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EMERGENCY DOCKET

Supreme Court sidesteps Trump’s effort to remove watchdog agency head

 at 6:54 p.m.

The justices on Friday left Hampton Dellinger, the head of the Office of Special Counsel, in place at the independent agency that oversees protections for government whistleblowers. Dellinger was fired in an email from the Trump administration on Feb. 7. The justices kept a district court judge’s order temporarily reinstating Dellinger in place, putting off a ruling on the government’s request to lift the order.

Supreme Court building

The court issued its decision in Bessent v. Dellinger on Friday evening. (Katie Barlow)

CASE PREVIEW

A death row plea for DNA testing

 at 11:38 a.m.

Ruben Gutierrez has long maintained that access to DNA testing on several pieces of evidence would exonerate him of the 1998 Brownsville, Tex., murder for which he was sentenced to death. Gutierrez was sentenced for killing 85-year-old Escolastica Harrison but argues that he was not in the house when two other men killed her. Last year, a lower court ruled that Gutierrez does not have the right to sue over Texas’s DNA testing law.

CASE PREVIEW

Ohio woman asks court to weigh in on requirements for reverse discrimination claim

at 11:05 a.m.

Marlean Ames contends that she did not get the job she wanted and was demoted at the Ohio youth rehabilitation center where she works because she is straight. Her case, she says, amounts to reverse discrimination. On Wednesday, the justices will consider whether the lower court improperly required her to meet a more stringent standard for her case to move forward under federal employment discrimination laws than if she had been a member of a minority group.

OPINION ANALYSIS

Justices rule out “commingled funds” theory in Hungarian Holocaust survivors’ compensation suit

 at 12:23 p.m.

In a unanimous ruling, the Supreme Court on Friday rejected a lower court decision that allowed survivors of the Hungarian Holocaust to use a theory that their confiscated property had been commingled with funds used in the United States to sue the country and its railway in U.S. courts. But Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that the court’s decision is narrow and only means that plaintiffs like the survivors “cannot rely on a commingling theory alone.”

Advocates in Conversation