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United States Supreme Court

Mar 2006Number of the 193 “laughing episodes” during Supreme Court arguments last term that were caused by Antonin Scalia: 77
Source:

Jay D. Wexler, Boston University School of Law

Mar 2006Number of the 193 “laughing episodes” during Supreme Court arguments last term that were caused by Clarence Thomas: 0
Source:

Jay D. Wexler, Boston University School of Law

Nov 2005

Years that property owners in New London, Connecticut, spent fighting the city’s seizure of their land: 5

Minimum back rent that the city, after winning in the Supreme Court, is now intending to charge them: $951,718

Source:

Waller, Smith & Palmer, P.C. (New London, Conn.)

Nov 2002Year in which Disney's Mickey Mouse copyright will expire if the Supreme Court reverses a 1998 extension this winter: 2003
Source:

Prof. Lawrence Lessig, Stanford Law School (Stanford, Calif.)

Feb 2001Score shouted by Justice Antonin Scalia at a Washington, D.C., tennis court in 1998 before claiming victory: "5-4!"
Source:

Daniel Schorr, National Public Radio (Washington)

Sep 2000Number of the three cancer survivors on the Supreme Court who are also over 70: 2
Source:

U.S. Supreme Court

May 29, 2009 President Barack Obama nominated Sonia Sotomayor, a Bronx-born, divorced, childless, diabetic, Hispanic federal judge on the U.S Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, to replace Justice David Souter on the Supreme Court. Analysts studying Sotomayor's decisions were unable to determine whether she would uphold Roe v. Wade, or whether she was distinctly pro- or anti-business, but much was made of a 2001 speech at the University of California at Berkeley in which she expressed hopes that a “wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life.” During the speech she also expressed fondness for “platos de arroz, gandoles y pernil,” a dish made with rice, beans, and pork. “Her word choice in 2001 was poor,” offered White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, but many Republicans were unconvinced. “The comments she made about the quality of her decisions being better than those of a white male—I mean, we need to go further into her record to see whether this is a trend,” said Senator John Cornyn (R., Tex.), one of 98 non-Hispanic senators, who was considered for the Supreme Court in 2005 but not appointed. Newt Gingrich, who in 2007 spoke out against bilingual education by suggesting that students should “learn the language of prosperity, not the language of living in a ghetto,” criticized Sotomayor via Twitter. “White man racist nominee would be forced to withdraw,” tweeted Gingrich. “Latina woman racist should also withdraw.”
Source 1:

The New York Times

Source 2:

The New York Times

Source 3:

The New York Times

Source 4:

The Guardian

Source 5:

The Washington Post

Source 6:

The Los Angeles Times

Source 7:

Fox News

Source 8:

The White House

Source 9:

The New York Times

Source 10:

FJC.gov

Source 11:

Wikipedia.org

Source 12:

Leading the news

June 29, 2008The Supreme Court overturned the 32-year ban on handguns in Washington, D.C., ruling 5-4 that there is a Second Amendment right to own a gun for personal use. Justice John Paul Stevens wrote in his dissent that the court's ruling, its first on the Second Amendment in 70 years, showed a lack of “respect for the well-settled views of all of our predecessors on the court, and for the rule of law itself.” The National Rifle Association promptly brought lawsuits against five other cities with handgun bans, including San Francisco, Chicago, and Oak Park, Illinois. “It's just completely befuddling,” said the Oak Park village manager, “that our Supreme Court would be in alliance with the gangbangers.”
Source 1:

The New York Times

Source 2:

NPR

June 26, 2008The Supreme Court determined that Exxon need pay only $507.5 million (about four days' worth of recent profits) of the $5 billion in punitive damages initially awarded to victims of the 1989 “Valdez” oil spill.
Source 1:

CNN Money

Source 2:

AP via Yahoo! News

June 25, 2008The Supreme Court determined that child rapists should not be sentenced to death if their crime “did not result, and was not intended to result, in the victim's death.” John McCain disagreed with that ruling and suggested that by executing those found guilty of “the most heinous of crimes” the United States could protect the innocence of its children, while Barack Obama suggested that the rape of a small child, “six or eight years old,” could be punished by death without violating the Constitution.
Source:

AFP

June 14, 2008The Supreme Court ruled 5–4 that detainees held as “enemy combatants” by the United States in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have a constitutional right to challenge their detention through habeas corpus petitions in federal courts. “Liberty and security can be reconciled...within the framework of the law,” wrote Justice Anthony M. Kennedy in the court's decision. “The Framers decided that habeas corpus...must be...a part of that law.” Dissenting, Chief Justice John Roberts asked, “So who has won? Not the detainees. The Court's analysis leaves them with only the prospect of further litigation.” Defense lawyers for the detainees moved to establish that their clients have the right to other constitutional protections and sought to halt ongoing military-commission trials, which permit hearsay and evidence gained from torture. John McCain called the ruling “one of the worst decisions in the history of this country.” Barack Obama said, “I think the Supreme Court was right.”
Source 1:

New York Times

Source 2:

New York Times

Source 3:

cnn

December 6, 2007The Supreme Court debated the limits of habeas corpus.
Source:

WP

April 19, 2007The United States Supreme Court ruled in a 5 to 4 decision that the 2003 Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act is legal.
Source:

Washington Post

April 2, 2007The Supreme Court forbade the Environmental Protection Agency to shirk its responsibility to regulate greenhouse gases.
Source:

New York Times

January 26, 2007Ruth Bader Ginsburg said that being the only female Supreme Court justice made her feel lonely.
Source:

USA Today

January 5, 2007Newly released FBI files revealed that the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist checked into a hospital for sedative dependency in 1981. During his rehabilitation, Rehnquist spoke of “a CIA plot against him” and tried to escape from the hospital clad in his pajamas.
Source:

Washington Post

October 3, 2006The Supreme Court refused to consider the constitutionality of Ignacio Sergio Acosta v. state of Texas, a case that challenged the Texas law that makes it illegal to promote genitalia-shaped sex toys.
Source:

ABC News

July 8, 2006 President Bush said that he was “willing to abide by the ruling of the Supreme Court” in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, which held that the administration's scheme to try prisoners at Guantánamo in military tribunals is illegal. “It didn't say we couldn't have done—couldn't have made that decision, see?” Bush added. “They were silent on whether or not Guantánamo—whether we should have used Guantánamo. In other words, they accepted the use of Guantánamo, the decision I made.”
Source:

New York Times

June 29, 2006The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that President George W. Bush had overstepped his authority in establishing military tribunals for Guantánamo Bay detainees. “I'd like to close Guantánamo,” said Bush, “But . . . we're holding some people that are darn dangerous.”
Source 1:

Yahoo! News

Source 2:

Breitbart.com

May 23, 2006The Supreme Court voted unanimously that police may enter a house without a warrant in order to break up a fight.
Source:

The New York Times

March 21, 2006The Supreme Court voted to refuse Puerto Ricans the right to vote in U.S. Presidential elections.
Source:

BBC News

March 6, 2006 Bush proposed legislation to give the President a line-item veto, even though the Supreme Court ruled in 1998 that a line-item veto was unconstitutional.
Source:

The New York Times

February 1, 2006 Samuel Alito was confirmed as a Supreme Court justice.
Source:

CNN.com

January 27, 2006 Massachusetts Junior Senator John Kerry, in Switzerland for the Davos economic forum, called for a filibuster to stop the nomination of Samuel Alito Jr. to the Supreme Court.
Source:

The Salt Lake Tribune

January 17, 2006The U.S. Supreme Court upheld an Oregon law allowing for physician-assisted suicide.
Source:

CBC.ca

January 12, 2006The U.S. Senate made Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito's wife cry.
Source:

NBC11.com

January 5, 2006Three Christian ministers claimed that they had sneaked into a Senate hearing room to anoint with oil the chairs used during Samuel Alito's Supreme Court confirmation.
Source:

Salon.com

December 31, 2005A study found that Antonin Scalia is the funniest of the Supreme Court justices; in fact Scalia is 19 times funnier than Ruth Bader Ginsburg. A former clerk defended Ginsburg's sense of humor: “Maybe not often, perhaps not loudly or with great vigor and the wild waving of arms,” said the clerk, “but laugh she does.”
Source:

The New York Times

November 28, 2005The Supreme Court’s marble facade began to crumble.
Source:

The New York Times

November 19, 2005 Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito attempted to distance himself from his statement, “the Constitution does not protect a right to an abortion,” which he wrote in an application for a job in the Reagan Administration. “It was a political job,” he clarified, “and that was 1985.”
Source:

The Boston Globe

November 3, 2005It was revealed that Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito once led a student conference that called for sodomy to be legalized.
Source:

IndyStar.com

October 28, 2005 Harriet Miers withdrew her nomination to the Supreme Court.
Source:

CNN.com

October 10, 2005Both Democratic and Republican senators were questioning the qualifications of Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers, who has never argued a case before the Supreme Court but has been often referred to as President Bush's “work wife.”
Source 1:

The Seattle Times

Source 2:

Slate.com

September 29, 2005John G. Roberts, Jr. was sworn in as Chief Justice of the United States.
Source:

CNN.com

September 29, 2005President George W. Bush nominated Harriet Miers, a White House lawyer who has never been a judge, to the Supreme Court. Miers has allegedly described Bush as "brilliant."
Source:

David Frum’s Diary/NRO

September 14, 2005 Supreme Court nominee John G. Roberts Jr. was questioned by members of the Senate and managed to avoid direct answers to many of the questions posed to him. He did reveal, however, that "Dr. Zhivago" and "North by Northwest" were his favorite films. Antiabortion groups felt that Roberts was doing just fine.
Source 1:

KPAX

Source 2:

The Washington Post

September 3, 2005 Chief Justice of the United States William H. Rehnquist died, and President Bush nominated John G. Roberts, Jr. as a replacement.
Source 1:

Wikipedia

Source 2:

The Mercury News

August 29, 2005 Supreme Court nominee John Roberts was revealed to be a strict grammarian.
Source:

The New York Times

August 17, 2005A file folder describing the affirmative-action work of Supreme Court nominee John Roberts went missing from the Reagan Library after it was reviewed by White House lawyers, and it was revealed that Roberts had once refused a request from Michael Jackson for a special letter of commendation from the Reagan White House.
Source 1:

The Washington Post

Source 2:

BBC News

July 19, 2005President George W. Bush nominated John G. Roberts, a federal appeals court judge, to the Supreme Court. Roberts has criticized U.S. abortion policy, but is considered very handsome. “American women will love him,” said an editor at More Magazine. “I love thee,” commentator David Brooks wrote of the nomination, “with the depth and breadth and height my soul can reach. I love thee freely.”
Source 1:

AP

Source 2:

Times Online

July 14, 2005William Rehnquist announced that he would not retire from the Supreme Court.
Source:

AP

July 4, 2005Conservative groups began fighting to keep Attorney General Alberto Gonzales from being nominated to replace Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor because he is not conservative enough.
Source:

The New York Times

July 1, 2005Sandra Day O'Connor announced that she would retire from the Supreme Court.
Source:

AP

June 23, 2005The Supreme Court ruled that the government can take property under eminent domain for private development. “Under the banner of economic development,” said Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, “all private property is now vulnerable to being taken and transferred to another private owner, so long as it might be upgraded.”
Source:

The New York Times

June 6, 2005The Supreme Court made it impossible to obtain medical marijuana.
Source:

Bloomberg.com

March 25, 2005The Supreme Court refused to hear a case brought by Terri Schiavo's parents to force the reinsertion of Schiavo's feeding tube.
Source:

New York Times

February 22, 2005The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear a case challenging the Alabama law that makes it a crime—punishable by a year in jail and a $10,000 fine—to sell vibrators, dildos, anal beads, and artificial vaginas.
Source:

Reuters

January 10, 2005The Supreme Court ruled that the Ku Klux Klan could adopt a highway in Missouri.
Source:

Reuters

November 1, 2004Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who underwent a tracheotomy last week, was recovering from treatment for thyroid cancer and was unable to return to work.
Source:

Reuters

October 1, 2004 Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia said that "sexual orgies eliminate social tensions and ought to be encouraged."
Source:

Guardian

September 23, 2004After maintaining for three years that Yaser Esam Hamdi, an American citizen captured in Afghanistan, was so grave a threat to the United States that merely permitting him to meet with his lawyer would fatally compromise national security, the Bush Administration (having been told by Justice Antonin Scalia that "the very core of liberty secured by our Anglo-Saxon system of separated powers has been freedom from indefinite imprisonment at the will of the Executive") declined to defend its case against Hamdi in open court and announced that he will be stripped of his citizenship and released in Saudi Arabia.
Source:

Boston Globe, Washington Post, ZNet

June 29, 2004Observing that "a state of war is not a blank check for the president," the Supreme Court ruled that both foreign prisoners held at Guantánamo Bay and so-called enemy combatants held in the United States can use the American legal system to challenge their detention.
Source:

New York Times

June 29, 2004The Supreme Court ruled that a federal law designed to shield children from Internet porn cannot be enforced, because it likely violates the First Amendment.
Source:

Associated Press

June 24, 2004The Supreme Court declined to make Dick Cheney release the records of his 2001 Energy Task Force and sent the case back to a lower court for further consideration.
Source:

Reuters

April 13, 2004 Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia apologized to two reporters whose recordings of a recent speech were erased by a federal marshal; Scalia had lamented in the speech that people just don't revere the Constitution the way they used to.
Source:

New York Times

February 12, 2004 Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia defended his duck-hunting trip with Dick Cheney and said he did not plan to recuse himself from a case involving the Vice President's shadowy energy task force.
Source:

Associated Press

January 16, 2004Five military lawyers who represent detainees at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, filed a brief with the Supreme Court arguing that President Bush has exceeded his constitutional authority in setting up military tribunals for their clients and the other detainees. "Under this monarchical regime," they wrote, "those who fall into the black hole may not contest the jurisdiction, competency or even the constitutionality of the military tribunals."
Source:

New York Times

January 13, 2004The Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal challenging the government's post-September 11 policy of secretly seizing and imprisoning Muslim men.
Source:

Associated Press

December 11, 2003The United States Supreme Court upheld the McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform law, which bans unlimited political contributions to political parties. The majority concluded that "it was not unwarranted for Congress to conclude that the selling of access gives rise to the appearance of corruption."
Source:

New York Times

October 15, 2003The Supreme Court let a ruling stand that the federal government may not prevent doctors from recommending marijuana as a pain reliever.
Source:

New York Times

July 16, 2003 Pat Robertson called on his disciples to mount a "prayer offensive" against the Supreme Court aimed at forcing three of the justices, who Robertson said have "opened the door to homosexual marriage, bigamy, legalized prostitution and even incest," to retire.
Source:

Associated Press

March 11, 2003 The United States Supreme Court ruled that it is not cruel and unusual punishment to put a man in prison for 50 years for stealing a couple of videotapes for his children.
June 4, 2002The Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal by the state of Texas in the matter of Calvin Jerold Burdine, who was convicted of murdering his gay lover and was sentenced to die after his court-appointed lawyer slept through the trial; Texas officials, who had argued that having an unconscious lawyer did nothing to affect the fairness of his trial, must now retry Burdine or let him go.
October 2, 2001 Supreme Court justice Sandra Day O'Connor told a New York audience that “we're likely to experience more restrictions on our personal freedom than has ever been the case in our country.” White House spokesman Ari Fleischer denounced television personality Bill Maher for saying that firing cruise missiles at targets 2,000 miles away was perhaps more cowardly that flying a plane into a tall building: “There are reminders to all Americans that they need to watch what they say, watch what they do, and this is not a time for remarks like that; there never is.” “Watch what they say,” which was captured on tape, was omitted from the official White House transcript.
August 14, 2001 Microsoft asked the Supreme Court to review its antitrust case.
July 10, 2001 Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor told the Minnesota Women Lawyers Association that innocent people may have been executed in the United States; O'Connor also acknowledged that wealthy people are better served by the justice system.
July 10, 2001 Florida's supreme court was considering a constitutional amendment that would enshrine the right of pigs to spacious quarters while pregnant.
June 12, 2001The United States Supreme Court overturned the death sentence of a retarded Texan.
April 24, 2001The Supreme Court issued a stay of execution for a murderer who was represented by a lawyer who also represented the victim.
April 3, 2001The Supreme Court said it would decide whether executing retarded murderers was cruel and unusual.
March 6, 2001The United States Supreme Court rejected a challenge from industry groups to force the Environmental Protection Agency to use cost-benefit analysis in setting clean-air standards.
February 6, 2001The Democratic Party demonstrated its seriousness of purpose by failing to mount a filibuster to block the confirmation of former senator John Ashcroft, who was defeated by a dead man in the last election; Ashcroft was sworn in as Attorney General by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas in a private ceremony.
January 23, 2001 Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist, wearing his tacky Gilbert and Sullivan-inspired gold-striped robe, which he himself designed, swore in George W. Bush, whom he himself appointed president of the United States.
December 19, 2000The Supreme Court of the United States made a gift of the presidency to George W. Bush.
December 19, 2000General Henry Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called for an increase in military spending to stop the “fraying of our force.” Virginia Lamp Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, was working for the rightist Heritage Foundation, vetting résumés of courtiers seeking places at the Republican banquet.
December 12, 2000The United States Supreme Court then granted a stay requested by George W. Bush, whose lawyers said the recount would cause “irreparable harm” to their client.
December 5, 2000The United States Supreme Court said that random highway drug searches were unconstitutional.
December 5, 2000The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case of a retarded Texas killer who believes in Santa Claus; he was scheduled to die but got a reprieve.
October 3, 2000The Supreme Court refused to hear the Microsoft antitrust appeal and sent the case back to a lower court.
September 5, 2000The Supreme Court issued an emergency stay preventing California from allowing the medical use of marijuana.
January 0, 2000 Supreme Court Justice David Souter announced that he was retiring, a decision some attributed to his hatred for Washington, D.C., which he has called “the world's worst city.”
Source 1:

Seattle Times

Source 2:

AP Via Google


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