All Law & Courts
- Supreme Court will hear largest transgender rights case in US historyOn Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear the biggest transgender rights case in its history. The decision in United States v. Skrmetti has the potential to be a seismic one.
- Trump promised to pardon Jan. 6 felons. Where does that stand now?President-elect Donald Trump says he鈥檒l pardon many of those convicted in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol 鈥 a potentially controversial precedent.
- Will Trump still face lawsuits? Will he use Justice Department to sue his enemies?Newly elected president Donald Trump has a bucket of legal problems 鈥 and a Justice Department soon at his disposal. He may reshape American justice.
- Abortion on the ballot: What鈥檚 happening in 10 key statesWhen the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, it returned the abortion issue to the states. This election, more than any other moment to date, will tell us how states respond.
- First LookColorado judge receives threats after sentencing election denier official to prisonA Colorado county courthouse has stepped up security after threats were made against staff and a judge who sentenced former county clerk Tina Peters to prison in a data breach scheme tied to denial of 2020 election results.
- The ExplainerBig development in Jan. 6 case against Trump. Why now?Is a judge unsealing the 165-page brief from special counsel Jack Smith a politically timed move? It comes in the final weeks of an election campaign, but the case itself has been going on for months.
- The ExplainerTransgender rights, ghost guns 鈥 and an election? The Supreme Court returns.Supreme Court justices are set to grapple with cases involving transgender rights, 鈥済host guns,鈥 and fallout from the court鈥檚 decisions to weaken federal agencies. And then there鈥檚 the election.
- Entering a new Supreme Court term, John Roberts is as enigmatic as everAfter a term in which Chief Justice John Roberts wrote landmark opinions benefiting former President Donald Trump, some court watchers are reevaluating his institutionalist image.
- They paid their debts to society. Nebraska still might not let them vote.Nebraska鈥檚 high court is ruling on whether a new law, letting those with felony convictions vote, is constitutional. How U.S. voting rights are shaking out.
- Special treatment? How judges are handling Trump ahead of election.Prosecuting a former and would-be leader may be the ultimate stress test聽of a nation鈥檚 justice system. Donald Trump鈥檚 criminal cases are all delayed.
- Judge delays Trump鈥檚 hush-money sentencing until after November electionA New York judge agreed to postpone the sentencing of former President Donald Trump in a criminal case involving falsified records on hush money.
- Why Joe Biden changed his mind about Supreme Court reformsPresident Biden had resisted calls to reform the Supreme Court. Then came the July decision offering former presidents immunity for any official act.
- The ExplainerTrump documents case: What if there鈥檚 no one to investigate presidents?A federal judge in Florida has dismissed the Trump documents case, saying the special counsel leading the prosecution has no constitutional power to do so. Where does that leave independent investigations of presidents?
- On the Supreme Court, Amy Coney Barrett is unafraid to 鈥榞o her own way鈥At a time when a majority of Americans believe the high court makes decisions based on ideology rather than on the law, Justice Amy Coney Barrett has quietly gone her own way, even on hot-button issues.
- Stick, meet Carrot. How Portland police and activists teamed up to fight addiction.Portland became famous for a failed drug decriminalization measure. But the two sides found themselves doing something they rarely did: talking. Out of that, a promising program was born. Part 1 of a series.
- After momentous term, Supreme Court cements Federalist Society vision as lawOverturning Roe was just the first step for conservatives eager to undo what they regarded as past judicial mistakes. This term overturned more precedents.
- Supreme Court grants Trump some immunity. Are presidents now above the law?The decision in Trump v. United States immediately ranks as one of the Supreme Court鈥檚 most significant.
- First LookSupreme Court holds Texas and Florida social media laws. Cases returned to lower courts.The Supreme Court has kept a hold on Texas and Florida efforts to restrict content moderation and alleged silencing of 鈥渃onservative viewpoints and ideas鈥 on social media platforms, returning the cases to the lower courts.
- On a sweeping Supreme Court day, a trio of rulings that will affect millions of livesThe three decisions issued Friday alone would qualify as a history-making term. And the Supreme Court is not done, with arguably the biggest case coming Monday.
- Abortion ruling shows a Supreme Court splintered over emergency careIdaho doctors can continue to perform abortions in a medical emergency, for now, the Supreme Court ruled Thursday.