Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Justice Clarence Thomas"


25 mentions found


Republicans are looking ahead at the possibility of Donald Trump appointing more Supreme Court justices. And dozens of Black people have said they received racist text messages about picking cotton. That includes potentially installing several more Supreme Court justices. More election coverage:Black people report receiving racist text messages about picking cottonFederal and local authorities across the U.S. have said they are aware of text messages that dozens of Black people have received telling them they’ve been “selected” to “pick cotton at the nearest plantation.” The messages came hours after the polarized presidential election came to a close earlier this week. Black social media users across the country reported similar text messages.
Persons: Donald Trump, Liam Payne, Trump, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Sonia Sotomayor, — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett —, Franklin D, Roosevelt, hasn't, they’ve, Monèt Miller, ” Miller, Liam Payne’s, Payne, Yifei Xu, Xu, — Elizabeth Robinson, Elizabeth Robinson Organizations: White, Republicans, Federal Communications Commission, FBI, Justice Department, , NBC Locations: Atlanta, Brown, Buenos Aires, Shanghai
WASHINGTON — Republicans are gearing up to lock in their remake of the judiciary under President-elect Donald Trump and a new Senate majority, including potentially installing several more conservative Supreme Court justices. Conservatives are prepared for Supreme Court retirements, with the most attention on Justice Samuel Alito, 74. GOP won't pursue Supreme Court ethics rulesTrump already transformed the federal courts in his first term, appointing 54 appeals court judges and 174 district court judges, many of whom are closely linked with the Federalist Society, a conservative legal group. Biden has made his own mark on the judiciary, appointing 210 district and appeals court judges in total, including 44 appeals court judges, falling just short of Trump’s total. “We’ll quit beating up the Supreme Court every time we don’t like the decision they make,” he said.
Persons: Donald Trump, — Trump, Trump, Samuel Alito, Alito, , Mike Davis, “ That’s, — John Thune, John Cornyn, , ” Cornyn, Thune, Trump’s, Clarence Thomas, Roe, Wade, John Malcolm, Franklin D, Roosevelt, — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett —, Biden, Davis, Thomas, Don McGahn, , you’ve, Sonia Sotomayor, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Trump's, Barrett, “ Sonia Sotomayor, Sotomayor, Alex Aronson, Sotomayor didn’t, Chuck Grassley, Sen, Grassley, Josh Hawley, Trump hasn’t, Malcolm, Andrew Oldham, Amul Thapar, JD Vance’s, Usha Vance, Thapar, Judge James Ho, Neomi Rao, Patrick Bumatay, Joe Biden hasn’t, Russell Wheeler, Leonard Leo, Leo, Mitch McConnell, shepherded, “ We’ll Organizations: WASHINGTON, Republicans, Democratic, Senate, Trump, GOP, Heritage Foundation, , White, NBC, NBC News, Committee, Circuit, Appeals, U.S ., District of Columbia Circuit, Republican, Institution, Federalist Society, Supreme, Court Locations: West Virginia , Montana and Ohio, Texas, Iowa, New Orleans, Cincinnati, San Francisco, Ky
With Trump's victory and upcoming GOP control of the Senate, the Supreme Court looms large. AdvertisementDuring Donald Trump's first term as president, he appointed three justices to the Supreme Court, giving it a 6-3 conservative supermajority. Trump's second term gives Thomas and Alito a chance to retireRepublicans won a majority in the US Senate alongside Trump's victory, which means that they'll be working in tandem should a vacancy arise on the court in Trump's second term. AdvertisementAssociate Justices Clarence Thomas, 76, and Samuel Alito, 74, are two of the most stalwart conservatives on the Supreme Court. Sweeping reforms won't occurMany top Democrats have long eyed changes to the Supreme Court, whether it be expansion or some sort of ethics reform.
Persons: Trump, Clarence Thomas, , Donald Trump's, — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett —, Roe, Wade, Thomas, Alito, Trump's, Samuel Alito, there's, George H.W, Bush, George W, Peter Loge, He's, ProPublica, Harlan Crow —, Carl Tobias, Tobias, they're, Lindsey Graham, Susan, Collins, Lisa, Murkowski, Biden, Sen, Mitch McConnell, McConnell, Merrick Garland —, Barack Obama, McConnell reveled, we'll Organizations: Senate, Court, Service, Trump, Republicans, Republican, School of Media, Public Affairs, George Washington University, US, Getty, University of Richmond School of Law, eventual, White, GOP, Democratic, Supreme Locations: Trump's, Kentucky, Washington
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Friday handed a loss to Republicans by allowing Pennsylvania voters who sent mail-in ballots that were flagged as being potentially defective to submit a separate provisional in-person ballot. The justices rejected, with no noted dissents, a Republican request to put on hold a Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling from last week. The Supreme Court action does not definitively resolve the legal issue, which could yet return to the justices. Many of Pennsylvania's counties, which administer elections, already allowed for voters to cast provisional ballots if their mail-in ballots lacked a secrecy envelope even before the recent state Supreme Court ruling. Genser and Matis lost in a trial court, but an intermediate appeals court and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled in their favor, prompting Republicans to appeal again to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Persons: WASHINGTON —, Ben Geffen, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Alito, Geffen, Rick Hasen, Harris, Walz, Donald Trump, encroaches, Donald Trump’s, Faith Genser, Frank Matis, Genser, Matis, Joe Biden Organizations: Republicans, Pennsylvania, Republican, Supreme, Democratic, Pennsylvania Supreme, UCLA School of Law, NBC, Democratic National Committee, Republican National, U.S, U.S . Constitution, Trump, Butler, Republican National Committee Locations: Pennsylvania, Butler County, Pennsylvania's, U.S .
CNN —Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell delivered a scathing assessment of the modern Republican Party in an upcoming biography, saying the “MAGA movement is completely wrong” and that Ronald Reagan “wouldn’t recognize” the party today. The Republican leader eventually voted to acquit Trump during the second impeachment trial, focused on the former president’s involvement in the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. However, Tackett reports that McConnell had leaned towards voting to convict at certain points. However, McConnell has endorsed Trump, and met with him back in June of this year during Trump’s meeting with Senate Republicans off the Hill. McConnell also expressed support for special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into Trump’s actions around the 2020 election and the insurrection.
Persons: Mitch McConnell, MAGA, Ronald Reagan “, Trump, Ronald Reagan, ” McConnell, Michael Tackett, Power ”, McConnell, “ Trump, haven’t, , , it’s, acquit Trump, “ I’m, he’s, Elaine Chao, Chao, Coco Chow ”, ” Tackett, Donald Trump, Donald Trump’s, JD Vance, Lindsey Graham, Sen, Rick Scott, Senate Republicans ’, Scott, Rick, Clarence Thomas “, I’m, Thomas, Thomas ’, Jack Smith’s, hasn’t, CNN’s Manu Raju, Ted Barrett Organizations: CNN, Republican Party, Associated Press, Republicans, Republican, Capitol, GOP, Kentucky Republican, Senate, Senate Republicans Locations: , China
California, Colorado and Hawaii will soon allow their residents to vote on ballot measures that would remove language from their state constitutions prohibiting same-sex marriage. The landmark 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges ruling, guaranteeing same-sex couples across the country the right to marry, makes these state bans unenforceable. However, these ballot measures seek to proactively protect these marriage rights should Obergefell ever be overturned. Without Obergefell, there is federal legislation that would keep same-sex marriage rights mostly, but not entirely, intact: the Respect for Marriage Act. It’s a personal issue for LGBTQ couples who had to navigate a time when same-sex marriage wasn’t legal or straightforward.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Hodges, Paul Smith, Lawrence, Dobbs, “ We’ve, , don’t, ” Smith, Clarence Thomas ’, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Erin Schaff, Griswold, ” Thomas, Alito, Donald Trump, Mary Bonauto, Obergefell, ” Bonauto, Smith, Joe Biden, Bonauto, there’s, , , , ” Susy Bates, It’s Organizations: . Texas, Jackson, Health Organization, . Connecticut, Republican, Movement Advancement Locations: California , Colorado, Hawaii, Georgetown, ., Washington, Lawrence, New York
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday allowed the Biden administration at least in the short term to enforce its latest attempt to curb climate-harming carbon emissions from coal- and gas-fired power plants that contribute to climate change. The Supreme Court is often skeptical of major agency actions but it has bucked that reputation in recent weeks. Under the proposed rule, the EPA wants to require “carbon capture,” a technique that uses solvents to remove carbon dioxide from a power plant’s emissions. The appeals court in July declined to block the regulation, saying the major questions doctrine did not apply on this occasion. In court papers, the challengers sought to portray the new regulation as being essentially the same as the one the Supreme Court struck down.
Persons: WASHINGTON —, Biden, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch, Patrick Morrisey, Vicki Patton, Donald Trump, ” Morrisey, Elizabeth Prelogar, Prelogar Organizations: Republican, Environmental Protection Agency, U.S ., Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit, West Virginia, Environmental Defense Fund, Democratic, EPA Locations: West Virginia, U.S, EPA’s bailiwick,
“I have had two spectacular Notre Dame law clerks. The traditional elite law schools dominate Supreme Court clerkships, with many justices hiring clerks from the same law schools they themselves attended and maintaining close links with faculty members. Barrett, who graduated from Notre Dame Law School, is the only member of the current court not to have a law degree from Harvard or Yale. Within that context, Notre Dame is scrapping with other law schools for the remaining clerkships and has performed well. Another conservative-aligned law school that is making inroads is George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School in Virginia, which has also placed some graduates in Supreme Court clerkships.
Persons: Annie Ortega, Barrett, , Joshua Mannery, , Aliza Shatzman, Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, Kari Lorentson, Elizabeth Totzke, Christian Burset, Patrick Reidy, Neil Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, Gorsuch, “ It’s, ” Kavanaugh, ” Nicole Garnett, Clarence Thomas, Barrett’s, Nicole Garnett, Patrick F, Evan Cobb, clerkships, George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Organizations: Federalist Society, Notre Dame Law School, Catholic, Notre Dame, Notre, University of Notre Dame, NBC, U.S . News, Harvard, Yale, University of Chicago, Duke University, University of Pennsylvania, Columbia University, School, Supreme Locations: Texas, clerkships, U.S, Stanford, Columbia, Virginia
"Federal judges are gods, and they can get away with anything," Rahmani said. More than 30 conservative federal justices, members of Scalia's family, and several fellow members of the conservative Federalist Society also attended, ProPublica reported. Earlier this summer, President Joe Biden called on Congress to implement term limits and an enforceable code of ethics for Supreme Court justices. AdvertisementThe nine Supreme Court justices did agree to a code of conduct last year, modeling their new guidelines after the rules that govern federal judges. California Rep. Adam Schiff introduced a bill earlier this year that would expand penalties for federal judges who violate ethics rules.
Persons: , Aileen Cannon, ProPublica, Cannon, Judge Cannon, America's, Clarence Thomas, Harlan Crow, Samuel Alito, Rahmani, Antonin Scalia, Impeaching, Scott Lemieux, John J, SCOTUS, Joe Biden, Rahamni, Adam Schiff, Lemieux Organizations: Service, Trump, Business, Southern, Southern District of, Supreme, Law and Economics, George Mason University, Federalist Society, University of Washington, Los Angeles litigator Locations: Southern District, Southern District of Florida, Bali, Los Angeles, California
The full interview of Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson will air Friday at 10 p.m. “It’s hard to look back and feel regret,” said Jackson, whom President Joe Biden nominated to the Supreme Court in 2022. Jackson said she was “flattered” that conservative Justice Clarence Thomas, the other Black justice on the court, laid out a detailed disagreement with her dissent in the case. “I think it is a concern for the court as an institution because public confidence is basically all we have,” Jackson said. “I ruled in that case consistent with what I believe the law required,” Jackson told CNN.
Persons: Ketanji Brown Jackson, Abby Phillip, , Jackson, , Talia, ” Jackson, Joe Biden, I’ve, Jackson demurred, hadn’t, Clarence Thomas, Roe, Wade, “ I’m Organizations: ” CNN, CNN, , Harvard, University of North, today’s, Capitol Locations: Boston, Miami, University of North Carolina
According to The Times report, the princess hosted Alito and his wife Martha-Ann in July 2023 at her 500-room castle, St. Emmeram Palace, in southeastern Germany. Advertisement"He is pro-life in a time where the majority follows the culture of death," the princess said of Alito. In his 2023 disclosure, Thomas amended his disclosures from 2019 to reflect the luxury trips he received from Crow. AdvertisementStricter ethics rules were adopted in March 2023, requiring Supreme Court justices to disclose any gifts, trips, or meals they may have accepted. A representative for Alito didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, sent outside business hours.
Persons: , Samuel Alito Jr, Gloria von Thurn, Alito, Martha, Ann, Richard Wagner, SCOTUS, ProPublica, Clarence Thomas, Harlan Crow, who's, Crow, Thomas, John Oliver, Oliver, Vladimir Putin's, Alito didn't Organizations: Service, Gloria von Thurn und, The New York Times, The Times, Business, Bayreuth, Times Locations: German, St, Emmeram, Germany, Crow, Russia
Judge James Robart told Business Insider a bank that managed his wife's individual retirement account purchased Boeing stock in April 2023. He said as soon as he learned about it, he had the stocks sold; his financial disclosures said the shares were sold on two dates in May and June. Based on the prices that Boeing shares traded at on the days her IRA bought and sold the shares, at least one of the two sales was a money-loser, while the second could have been profitable. He and his family disposed of their Boeing shares more than a year before that decision. The amount of Boeing stock traded isn't much compared with Robart's total wealth.
Persons: , Judge James Robart, Robart, it's, Clarence Thomas, Sonia Sotomayor's, Zunum, Bill Hodes, Gabe Roth, Roth, Charles Schwab, hasn't Organizations: Service, Boeing, Business, BI, Supreme, Street Journal Locations: Seattle
Harris expected to announce her VP pickBy the end of the day, the world will know who Kamala Harris’ 2024 running mate will be. This is Morning Rundown, a weekday newsletter to start your day. Simone Biles won the silver medal in the floor exercise, bringing her final Paris medal count to four: three golds and one silver. Google’s antitrust loss is a win for internet regulatorsIn a massive antitrust lawsuit ruling, a federal judge found that Google has an illegal monopoly on search engines and text advertisements. Despite some posts and influencers recommending close to 100 grams of protein per day, experts say the answer is far less.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, Kamala Harris ’, Josh Shapiro, Sen, Mark Kelly of, Tim Walz —, JB Pritzker, Andy Beshear, Pete Buttigieg, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Read, Simone Biles, Suni Lee, Biles, Jordan Chiles, Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade, Chiles, Andrade, Elsa, Gabby Thomas, McKenzie Long, Brittany Brown, Noah Lyles, Spain’s, Peacock, Debby, Biden, TikTok, dietitians, Cori Bush, Dan Newhouse, Trump, Clarence Thomas, Domenick Fini, he’s, — Melissa Chan, Elizabeth Robinson Organizations: Google, Pennsylvania, Minnesota Gov, Illinois Gov, Kentucky Gov, Paris, National Hurricane Center, U.S, Asad Air Base, NBC News, White, Republican, NBC, An Army, CDC, WHO, Marion County Record Locations: U.S, Philadelphia, Mark Kelly of Arizona, Minnesota, Kentucky, Paris, Los Angeles, , Spain, France, Morocco, Egypt, Tropical, Georgia, Florida, United States, South Carolina, North Carolina, Gainesville , Florida, Mississippi, Florida , Georgia, Iraq, Jordan, Israel, Lebanon, Iran, Missouri, Kansas , Michigan , Missouri, Washington, Kansas, Virginia
The head of a Senate panel investigating Clarence Thomas said Monday that the Supreme Court justice had failed to disclose additional private jet travel. The letter, which also cited reports of Thomas’ travel to Greece, the Caribbean, Russia and the Baltics, is the latest in a string of allegations from Senate Democrats about undisclosed travel by Thomas. In a statement Monday, Crow's office accused Wyden of "abusing" his panel's power in what it called a political campaign against the Supreme Court. An attorney for Thomas and a spokesperson for the Supreme Court did not immediately respond to requests for comment Monday. The judiciary has updated its disclosure rules to make it clear that private jet travel has to be reported.
Persons: Clarence Thomas, Harlan Crow, Sen, Ron Wyden, Thomas, Wyden, Crow, Thomas ’, , Wyden’s, Elliot S, Berke, Thomas “, Joe Biden, Neil Gorsuch, Biden Organizations: Finance, Supreme, Judicial Locations: Hawaii, New Zealand, Greece, Caribbean, Russia
Read previewSupreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas missed publicly disclosing another jaunt on billionaire and conservative megadonor Harlan Crow's private jet, Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon alleged in a letter on Monday. According to the letter, Thomas and his wife, Virginia Thomas, took a round-trip flight on Crow's private jet from Hawaii to New Zealand in November of 2010. In the past, Thomas has said that he doesn't think he needs to disclose gifts from friends who don't have business before the court. Related storiesAt the end of his letter, Wyden requests a "detailed list of all flights Justice Clarence has taken on any private jets under Mr. Crow's ownership or control." AdvertisementWhen Thomas does list travel from Crow, he calls them "personal hospitality."
Persons: , Clarence Thomas, megadonor Harlan, Democratic Sen, Ron Wyden, Thomas, Virginia Thomas, Wyden, ProPublica, Clarence, Crow, Biden Organizations: Service, Democratic, Oregon, New Zealand, Business, Senate Finance Committee, New York Times Locations: Hawaii, New, New Zealand, Crow
Justice Clarence Thomas failed to publicly disclose additional private travel provided by the wealthy conservative donor Harlan Crow, a top Democratic senator said in a letter on Monday. Customs and Border Protection records revealed that the justice and his wife, Virginia Thomas, took a round trip between Hawaii and New Zealand in November 2010 on Mr. Crow’s private jet, according to the letter. Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, writing to Mr. Crow’s lawyer, demanded that he supply more information about the financial relationship between the two men. The letter, part of an inquiry that Mr. Wyden, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, has opened into Mr. Crow and the justice, comes as top Democrats have urged major changes to the Supreme Court, including an enforceable code of conduct.
Persons: Clarence Thomas, Harlan Crow, Virginia Thomas, Ron Wyden, Crow’s, Wyden, Crow Organizations: Democratic, . Customs, Border, New Zealand, Mr, Democrat, Senate Finance Locations: Hawaii, New, Oregon
The flight was not listed on Thomas’ financial disclosure reports and is the most recent example of the conservative justice accepting luxury travel from Crow becoming public. Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, is focused on the potential tax implications of the gifts Crow made to Thomas. President Joe Biden has made structural changes at the Supreme Court an issue during the waning months of his presidency. Biden has proposed term limits for Supreme Court justices and also an enforceable code of conduct. In response to criticism, the Supreme Court adopted a code of conduct last year for the first time in its history.
Persons: Clarence Thomas, Harlan Crow, Ron Wyden, Thomas, Virginia “ Ginni ” Thomas, ProPublica, Michaela Rose –, , Crow, Michaela Rose, ” Wyden, Wyden, Wyden’s, , Joe Biden, Biden Organizations: CNN, GOP, Democrat, Senate, Customs, Border Protection, Monday, Oregon Democrat, New York Times, Supreme Locations: Hawaii, New Zealand, Crow, Oregon, Indonesia
If you’re in the majority, you don’t need judges and juries to hear you and protect your rights. Last month, Biden traveled to Texas, where he announced a set of proposed Supreme Court reforms that would impose mandatory ethics rules for the court and term limits on justices. The proposals aren’t likely to be implemented before Biden’s term ends, but they signal a policy goal for Democrats as several Supreme Court justices have come under increased scrutiny in the last few years. Last year, ProPublica reported on a series of expensive gifts and trips Justice Clarence Thomas took with billionaire Harlan Crow. Both are symbols used by Trump supporters and were flown during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.
Persons: Neil Gorsuch, Joe Biden’s, Biden, , Fox News ’ Shannon Bream, Gorsuch, “ You’re, I’m, , ProPublica, Clarence Thomas, Harlan Crow, Thomas ’, Ginni Thomas, Donald Trump’s, Samuel Alito, Alito Organizations: Fox News, Trump, Capitol Locations: Texas
Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, and his wife Melissa Cohen Biden arrive at the federal court during his trial on criminal gun charges in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., June 5, 2024. Hunter Biden will be sentenced in his criminal gun case in Delaware on Nov. 13, eight days after the 2024 presidential election, a federal judge said Friday. The 54-year-old is the first child of a sitting U.S. president ever to be convicted of crimes. Biden faces another criminal trial in September in Los Angeles federal court. His lawyers on July 18 asked the judges in both the Delaware and L.A. cases to dismiss the charges.
Persons: Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, Melissa Cohen Biden, Biden, Maryellen Noreika, Clarence Thomas, Donald Trump Organizations: U.S, Supreme, Department of Justice Locations: Wilmington , Delaware, U.S, Delaware, Wilmington, Los Angeles, Florida
Opinion | Joe Biden Issues a Stinging Dissent
  + stars: | 2024-08-02 | by ( Jamelle Bouie | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The Supreme Court is caught in a crisis of its own making. There is the gross corruption of Justice Clarence Thomas and Justice Samuel Alito, who have received millions of dollars in gifts and benefits from various billionaire benefactors. There is the court’s open assault on the basic rights of tens of millions of Americans, exemplified in its decision to overturn the constitutional right to an abortion on the basis of a vague and inconsistent standard of “text, history and tradition.”And there is the hubris of Chief Justice Roberts, who, the legal scholar Eric J. Segall writes, has “led the court to coerce both state and federal governments to abide by his personal preferences, whether or not positive legal sources supported those decisions and at times even when prior law quite clearly did not justify the chief’s opinions and votes.”It is a testament to Roberts’s skill as a politician that he is often viewed as a modest and moderate judicial institutionalist when, in fact, he has used his position on the court to spearhead a remarkable campaign of judicial activism. In cases like Shelby County v. Holder in 2013 or the more recent West Virginia v. EPA, Roberts all but deployed novel constitutional doctrines (“equal state sovereignty” and the “major questions doctrine”) to achieve his preferred results. In just the last term, the Roberts court has rewritten the 14th Amendment to keep Donald Trump on the presidential ballot as well as radically expanded presidential power in direct contravention of the history, text and structure of the Constitution.
Persons: Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Justice Roberts, Eric J, Segall, Holder, Roberts, Donald Trump Organizations: EPA Locations: Shelby, West Virginia
This exclusive series on the Supreme Court is based on CNN sources inside and outside the court with knowledge of the deliberations. Justices weren’t in a hurry to hear the caseThe immunity case first arrived at the justices’ door in December. Perhaps, she hoped to influence lower court judges to read the Roberts opinion as more flexible for a future prosecution. It was a particularly extreme section of Roberts’ opinion – decided by the kind of 5-4 vote the chief justice usually tried to avoid. He fully joined Roberts’ opinion but then questioned the constitutionality of the special counsel’s office.
Persons: John Roberts ’, Donald Trump, Roberts, justice’s, admonishing Trump, Bush, Clinton, , Trump, ” Roberts, Jack Smith, Fischer, Samuel Alito, Roberts tersely, Clarence Thomas, weren’t, Smith, Adam Feldman, Jake Truscott, EmpiricalSCOTUS, Roberts ’, Ronald Reagan, George H.W, Brett Kavanaugh, George W, Reagan, SCOTUS, Roe, Wade, Dobbs, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Barrett, Trump’s, , Thomas, Thomas ’, Aileen Cannon, Trump . Thomas Organizations: CNN, Republican, Trump, Manhattan, Capitol, U.S . Capitol Police, New England Law Boston, Jackson, Health Organization, Liberal, Trump . Locations: Trump, Washington, rejoinder, United States, Galway, Ireland, Iran, Colorado
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewCiting "recent ethics scandals" involving Supreme Court justices, President Joe Biden has announced a proposal to drastically reform the workings of the court, including by establishing term limits for sitting Justices. I have overseen more Supreme Court nominations as senator, vice president and president than anyone living today. This "means there are virtually no limits on what a president can do," Biden said. AdvertisementThe Supreme Court published a code of ethics last year following intense criticism, but it is currently non-binding.
Persons: , Joe Biden, Biden, Roe, Wade, Donald Trump, SCOTUS, Clarence Thomas, Ginni Thomas, Samuel Alito, Alito, Thomas, Barack Obama's, Trump Organizations: Service, Business, Washington Post, Committee, House, Trump, PBS Locations: Washington
A separate special counsel, David Weiss, has been investigating Hunter Biden since 2018 and brought the separate gun and tax indictments against him last year. In fact, Hunter Biden tried but failed to get the gun and tax cases thrown out based on similar arguments. Reviving those arguments, Hunter Biden cited momentum from Trump-appointee Cannon and conservative Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. Ironically, while Hunter Biden champions their rulings, many of his father’s allies have condemned them. At his gun trial, Hunter Biden was found guilty of buying and possessing a gun while abusing illegal drugs.
Persons: CNN — Hunter Biden, Aileen Cannon, Donald Trump, Joe Biden’s, Trump, Jack Smith, David Weiss, Hunter Biden, Biden, he’s, Weiss, , General Merrick Garland, Smith, Cannon, Clarence Thomas, Hunter, ” Hunter, Weiss ’, ” Cannon’s, Alexander Smirnov, Joe, Smirnov’s Organizations: CNN, Justice Department, Mr, Trump, Court, Hunter Biden, ex, FBI Locations: Delaware, California
It also was the capstone of her highly scrutinized handling of the historic Trump case, in which she was known to drag out the pretrial proceedings, entertain long-shot legal theories offered by the former president and issue cumbersome orders that flummoxed lawyers on both sides of the case. Well before Monday’s ruling, outside cheerleaders of the special counsel, including many Trump critics, were calling on Smith to seek Cannon’s removal from the case. None of Thomas’ eight colleagues signed on to his solo concurring opinion, as Smith noted in court filings last week arguing to Cannon that the concurrence should not bear on the classified documents case. The way she has managed her docket has kept the case at a snail’s pace, playing into Trump’s strategy of delay. Or it has happened when the judge has “repeatedly” refused to comply with the appeals court’s instructions on a particular issue in a case, he said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Aileen Cannon, Jack Smith, , Jon Sale, Cannon, Trump, Michael Moore, Obama, “ She’s, General Merrick Garland, Smith, Clarence Thomas, Jon May, , Thomas ’, Thomas, it’s, ” Moore, She’s, , Don Samuel, ” Samuel Organizations: CNN, Trump, Circuit, Smith Locations: Florida, Fort Pierce , Florida, Georgia, Mar
Hunter Biden, son of US President Joe Biden, walks upon arrival at Fort Lesley J. McNair in Washington, DC, on July 1, 2024. The motions follow the ruling Monday by Florida federal court Judge Aileen Cannon tossing out Smith's prosecution of Trump over his retention of classified documents after leaving the White House. Cannon ruled that Smith's appointment as special counsel violated the Appointments Clause of the U.S. Constitution. He is awaiting trial in Los Angeles federal court on federal tax crime charges, which Biden's lawyers likewise are asking a judge there to toss out. That ruling related to Smith's pending prosecution of Trump in Washington, D.C., federal court for crimes associated with Trump's attempt to reverse his loss to President Biden in the 2020 election.
Persons: Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, Fort Lesley J, McNair, Clarence Thomas, Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Trump, David Weiss, Aileen Cannon, Cannon, Biden, Weiss Organizations: Fort, Supreme, White, U.S . Constitution, of Justice, Washington , D.C Locations: Washington ,, California, Delaware, Florida, U.S ., Los Angeles, Trump
Total: 25