News

Harvard University law and history professor Kenneth Mack provided an introduction to his lecture about African American law student Lloyd Gaines, who petitioned the Supreme Court when he was denied ...
Ian Williams wakes up one morning to find $1,338 has been stolen from his account via two Google Pay transactions. Two years ...
The rapid adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) services has reawakened the tension between tech and content over ...
Constitutional rights have to be enforceable. They can’t rely on the goodwill of the government. This utter lack of ...
The courts continue to be the only bulwark against an overreaching executive, writes Nancy Gertner, a former U.S. District ...
In an exclusive interview with Newslaundry, RJD leader and Rajya Sabha MP Manoj Kumar Jha delves into the court’s directions, ...
The Supreme Court lifted a judge’s order preventing the Trump administration from conducting mass layoffs across the federal bureaucracy, for now, though Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented.
The Supreme Court's conservatives said it was a federal judge in San Francisco, not President Trump, who exceeded her authority.
Hail to the Supreme Court for definitively slapping down the lower-court judges who’ve been issuing nationwide injunctions against President Donald Trump’s orders and actions.
As if on cue, the Supreme Court’s decision was followed on Tuesday by news that underscored just how dangerously misplaced the conservative justices’ deference toward Trump is.
Malviya was reportedly booked last month under various sections of the Bhartiya Nagrik Suraksha Sanhita and section 67 (a) of ...
Google requests a stay in a case against Cengage, Macmillan, and other textbook publishers pending the Supreme Court’s decision in Cox v. Sony Music Entertainment. A lawsuit filed against Google by ...