Wednesday round-up

Yesterday the Court heard oral argument in three cases.  Of those, Bruesewitz v. Wyeth – in which the Court is considering whether the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act preempts all vaccine design-defect claims – garnered the lion’s share of media coverage. Many of the Bruesewitz headlines describe the Court as “divided” on the issue, and indeed, NPR’s Nina Totenberg reports that “[a]t day’s end, there were few willing to bet on how the court will decide the case.” The New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, the Wall Street Journal (and a pre-argument post at the WSJ Law Blog), CNN, the National Law Journal, the Christian Science Monitor, Bloomberg, USA Today, C-SPAN, PBS NewsHour, Nature’s The Great Beyond blog, and Courthouse News Service all have coverage of the Bruesewitz argument. Meanwhile, yesterday’s argument in the Sixth Amendment case Harrington v. Richter is covered by Courthouse News Service, by Crime & Consequences, and by Dana Milbank in his column for the Washington Post (“Almost makes one long for a campaign-finance case,” he concludes.). JURIST and Crime & Consequences briefly cover the third argument yesterday, in Premo v. Moore.

Yesterday’s order list also generated plenty of headlines, as well, with an uncommon focus on cases in which the Court denied certiorari. SCOTUSblog has summaries of the list’s highlights here and here, as does the National Law Journal.  The order attracting the most attention is the denial of certiorari in Weise v. Casper (10-67), a First Amendment case brought by two people who were turned away from a public event featuring then-President Bush because of a bumper sticker implying their opposition to the Iraq War. Justice Ginsburg dissented from the denial of certiorari, in an opinion joined by Justice Sotomayor. The Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, the Christian Science Monitor, the New York Times, Politico, Bloomberg, Courthouse News Service, and TIME’s NewsFeed all have coverage of the Weise denial. Other notable denials include a case on Utah’s adult-oriented entertainment tax (The Hill’s On the Money blog) and a case on removal and fraudulent misjoinder (Courthouse News Service).

In addition to the denials, the Court added seven new cases to its docket (two of which are consolidated). The cert. grant in Bond v. United States, a Tenth Amendment case, drew notice from David Kopel at the Volokh Conspiracy, CBS News, the Christian Science Monitor, and Crime & Consequences. The consolidated cases, Camreta v. Greene and Alford v. Greene, drew attention, as well. Those cases are about the constitutional limits on interviewing schoolchildren about claims of sexual assault. Education Week’s School Law blog and Courthouse News Service have coverage of those cases. Meanwhile, the Utica Observer-Dispatch has an article on Madison County v. Oneida Indian Nation, an Indian law case that was also granted yesterday. JURIST has a post summarizing all of the new cases.

Briefly:

Posted in: Round-up

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