How Appealing



Wednesday, January 12, 2011

“Justices Look Again at How Police May Search Homes”: Adam Liptak will have this article Thursday in The New York Times.

Robert Barnes of The Washington Post has a news update headlined “Court reviews when police may enter someone’s home without warrant.”

In Thursday’s edition of The Los Angeles Times, David G. Savage will have an article headlined “Supreme Court appears set to give police more leeway in searches; Conservative justices appear to agree police should be allowed to enter a suspect’s residence without a warrant if they suspect evidence is being destroyed.”

Joan Biskupic of USA Today has a news update headlined “Supreme Court hears case on home searches by police.”

And online at Slate, Dahlia Lithwick has a Supreme Court dispatch entitled “Crime and Blandishments: What happens when Supreme Court justices try to think like criminal suspects.”

Posted at 10:45 PM by Howard Bashman



“Supreme Court again is asked to drop ‘In God We Trust'”: Michael Doyle of McClatchy Newspapers has an article that begins, “California attorney and dedicated atheist Michael Newdow is making another run at ‘In God We Trust,’ with a new Supreme Court petition challenging the national motto.”

Posted at 10:18 PM by Howard Bashman



“Judy Clarke: Jared Loughner’s ‘Amazing’ Attorney.” At Politics Daily, Andrew Cohen has a post that begins, “Judy Clarke is the Forrest Gump of criminal defense attorneys. Otherwise unassuming, even shy, she seems to turn up, front and center, for many of the cases we’ll never forget.”

Posted at 10:42 AM by Howard Bashman



“Court Rules on Debtors and Doctors in Training”: Adam Liptak has this article today in The New York Times.

In today’s edition of The Washington Post, Robert Barnes reports that “Kagan delivers her first judicial opinion, in bankruptcy case.”

And David G. Savage of The Los Angeles Times has an article headlined “Elena Kagan’s first Supreme Court opinion not a dramatic one; New Supreme Court justices rarely are given important cases in their first term, and Elena Kagan’s initial effort, in a bankruptcy dispute, proved to be no exception.”

Posted at 8:00 AM by Howard Bashman



“61 apply for seat on Iowa Supreme Court”: Today’s edition of The Des Moines Register contains an article that begins, “Sixty-one people — including two who have spoken publicly about gay marriage — have applied to replace the three Iowa Supreme Court justices who were voted off the bench in November.”

And today’s edition of The New York Times contains an editorial entitled “Impeachment as Intimidation.”

Posted at 7:54 AM by Howard Bashman