Claim that “Certificate of Need” Law Lacks a Rational Basis Can Go Forward
Start at Slaughter v. Dobbs), decided by Judge Carlton Reeves on Thursday (S.D. Miss.): The case involves a constitutional challenge of Mississippi’s Certificate of Need […]
Start at Slaughter v. Dobbs), decided by Judge Carlton Reeves on Thursday (S.D. Miss.): The case involves a constitutional challenge of Mississippi’s Certificate of Need […]
Tomorrow’s argument is expected to be heard by the Supreme Court Cassirer v. Thyssen Bornemisza Collection Foundation. This is a dramatic account of the looting […]
Crisis for the nondelegation doctrine The Supreme Court has used it for nearly a century to answer questions regarding transfers of legislative authority. It was […]
A North Dakota Supreme Court decision in Re Yates (Jan. 6): Amy Jo Yates and Shane Lance Yates applied to the district court for their […]
Frontiero (1973) and United States (2004) were argued simultaneously, 23 years apart. Ruth Bader Ginsburg was the one who argued the first case and she […]
His car is his castle. Washington Supreme Court declared that a city could not imprison a homeless person’s truck. It also ruled in August that […]
Kirk Parker Jr. was an employee of Baltimore Department of Public Works. He has been charged for second-degree burglary and theft. Also, malicious destruction of […]
16/1919: Ratification of the 18th Amendment. Reason.com first published the post Today in Supreme Court History January 16, 1919
Sheila Jackson Lee, a black Democrat who has represented downtown Houston in Congress since 1995, thinks repealing marijuana prohibition is “an necessary racial justice measure.” […]
In the past two years, there has been a surge of scholarship that challenged and supported the historic pedigrees of the Nondelegation Doctrine. A number […]