Thursday round-up

Yesterday the Court heard oral argument in two cases. In the first, Sykes v. United States, it considered whether fleeing the police in a car, after being ordered to stop, constitutes a “violent felony” for purposes of the Armed Career Criminal Act. At issue in the second case, Kentucky v. King, are the circumstances in which lawful police action impermissibly “creates” exigent circumstances, such that the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant requirement does not apply. Transcripts of both arguments are available here.

Kentucky v. King, the exigent circumstances case, garnered the lion’s share of the media attention. After what the Volokh Conspiracy’s Orin Kerr describes as a “messy” oral argument, most journalists and commentators predict that the Court will uphold the warrantless search. NPR’s Nina Totenberg suggests that the respondent’s lawyer “seemed unable to persuade the justices that she had a workable rule.” And Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick predicts that the Court is “poised to eviscerate the warrant requirement in a broad class of ‘exigent’ situations.”  Lithwick also discusses the argument in Sykes v. United States, the Armed Career Criminal Act case. The Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, USA Today, the Associated Press, the Crime & Consequences blog, and PoliceOne have additional coverage of the argument in King. JURIST briefly summarizes both of yesterday’s cases.

Courthouse News Service and JURIST have additional coverage of the Court’s order, issued late Tuesday, staying the execution of Texas death row inmate Cleve Foster, an Army veteran convicted in 2002 of rape and murder. See yesterday’s round-up for additional coverage of the order.

Briefly:

Posted in: Round-up

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