Wednesday round-up

Retired Justice John Paul Stevens, in a speech to the Equal Justice Initiative on Monday night, criticized the Court’s recent decision in Connick v. Thompson, in which the Court held that a district attorney’s office cannot be held liable under Section 1983 for failing to train its prosecutors based on one example of misconduct. In the speech, Stevens “urged congressional action to hold prosecutors clearly liable for the civil rights violations of their underlings,” reports Tony Mauro at the Blog of LegalTimes. On her Court Beat blog, Joan Biskupic discusses Justice Stevens’s remarks, which the WSJ Law Blog makes available in full. Stevens also spoke yesterday at a symposium convened by Second Circuit Judge Robert A. Katzmann “to discuss the barriers that deny many immigrants proper legal counsel,” reports the New York Times.

The other major Court-related story in the news is Prince Charles’s visit to the Court yesterday, just days after his son’s wedding in London. Prince Charles attended a reception for Marshall Scholar alumni at the Court and “caused quite a stir at the usually quiet quarters of the nation’s highest court,” writes Tony Mauro for the Blog of LegalTimes. The Associated Press (via the Washington Post) reports that the Prince also met with Justices Scalia, Breyer, and Sotomayor. The WSJ Washington Wire blog, the Washington Post’s Reliable Source blog, the BBC, and CNN have more general coverage of the Prince’s three-day visit to Washington.

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Posted in: Round-up

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