Friday round-up

Amy Howe reports for this blog, in a post that first appeared at Howe on the Court, that yesterday “the justices responded again to the emergency created by the [coronavirus] and its impact on U.S. workplaces by issuing an order that … relaxes filing deadlines for petitions seeking Supreme Court review.” At Bloomberg Law, Jordan Rubin reports that “Thursday’s order, which doesn’t apply to appeals that have already been granted certiorari, also relaxes court practices on certain time extension requests.”

At the ABA Journal, Mark Walsh takes a look back at “the past outbreaks of disease cited by the court” in its recent announcement that it is postponing the March oral argument session. At CNN, Joan Biskupic observes that the coronavirus pandemic “is bound to force Supreme Court justices into new territory[:] They may open their operations in more modern ways[, o]r, if they move in the opposite direction and shun any high-tech alternative, they might postpone all previously scheduled March and April oral argument sessions, a total 20 disputes, until next summer or fall.” Tom Goldstein offers some possibilities for how the court could handle the term’s yet-to-be-argued cases in a post on this blog.

Briefly:

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