Wednesday round-up

Yesterday the Supreme Court refused to stay the scheduled execution of a Virginia prisoner, Teresa Lewis, who admitted that she planned the killings of her husband and stepson in 2002. Justices Ginsburg and Sotomayor would have granted the application to stay the execution. Lewis is now likely to be the first woman executed in the United States in five years, and the first in Virginia in nearly one hundred. The Washington Post, CNN, the Richmond Times-Dispatch, ABC News, BBC, and the New York Times all have coverage of the story.

Justice Ginsburg is featured in next month’s ABA Journal, which has a cover story on Ginsburg’s “career as a lawyer and judge; [her] marriage to her late husband, Martin; and … the changes that women have seen in law and parenthood.” (Two audio clips of the ABA Journal’s interview with Ginsburg are available here and here.) The new issue of the Journal includes several additional features pertaining to the Supreme Court. Mark Walsh looks ahead to several high-profile cases of the upcoming Term, as well as the addition of Elena Kagan to the bench. John Gibeaut and Wendy Davis provide substantial previews of Snyder v. Phelps, the funeral picketing case, and Bruesewitz v. Wyeth, the vaccine liability case, respectively. And Georgetown law student Mike Sacks reflects on the six months he spent attempting to be first in the public line for all Supreme Court sittings. (Thanks to How Appealing and Howard Bashman for the links.)

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Posted in: Round-up

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