Wednesday round-up

Yesterday the Court heard oral argument in a corporate speech case, Sorrell v. IMS Health, Inc., and issued its decision in United States v. Tohono O’odham Nation, which settled a jurisdictional issue of the Court of Federal Claims. (Disclosure: Goldstein, Howe & Russell represents one set of respondents in Sorrell.)

The argument attracted significantly more attention than the decision, and almost all journalists covering Sorrell agreed that the Court was skeptical of Vermont’s restriction on pharmaceutical marketers’ use of drug prescription records. “So heavy was the [Court’s] defense of corporate expression,” writes SCOTUSblog’s Lyle Denniston, “that the lawyer for Vermont . . . had to continue her argument under siege.” In the New York Times, Adam Liptak links the “somewhat esoteric” Sorrell case to Citizens United v. FEC , explaining that both cases involve “a fundamental First Amendment principle that has much engaged the justices lately: What role may the government play in regulating the marketplace of ideas?” USA Today, NPR, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times (also here), CNN, Bloomberg, the Associated Press (via the Boston Globe), the Christian Science Monitor, PBS NewsHour, Reuters, JURIST, the WSJ Health Blog, and Constitutional Law Prof Blog all have coverage of the argument.

In United States v. Tohono O’odham Nation, the Court held that an Indian nation cannot simultaneously pursue the same claim in both federal district court and the Court of Federal Claims, even if each court acting alone cannot provide full relief. Kent Scheidegger of Crime & Consequences calls the decision “unsurprising.” Courthouse News Service, the Associated Press (via the Washington Post), UPI, West Valley News (Ariz.), and JURIST have coverage of the decision.

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Posted in: Round-up

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