The Trump administration invoked a 1798 wartime law to deport people without hearings, without courts, without the process the Constitution requires. Federal judges drew a line — and the fight over whether any court can hold it is still live.
Follow the thread →A Texas deputy jumped onto Ashtian Barnes's moving car during a traffic stop and shot him twice. The Supreme Court ruled 9-0 that courts have been asking the wrong question about when police can use deadly force — and changed the standard.
Read the case →Congress passed a law requiring TikTok's Chinese parent company to sell or face a ban. The Supreme Court upheld it 9-0. The case tells you how far national security interests reach when they run into the First Amendment.
Read the case →A Tennessee company sued a Brooklyn auto shop for $47,000, the Brooklyn shop ignored it on the theory that…
This is a Supreme Court case about subject matter jurisdiction and diversity jurisdiction. A Texas mother…
Damon Landor is a devout Rastafarian who kept his dreadlocks for 20 years as a religious obligation, and…
A Marine who served two tours in Iraq was medically retired with combat-related PTSD, applied for his…
This case concerns the government’s removal of the public apportionment database, which tracks federal…
This case, alongside the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition, involves a challenge to actions by the State…
Hats, shirts, and more. Every purchase helps keep Morning Report going.
Shop BrynoDC ↗