“Supreme Court Allows Street Preacher’s Lawsuit; Gabriel Olivier was arrested after violating an ordinance restricting demonstrations outside an amphitheater in Brandon, Miss.” Ann E. Marimow of The New York Times has this report.
Julian Mark of The Washington Post reports that “Supreme Court sides with antiabortion activist in free speech case; The Supreme Court ruled an antiabortion activist can challenge a law blocking protests outside of a designated area.”
And Maureen Groppe of USA Today reports that “A street preacher whose group yelled ‘whores’ gets a Supreme Court win; The new ruling could make it easier to challenge not just restrictions on public demonstrations but also local laws governing hunting, sleeping in public places and more.”
You can access today’s ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court at this link.
“Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett at the Library: ‘Respect the law.’” Maria Peña has this post at the blog of the Library of Congress.
“The Supreme Court Is About To Decide The Fate Of Millions Of Votes; If Mississippi loses this fight at the Supreme Court, it could mean major changes to how mail-in ballots are counted everywhere”: Brandi Buchman of HuffPost has this report.
And in commentary, Saturday’s edition of The Wall Street Journal will contain an editorial titled “Late Mail Ballots at the Supreme Court; Election Day is set by federal law; Is that also an absentee deadline?“
“Schools hiding children’s ‘transitioning’ violate parental rights; A case involving a Maine student given a chest binder at school may be headed to the Supreme Court”: Columnist George F. Will has this essay online at The Washington Post.
“Former CT Supreme Court chief justice and his law partners: No ethics rules broken in their case.” Edmund H. Mahony of The Hartford Courant has this report.
“Maine lobsterman asks US Supreme Court to block GPS boat tracking; The legal challenge claims 24/7 surveillance of the lobster fleet is a warrantless search in violation of the Fourth Amendment”: Penelope Overton of The Portland Press Herald has this report.
“Inside the court: Chief Justice Roberts discusses 20 years on the Supreme Court.” Avery Ruxer Franklin of Rice University has this report.
“‘Embodied the American dream’: Sandra Day O’Connor remembered at Supreme Court.” Zach Schonfeld of The Hill has this report.
You can access the two transcripts of yesterday’s bar memorial here and here.
“Samuel Alito and Sonia Sotomayor Did Not Attend the Same Princeton”: Peter S. Canellos has this guest essay online at The New York Times.
“A Judge’s Vulgar Dissent Is a Loss for Everyone”: Online at Bloomberg Opinion, law professor Noah Feldman has an essay that begins, “A recent opinion by a judge on the US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit is a contender for the most vulgar piece of judicial writing in the 300-plus-year history of recorded judicial decisions in the English language.”
“Appeals Court Revives Claims Against Activist Over Protest”: Suzanne Monyak of Bloomberg Law has a report (subscription required for full access) that begins, “A federal appeals court revived a Louisiana police officer’s lawsuit against a civil rights activist over injuries the officer suffered at a Baton Rouge protest, prompting one judge to warn the decision ‘imperils’ free speech rights.”
You can access yesterday’s decision of a divided three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit at this link.
“A Not-So-Wise Reflection on a ‘Wise Latina’ Judge; Sotomayor’s comment arouses controversy”: Ed Whelan has this post at his “Confirmation Tales” Substack site.
“Luigi Mangione wants to delay his federal trial until 2027; Attorneys for the accused health care CEO shooter say that it would be ‘impossible’ for the federal case to go to trial in September with his state case already set for June”: Erik Uebelacker of Courthouse News Service has this report.
And Patricia Hurtado of Bloomberg News reports that “Mangione Asks for 2027 Federal Murder Trial, After State Case.”
“What to Know About the Push to Display the Ten Commandments in Classes; Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas have passed laws requiring the posters in public schools. Several other states are considering similar measures”: Pooja Salhotra of The New York Times has this report.
“Woman charged with murder after allegedly taking abortion pills, going to hospital; The 31-year-old Georgia woman went to the emergency room with severe pain after allegedly taking abortion pills at home, according to police and court records”: Daniel Wu of The Washington Post has this report.
“Pressure Grows for Supreme Court to End ‘Emergency’ Wins for Trump; Justices fast-tracked arguments on the president’s power to end protections for migrants fleeing violence after lower courts called out unexplained emergency rulings”: Zoe Tillman and Greg Stohr of Bloomberg News have this report.
“Professor Larry Solum Joins Texas A&M Law from the University of Virginia”: Texas A&M School of Law has this blog post.
“Lawsuit Accuses Justice Dept. Leadership of ‘Political Retribution’; The suit filed by two fired F.B.I. agents aimed to hold the Trump administration accountable for the purge of personnel who had worked on the investigations of Mr. Trump or his allies”: Alan Feuer of The New York Times has this report.
“Chief Justice John Roberts To Receive Jefferson Medal in Law”: Mike Fox of The University of Virginia School of Law has this report.
“A Gift From Trump to the Supreme Court: In a caustic critique of the court issued on social media late Sunday night, the president inadvertently buttressed its independence.” You can access today’s new installment of Adam Liptak’s “The Docket” newsletter online at The New York Times via this link.
“Bonus 216: Shadow Docket Shadowboxing; Justice Barrett’s Mirabelli concurrence is the latest example of attempts to defend the Court’s behavior on emergency applications that don’t meaningfully engage *with* the criticisms — or the critics.” Steve Vladeck has this post at his “One First” Substack site.
“Courts Should Stop Taking the President at His Word”: Law professor Noah Feldman has this essay online at Bloomberg Opinion.
“Please be advised that the date for oral argument in the above-captioned appeal has been changed from April 15, 2026 to April 15, 2026.” So begins a letter to all counsel from the Superior Court of Pennsylvania that I received today in one of my cases. Fortunately, I had already calendared the oral argument for that date.
“VanDyke Unapologetic Over Colorful Dissents That Irk Colleagues”: Jacqueline Thomsen of Bloomberg Law has this report.
The Federalist Society has posted on YouTube a video titled “Closing Banquet: Keynote Address and Presentation of the Annual Joseph Story Award.”
“2026 Joseph Story Award Winner: Prof. J. Joel Alicea.” The Federalist Society has posted this video on YouTube, along with a video titled “2026 Story Award Presentation Video.”
“The Perilous War Over Legal Ethics in Government and Politics; On its current course, it cannot end well”: Bob Bauer has this post at the “Executive Functions” Substack site.
“Stop the count: Supreme Court puts mail-in ballot deadline under the microscope; Months before the midterms, the Supreme Court is putting Election Day on the docket in a case that could affect how voters cast ballots in over 30 states.” Kelsey Reichmann of Courthouse News Service has this report.
“Chief Justice Says Personal Attacks on Judges Are ‘Dangerous’ and Must Stop; The public remarks from Chief Justice John Roberts were his first since President Trump excoriated the justices who ruled against his tariffs in harsh and personal terms”: Ann E. Marimow of The New York Times has this report.
Maureen Groppe of USA Today has an article headlined “Amid Trump attacks, Supreme Court’s John Roberts says stop with the hostility; In his first public comments since President Trump attacked the Supreme Court’s tariffs ruling, Chief Justice John Roberts said ‘personally directed hostility is dangerous.’”
Isaac Yu of The Houston Chronicle has an article headlined “At Rice, Chief Justice John Roberts says personal attacks on judges have ‘got to stop.’”
Mark Sherman of The Associated Press reports that “Chief Justice Roberts says personal criticism of judges is dangerous and has ‘got to stop.’”
John Kruzel of Reuters reports that “US Supreme Court’s Roberts says personal hostility aimed at judges has ‘got to stop.’”
Greg Stohr of Bloomberg News reports that “Roberts Slams ‘Dangerous’ Attacks on Supreme Court Justices.”
John Fritze of CNN reports that “Chief Justice John Roberts says that hostility toward judges has ‘got to stop.’”
Lawrence Hurley of NBC News reports that “Chief Justice John Roberts warns personal attacks on judges have ‘got to stop’; Roberts’ comments follow President Donald Trump’s most recent criticism of the Supreme Court over its tariffs ruling.”
Josh Gerstein of Politico reports that “Roberts defends Supreme Court against Trump attacks; ‘It’s got to stop,’ the chief justice said of personal invective aimed at judges.”
And Kelsey Reichmann of Courthouse News Service reports that “Roberts puts personal and political attacks against judges on blast; The chief justice aired grievances about misconceptions of bias, insularity and loyalty on the Supreme Court.”
The Baker Institute has posted on YouTube a video titled “A Conversation with John G. Roberts, Jr., Chief Justice of the United States.”
“Judge Ejects Federal Prosecutor From Court and Orders Bosses to Testify; Judge Zahid Quraishi ordered a hearing on who had the authority to lead New Jersey’s top federal law enforcement office”: Jonah E. Bromwich and Tracey Tully of The New York Times has this report.
Update: In other coverage, Chris Palmer and Abraham Gutman of The Philadelphia Inquirer report that “A federal judge blasted prosecutors in N.J., saying Trump’s DOJ has ‘lost the confidence and the trust of this court’; U.S. District Judge Zahid N. Quraishi said all three lawyers leading the U.S. Attorney’s Office would have to testify in his courtroom before he would decide if a case could proceed.”
“Putting The ‘Dick’ In Dicta; Judge Lawrence VanDyke’s ‘swinging dicks’ opinion, including the reaction to it, offers a window into the state of the judiciary — and our country — in 2026”: David Lat has this post at his “Original Jurisdiction” Substack site.
“Time to Give Up the Jerome Powell Case; What matters is getting Kevin Warsh confirmed, not appealing a legal loss”: This editorial will appear in Tuesday’s edition of The Wall Street Journal.
“Halt on White House Spending Freeze Upheld by First Circuit”: Brian Dowling of Bloomberg Law has this report.
You can access today’s ruling of a unanimous three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit at this link.
“California’s Never-Ending Race Preferences; Again activists attempt to gut the Golden State’s ban on affirmative action”: Columnist William McGurn will have this op-ed in Tuesday’s edition of The Wall Street Journal.
“Supreme Court Defers Decision on Trump’s Bid to End Protections for Migrants; The justices will hear arguments over the president’s efforts to terminate the program, known as Temporary Protected Status, for migrants from Haiti and Syria as part of his mass deportation efforts”: Ann E. Marimow of The New York Times has this report.
Julian Mark of The Washington Post reports that “Supreme Court to consider whether Trump can end protected status for Syrians, Haitians; A decision by the Supreme Court could affect other challenges to the government’s efforts to end temporary protected status for hundreds of thousands of migrants.”
And Kelsey Reichmann of Courthouse News Service reports that “Supreme Court keeps legal protections for Syrian and Haitian migrants, for now; The Trump administration’s push to strip temporary protections from migrants legally living in the United States put a spotlight on shadow docket precedent.”
“DOJ to Start Hiring Prosecutors Directly Out of Law School”: Ben Penn of Bloomberg Law has this report.