Supreme Court

Clarence Thomas signals he's coming for assault weapons bans: analysis

The Supreme Court just had a significant term of decisions on gun-related cases, from the legality of "bump stocks" to the Second Amendment rights of accused domestic abusers. But far-right Justice Clarence Thomas would like to go further, taking aim at state bans on assault weapons.

According to Newsweek, the Supreme Court declined to take up a case in Illinois reviewing whether their assault weapon ban is constitutional — but only because they want to wait and see how the lower courts resolve the issue. Thomas agreed with this — but made clear in his own writing that if he doesn't like how the court rules, he will push the court to review it.

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How Trump and Senate Republicans are circling the wagons to save Clarence Thomas

WASHINGTON — The cycle continues: Clarence Thomas has former President Donald Trump’s back, Trump has Senate Republicans in his back pocket and Senate Republicans, in turn, have Thomas’ back.

No matter how much financial dirt journalists and watchdog groups dig up on Thomas, and no matter how much Democrats single Thomas out for what they consider his shameful jurisprudence, his legend only continues to grow within conservative circles.

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Calls grow for Dems to 'pack the Court' after Supreme Court immunity ruling

The U.S. Supreme Court's anxiously awaited ruling on former President Donald Trump's absolute immunity claim came down on Monday morning, July 1 — with six GOP-appointed justices ruling that Trump enjoys immunity from prosecution for official acts as president and three Democrat-appointed justices dissenting.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor was especially vehement in her dissent, warning that the Republican justices were giving U.S. presidents way too much power.

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'Dripping with disdain': Witness says Sotomayor didn't try to hide her contempt in court

Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor's voice was "dripping with disdain" Monday as she read her dissent against Chief Justice John Roberts' decision granting immunity to former President Donald Trump for "official acts," legal analyst Joan Biskupic told CNN's Kaitlan Collins on Monday.

Biskupic was in the Supreme Court when the justices issued the landmark decision making a federal trial for the former president all but impossible before the election and granting the executive unprecedented new powers, legal experts say.

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'Justice Karen': MAGA revolts over Amy Coney Barrett’s Trump immunity disagreement

The U.S. Supreme Court Monday handed down its anxiously awaited decision on former President Donald Trump's claim that he enjoys absolute immunity from prosecution in special counsel Jack Smith's federal election interference case.

The 6-3 decision came down along party lines, with the dissent from Democrat-appointed justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson. Sotomayor was especially scathing in her dissent, arguing that the ruling gives presidents way too much authority.

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'Court in chaos': Experts warn of massive impact from under-the-radar Supreme Court ruling

Experts say the Supreme Court struck a shattering blow to the delicate scales that balance political powers in Washington D.C. Monday — before they even released the ruling on presidential immunity.

Moments before the court issued its historic verdict ruling on former President Donald Trump's defense in his federal criminal trials, the nine justices revealed their ruling on a truck stop convenience store's challenge to debit card fees.

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'Expect a visit': Chilling words from Trump rep raise specter of political assassination

A young activist interpreted Justice Sonia Sotomayor's chilling warning that the Supreme Court just authorized presidents to conduct political assassinations on social media — and received an equally chilling reply from former President Donald Trump's spokesperson.

"According to the Supreme Court, Biden could now send in Seal Team 6 to take all of them out," wrote Harry Sisson. "He could send in the military to take out Trump."

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'Impossible': Expert says Supreme Court just killed both Trump's federal cases

The Supreme Court ruling on former President Donald Trump's presidential immunity claim — which Justice Sonia Sotomayor argued turns the office into a kingship empowered to assassinate political rivals — effectively kills the federal court cases against him, one legal analyst argued Monday.

ABC News chief Washington correspondent Jon Karl told viewers Monday morning that despite the majority's quibbling on absolute immunity — a decision on specifics was kicked down to a lower court — they had handed an out-and-out victory for Trump.

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Jack Smith has 'one more card to play' in D.C. election subversion case: former prosecutor

Jack Smith has had a tough time prosecuting Donald Trump, especially considering his D.C. election subversion prosecution has been frozen pending Supreme Court action, but a former prosecutor said on Sunday that the special counsel has one more trick up his sleeve.

Trump faces charges in that case related to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, as well as related efforts to allegedly undermine the presidential election in 2020 when Joe Biden beat the former president. With the case tied up, however, analysts have suggested that it won't reach trial before the election.

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Supreme Court 'staged a coup' and will resemble Russian courts if Trump wins: conservative

The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) has grown far too powerful, and could permanently alter the government established by the framers if current trends continue, according to a conservative legal expert.

On Saturday, Norman Ornstein — who is an emeritus scholar at the Koch-funded American Enterprise Institute — offered a frank and stunning condemnation of the Court in a post to X (formerly Twitter). After a wave of controversial rulings in the final week of its 2023-2024 term, Ornstein opined that the Supreme Court is rapidly transforming into courts seen in authoritarian governments seen in other parts of the world.

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'Could end up hurting him': Expert warns Trump's next move puts D.C. trial before election

If Donald Trump attempts to get his election subversion case tossed he could compel Special Counsel Jack Smith to lean out his indictment and bring a trial ahead of the general election.

NYU law professor Ryan Goodman said as much during an appearance on CNN.

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'Hard to understand': Expert questions competency of Supreme Court after website flub

Legal experts gathered Friday to trash some of the recently released decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Slate Supreme Court reporter Dahlia Lithwick explained the unwriting of a 40-year precedent in the Chevron case, which the High Court had not made. The federal government decides a number of regulations, employing experts, scientists, doctors, chemists, and others to determine what is or isn't safe for the American people. Some examples are how long meat can be unrefrigerated during transport, how much lead is safe for drinking water, and even recommendations about cooks washing their hands after using the bathroom.

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Supreme Court strips federal agencies of decades-old power in new ruling

The Supreme Court ruled Friday on two pivotal cases that strip federal agencies of substantial power to interpret the law.

Supreme Court Justices issued rulings in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless v. Department of Commerce — both challenges to a decades-old precedent that says courts must defer to government agencies’s interpretation of statutes.

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