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BREAKING NEWS
SCOTUS NEWS

Justices take up “false statement” dispute and rare capital case

at 11:44 a.m.

The court on Friday added 15 new cases to their docket out of Monday’s “long conference,” the first time the justices officially met to discuss petitions since early July. The added cases include a dispute involving a member of one of Chicago’s most prominent political dynasties, a relatively rare capital case, and Mexico’s lawsuit against U.S. gun manufacturers.

The United States Supreme Court

The justices released a list of 15 new cases they will hear this term on Friday morning. (Aashish Kiphayet via Shutterstock)

SCOTUS NEWS

Supreme Court declines to block EPA methane, mercury rules

at 1:24 p.m.

The court declined to put on hold federal air pollution rules that the Biden administration put in place earlier this year to curb hazardous air pollutants and planet-warming methane emissions. Republican-led states and industry groups said the rules overburdened power plants. The justices did not explain their decision to deny the requests.

CASE PREVIEW

Justices to hear challenge to regulation of unserialized ‘ghost guns’

at 5:35 p.m.

At oral argument on Tuesday the court will examine a challenge to a 2022 federal rule that seeks to regulating unserialized guns assembled by a user from parts – known as ghost guns – that can be bought anonymously and without a background check. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives says the rule was implemented not to ban ghost guns but to regulate them, as traditional gun sales are, under the 1968 Gun Control Act.

CAPITAL CASE

Supreme Court allows Marcellus Williams to be executed

at 11:29 p.m.

A majority of the court turned down Marcellus Williams’ last appeals, allowing his execution to go forward in Missouri. He was killed by lethal injection shortly after the court issued its unsigned order. None of the forensic evidence found at the scene of the 1998 murder of Felicia Gayle tied Williams to the crime and the prosecutor later testified that he had excluded at least one potential juror based on race. Williams, who was Black, was convicted by 11 white jurors and just one Black juror.

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