Legal News

Divided court sides with government, cutting Medicare payments to safety-net hospitals

On Friday, in Becerra v. Empire Health Foundation, the Supreme Court had yet another chance to topple the Chevron doctrine, a stalwart of administrative law under which courts generally defer to federal agencies’ interpretations of ambiguous statutes. App

logo.png  By IG  Jun 28, 2022

Tantamount to nothing: Miranda “rights” can(not) be wronged

On Thursday, the Supreme Court released its opinion in Vega v. Tekoh, in which a 6-3 court held that a violation of Miranda v. Arizona does not provide a basis for civil damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The majority’s decision both hobbles Miranda’s enforc

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Justices agree to hear technical bankruptcy case but won’t reconsider pillar of defamation law

At last Thursday’s conference, the justices considered several high-profile petitions for review, involving issues like New York’s vaccine mandate for health-care workers, whether to overrule the court’s landmark decision in New York Times v. Sullivan, an

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A minor impact on gun laws but a potentially momentous shift in constitutional method

This article is part of a symposium on the court’s decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen. Randy E. Barnett is the Patrick Hotung professor of constitutional law at the Georgetown University Law Center and the faculty director

logo.png  By IG  Jun 28, 2022