“Judge Bars Moussaoui From Courtroom”: This article appears today in The Washington Post.
The Los Angeles Times reports today that “Moussaoui Barred From Rest of Jury Phase After Outburst.”
The Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that “Moussaoui barred from jury selection after outburst.”
The Washington Times reports that “Judge ousts Moussaoui again.”
USA Today reports that “Moussaoui kicked out of court after tirades.”
The Sacramento Bee reports that “Moussaoui shut out of jury selection.”
And The Associated Press reports that “Jury Selection to Resume Without Moussaoui.”
“SJC misses date on gay marriages”: The Republican of Springfield, Massachusetts today contains an article that begins, “Delaying a decision on a case watched around the country, the state’s highest court has waived a self-imposed deadline for ruling on whether gays from other states can legally marry in Massachusetts.”
And The Associated Press reports that “Court Extends Gay Marriage Ruling Deadline.”
In today’s edition of The Washington Post: Charles Lane reports that “Alito Hires as a Clerk Former Ashcroft Aide; Lawyer Played Key Role at Justice Dept.”
And in other news, “Ford Cleared in Va. Suit Over Air Bags.”
“Affirmative Blackmail: The ABA orders law schools to practice racial preference–even if they have to break the law.” Law Professor David E. Bernstein‘s op-ed from this past Saturday’s edition of The Wall Street Journal can now be freely accessed at this link.
USA Today is reporting: Today’s newspaper contains articles headlined “Cyberstalking law opens debate on what’s annoying” and “Canada’s new PM worries gay couples; Conservative plans vote on ending same-sex marriage.”
“Justices Skeptical of ‘Friends’ Suit; Supreme Court notes that a fired assistant claiming sexual harassment had been warned about raunchy writers’ meetings”: Maura Dolan has this article today in The Los Angeles Times.
Today in The New York Sun, Josh Gerstein reports that “Sex Harassment Is Alleged By a Writer of ‘Friends.’”
And David Kravets of The Associated Press reports that “Justices weigh free speech, vulgarity in ‘Friends’ lawsuit.”
“Some Wonder If Chertoff Can Survive; Once hailed as the ‘right man’ for Homeland Security, he faces tough questions from a Senate panel over department’s response to Katrina”: This article appears today in The Los Angeles Times.