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The morning read for Friday, Dec. 30

SCOTUSBlog

Share Each weekday, we select a short list of news articles, commentary, and other noteworthy links related to the Supreme Court. Here’s the Friday morning read: Five ways the US Supreme Court reshaped policy in 2022 (Al Jazeera Staff, Al Jazeera). To suggest a piece for us to consider, email us at roundup@scotusblog.com.

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Patent Law at the Supreme Court September 2021

Patently O

So far, the Supreme Court has not granted certiorari in any patent cases for its 2021-2022 Term. On September 27, 2021, the court is meeting privately for what is known as the “long conference” to decide the fate of the petitions for writ of certiorari that have piled-up over the summer. by Dennis Crouch.

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A Hearing on Herring: Supreme Court to Hear Potentially Historic Chevron Case

JonathanTurley

Today, the Supreme Court will hear two of the most important cases of the term. In 1984, the Supreme Court ruled in Chevron U.S.A. The court went even further in Arlington v. In both lower court cases, Chevron carried the day for the agency. Court of Appeals for the D.C. The ruling of the D.C.

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On the Supreme Court’s shadow docket, the steady volume of pandemic cases continues

SCOTUSBlog

As the Supreme Court winds down for the holiday break, one thing that has not slowed is the flow of litigation arising from the COVID-19 pandemic. The court has not granted relief in any of those cases. 25, moments before the calendar turned to Thanksgiving Day. All of the cases followed a now-familiar procedural pattern.

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December calendar will include murder-by-poison conviction of mother who used drugs during pregnancy and while nursing

At the Lectern

The Supreme Court hasn’t published its December calendar yet (there are some technical problems with the court’s website), but, from email notifications, we know four of the cases that will be argued next month. When the court granted review in Brown , it limited the issues to: “1. Steger (1976) 16 Cal.3d

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Justice Arguelles to be remembered at December oral argument session

At the Lectern

The Supreme Court will begin its December calendar with a memorial for former Justice John Arguelles, who died in April. Arguelles, who served on the court for two years starting in 1987, was 94. The court has now posted the calendar. There had been some tech problems with the court’s website.)

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No wholesale voiding of death sentences in the offing as Supreme Court affirms death penalty without making anticipated dramatic change to its jurisprudence

At the Lectern

What could have been a blockbuster decision turned into a relatively routine Supreme Court affirmance of the death sentence in People v. Justice Liu also writes a 30-page concurring opinion, questioning the court’s jurisprudence on a federal constitutional issue. New Jersey (2000) 530 U.S.

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