“Court allows woman to sue boss accused of showing genitals”: David Pitt of The Associated Press has this report on a ruling that the Supreme Court of Iowa issued today.
You can access the briefs filed in the case and the YouTube video of the oral argument via this link.
“D.C. Circuit Review — Reviewed: ‘That’s Why Pencils Have Erasers.'” Aaron Nielson has this post at the “Notice & Comment” blog of the Yale Journal on Regulation.
“Federal judges hear arguments in Pa. congressional map fight: Should they block new map?” Jonathan Lai of The Philadelphia Inquirer has this report.
Charles Thompson of The Patriot-News of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania reports that “Federal courts get one last chance to alter Pennsylvania Congressional races.”
And Steve Esack of The Morning Call of Allentown, Pennsylvania reports that “GOP makes another run at stopping Pennsylvania’s new congressional map.”
“All-Women Panel Coincides with International Women’s Day”: The Public Information Office of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has posted this item online.
“Thurgood Marshall remembered by Justice Kagan and other former clerks”: Jon Levitan has this post at “SCOTUSblog.”
“Trump can’t do much about violent video games, thanks to Antonin Scalia.” Matt Ford has this post online at The New Republic.
And online at The New Yorker, Simon Parkin has a post titled “Donald Trump Takes on the Nonexistent Link Between Violent Video Games and Mass Shootings.”
“Join the Ohio Lawyers Chapters of the Federalist Society for our Second Annual Ohio Conference on April 6, 2018”: You can view the program and speakers for this day-long event via this link.
“Non-Majority Opinions and Biconditional Rules”: Law professor Adam Steinman has posted this essay online at SSRN (via “Legal Theory Blog“).
And at the “Civil Procedure & Federal Courts Blog,” Steinman has a related post titled “Hughes v. United States: SCOTUS to address the binding effect of non-majority opinions.”
“Polarization and the Judiciary”: Law professor Richard L. Hasen — author of the “Election Law Blog” — has posted this article online at SSRN (via “Legal Theory Blog“).
“Religious Accommodation, the Establishment Clause, and Third-Party Harm”: Mark Storslee has posted this article online at SSRN (via William Baude).
“Wisconsin high court candidates Rebecca Dallet and Michael Screnock divided over guns, NRA”: Patrick Marley of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has this report.
“The endangered GOP senator who thinks Justice Kennedy could save him; In audio obtained by POLITICO, Nevada’s Dean Heller predicts an imminent high court vacancy and calls some of Trump’s tweets ‘crazy'”: Burgess Everett of Politico has this report.
“How the Supreme Court is Expanding the Immigrant Detention System: Last week, the justices set a grim precedent for civil rights.” Law professor Garrett Epps has this essay online at The Atlantic.