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The morning read for Thursday, September 21

SCOTUSBlog

Here’s the Thursday morning read: Supreme Court can let West Point keep affirmative action (Noah Feldman, Washington Post) I teach constitutional law. Supreme Court arguments have gotten way too long.

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Who’ll Shoot First? How Relaxed Gun Rules Fuel a ‘Small Arms Race’

The Crime Report

According to law professors Guha Krishnamurthi of the University of Oklahoma College of law and Peter Salib of the University of Houston Law Center, this public concern is warranted. Guha Krishnamurthi is an Associate Professor of Law at the University of Oklahoma College of Law.

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Calling New Patent Law Professors

Patently O

Note that top ranked law schools rarely advertise for particular subject matter areas. The new hire then starts work the following summer.

Laws 66
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SCOTUS Kicks Off New Term With …

Constitutional Law Reporter

Oklahoma: The death penalty case has the support of Oklahoma’s attorney general who agrees that Gossip should be granted a new trial. The post SCOTUS Kicks Off New Term With … appeared first on Constitutional Law Reporter.

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Court blocks pathway for federal prisoners to raise legal innocence claims

SCOTUSBlog

Fast forward to 1996: In the wake of the Oklahoma City bombing, Congress passed AEDPA. The statute replaced the habeas remedy with the motion to vacate, unless the “remedy by motion is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of [the prisoner’s] detention.” AEDPA left the saving clause intact.

Legal 138
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Supreme Court Sides With Police in Two Qualified Immunity Cases

Constitutional Law Reporter

City of Tahlequah, Oklahoma v. City of Tahlequah, Oklahoma v. Bond In City of Tahlequah, Oklahoma v. The post Supreme Court Sides With Police in Two Qualified Immunity Cases appeared first on Constitutional Law Reporter. Bond, 595 U. Accordingly, the officers were entitled to qualified immunity.

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SCOTUS Limits Foreign Reach of Trademark Law

Constitutional Law Reporter

Hetronic sued Abitron in the Western District of Oklahoma for trademark violations under two related provisions of the Lanham Act, both of which prohibit the unauthorized use in commerce of protected marks when that use is likely to cause confusion. .

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