"Supreme Court fracas in 2011 figures in race": Patrick Marley will have
this article in Sunday's edition of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
"Obama's Guantanamo Is Never Going To Close, So Everyone Might As Well Get Comfortable": Ryan J. Reilly of The Huffington Post has
this report.
"Sentenced to life at 16, woman hopes for freedom": The Associated Press has
this lengthy report.
"Orie Melvin jury to reconvene Tuesday": Today's edition of The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette contains
an article that begins, "Deliberations will resume Tuesday in the criminal trial of suspended state Supreme Court Justice Joan Orie Melvin and her sister, Janine Orie."
And coverage from The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review can be accessed here.
"Florida Supreme Court snubs Palm Beach County judge-lawyer Facebook case": The Palm Beach Post has
this report.
"Courting Disaster: A new idea to limit drone strikes could actually legitimize them." Law professor
Jeffrey Rosen has
this essay online at The New Republic.
"Appellate Lawyer Sanford Svetcov, 1940-2013": This obituary, written by Scott Graham, appears online at The Recorder.
"The Most Important Legal Philosopher of Our Time": Online at Bloomberg View, law professor
Cass R. Sunstein has
an essay that begins, "Ronald Dworkin, a professor at New York University and the University of Oxford who died this week, was one of the most important legal philosophers of the last 100 years. He may well head the list."
"Tubbs issues statement saying security plan given to Supreme Court": Patrick Marley of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has
a blog post that begins, "Former Capitol Police Chief Charles Tubbs issued a statement Friday backing Supreme Court Justice Ann Walsh Bradley's claim that a security plan was put in place because of safety concerns."
"Man Accused of Robbing US Supreme Court Judge Claims He's Innocent; Magistrate says it's time to bring the matter before the court": The St. Kitts-Nevis Observer has
an article that begins, "'I have been wrongfully accused of a crime and I want my life back,' says the young Nevisian charged with robbing Associate Justice of the US Supreme Court Stephen Breyer."
"Who Owns Seeds? Monsanto Says Not You." CNBC.com has
this report.
"Think Hagel's bad? Just wait until there's a Supreme Court opening; The Hagel battle is actually a dry run for the next justice fight -- and it's clear that the GOP will filibuster." Jonathan Bernstein has
this essay at Salon.com.