers”: Scott Bauer of The Associated Press has this report.
“US judiciary can keep operating for 2 weeks if government shuts down”: Nate Raymond of Reuters has this report.
“The 2022–2023 Cato Supreme Court Review”: Thomas A. Berry has this post at the “Cato at Liberty” blog.
“Supreme Court Justice Tours Tuskegee”: Tuskegee University issued this news release today.
And on Friday, C-SPAN posted online a video titled “U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson Commemorates 16th Street Baptist Church Bombing.”
“Will Supreme Court take on latest challenge to MLB’s antitrust exemption?” Evan Drellich of The Athletic has this report.
“Rebuffing Consent-Based Jurisdiction Over the PLO for Overseas Terrorist Acts”: Rocky Rhodes and Andra Robertson have this guest post at “PrawfsBlawg.”
And earlier, Alison Frankel’s “On the Case” from Reuters had a post titled “Terror victims get no help from US Supreme Court’s latest ruling on jurisdiction.”
“Judge Neomi Rao on Pluralism and the Constitution”: C-SPAN has posted this video of an event that the American Enterprise Institute hosted yesterday.
“Circuit Split Watch: Judges Clash Over First Step Act Retroactivity Provision; A divided 6th Circuit lets stand decision that law does not apply to sentences imposed prior to enactment.” Avalon Zoppo of The National Law Journal has this report on an order denying rehearing en banc, and the opinions concurring in and dissenting therefrom, that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit issued yesterday.
The order contains the first published opinion (dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc) from recently confirmed Sixth Circuit Judge Rachel S. Bloomekatz.