Tuesday round-up

The Court began its March sitting yesterday, leading to plenty of coverage today.

Yesterday the Court granted certiorari in two cases, Maples v. Thomas and Rehberg v. Paulk; JURIST provides a quick summary of each. In Maples, the Court will consider whether a death-row inmate may pursue an appeal even though he missed a filing deadline. Adam Liptak covers the background of the case at length in the New York Times, as do CNN and the WSJ Law Blog. In Rehberg v. Paulk, the Court will consider whether prosecutors are entitled to immunity if they have presented perjured testimony to a grand jury; Courthouse News Service and the Associated Press report.

Several denials of certiorari also resulted in significant coverage:

Commentators also focused on the Court’s unanimous per curiam decision in Felkner v. Jackson, in which the Court summarily reversed a Ninth Circuit ruling awarding habeas relief to an inmate who alleged that a prosecutor acted unconstitutionally in striking jurors at his trial on the basis of race. Courthouse News Service, UPI, and the San Francisco Chronicle offer more coverage; Rory Little gives both an overview and commentary in an ABA Supreme Court case summary (PDF). David Savage of the Los Angeles Times observes that this is the tenth time the Court has struck down a Ninth Circuit ruling since November, and noted an “unusual tone of irritation.” The ABA Journal characterizes the decision as a “slap” for the Ninth Circuit, while Ashby Jones of the WSJ Law Blog musters an “ouch” in response to the Court’s determination that the Ninth Circuit’s decision was “as inexplicable as it is unexplained.”

Finally, yesterday’s oral arguments in Davis v. United States and Tolentino v. New York also generated coverage. Tony Mauro of the National Law Journal reports on yesterday’s oral argument in Tolentino by Caitlin Halligan, who has been nominated to fill an open seat on the D.C. Circuit, while Lyle Denniston of this blog explores the complex arguments advanced by Orin Kerr in Davis. Today, the Court is scheduled to hear oral argument in two cases. Amy Howe of this blog previews Fox v. Vice, in which the Court will consider when prevailing defendants are entitled to attorneys’ fees in civil rights litigation, while the University of Virginia Cavalier Daily previews Borough of Duryea v. Guarnieri, in which the Court will consider whether public employees are protected from retaliation under the First Amendment’s Petition Clause when they complain to the government about matters of purely personal concern.

Briefly:

Posted in: Round-up

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