March 23 Alito gives lawyers lesson on meaning of 'day' as Supreme Court weighs late-ballot fight Justice Samuel Alito emphasized the literal meaning of the word "day" as the Supreme Court heard arguments Monday about whether states can legally accept late-arriving ballots that are postmarked by Election Day.
March 23 SCOTUS conservatives signal readiness on curbing late-arriving mail ballots Conservative Supreme Court justices appeared skeptical during oral arguments of allowing states to continue counting late-arriving mail-in ballots. A decision is expected in June.
March 23 Judge blocks Trump from deporting Abrego Garcia to Liberia, extending legal standoff The judge's order order halts Trump officials from deporting Abrego Garcia to Liberia — extending a high-stakes, 12-month court fight over the status of one migrant.
March 17 Chief Justice Roberts warns against personal attacks on judges as ‘dangerous’ after Trump's court tirade Chief Justice John Roberts warned against personal criticism and "hostility" Tuesday in an indirect nod to Trump's tirade against the courts on social media days earlier.
March 17 Biden-appointed judge twice shut down by SCOTUS faces 'activist' fire after latest Trump policy block Biden-appointed federal judge Brian Murphy faced DOJ criticism after being overturned multiple times by the Supreme Court, and now he has blocked Trump vaccine policies.
March 16 Supreme Court to hear Trump challenge to protected status for Syrian, Haitian nationals in US The Supreme Court will review Trump's effort to unwind legal protections for migrants from Haiti and Syria, and will hear arguments in the case next month.
March 16 Justice Department asks Judge Boasberg to reconsider order quashing Powell subpoenas The Justice Department sent a motion for reconsideration to U.S. District Judge James Boasberg regarding his order to stop a subpoena of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
March 16 Overturning an outlandish Supreme Court ruling is the only way to fix education Tennessee House Bill 793 advances with 15-9 committee vote requiring public schools to verify student immigration status and report enrollment data to state.
March 14 Trump's demand for colleges nationwide to fork over race data faces legal hurdle A federal judge blocked Trump's requirement for colleges to immediately collect and turn over race data, siding — for now — with a group of Democrat attorneys general
March 13 Give the government an inch and they'll seize your $200k home for a $2k debt Supreme Court hears Pung family case after Isabella County, Mich., foreclosed on $200,000 home over disputed $2,000 tax debt, keeping $118,000 in equity.