February 26 Supreme Court litigator convicted of tax evasion A Supreme Court litigator was found guilty this week of tax evasion and related charges stemming from his lifestyle as an ultra-high-stakes poker player.
February 25 Legal experts react to Trump’s SCOTUS clash tariff pivot in fiery SOTU Trump's State of the Union highlighted his policy priorities such as tariffs and cracking down on violent crime.
February 25 Biden-appointed federal judge rules Trump's 'third country' deportation policy is unconstitutional The Boston-based federal judge ruled that the Trump administration’s third-country removal policy is unlawful and violates due process protections under the Constitution.
February 25 Trump trims some tariffs after Supreme Court loss but keeps trade fight alive Trump adapts trade strategy after Supreme Court strikes down tariffs in 6-3 ruling, preserving existing duties while vowing continued fight against decision.
February 25 Supreme Court intervenes in case where private ICE contractor forced detainees to clean common areas Supreme Court allows lawsuit against private prison company to proceed, rejecting GEO Group's immunity claim over alleged forced labor practices.
February 25 Thomas criticizes Supreme Court majority for 'needlessly' expanding precedent in unanimous decision Justice Clarence Thomas criticized the Supreme Court majority for “needlessly" expanding precedent in a unanimous decision involving attorney-client talks.
February 25 5 Supreme Court justices skip Trump State of the Union after key tariff ruling A majority of the Supreme Court did not attend President Trump’s 2026 State of the Union, days after the court invalidated his global tariff plan in a 6–3 ruling.
February 24 Trump rips Supreme Court tariff ruling in SOTU, vows new legal fight after 6-3 blow Trump calls Supreme Court tariff ruling "very unfortunate" during State of the Union, vows to pursue alternative legal avenues despite 6-3 defeat.
February 24 Postal Service can't be sued for intentionally not delivering mail, Supreme Court rules in 5-4 split Supreme Court rules 5-4 that U.S. Postal Service cannot be sued for intentionally failing to deliver mail, citing federal sovereign immunity protections.
February 24 To go or not to go? Supreme Court at the State of the Union Supreme Court justices face a decision on attending President Trump's State of the Union address after he said was "ashamed" of six who voted against his tariffs.