It’s rare for the Supreme Court to side with death row prisoners. But it’s not unusual for Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch to vote against them, so their dissent is unsurprising in Tuesday’s ruling in favor of a woman who was convicted in ...
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas dissented from a historic ruling in the case of a woman on death row for murder.
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas slammed a circuit court of appeals for not adhering to legal precedent in a dissent released on Monday. Thomas dissented from a denial by the court to review a lower court's decision. Justice Samuel Alito joined the opinion.
Justice Clarence Thomas, joined by Justice Neil Gorsuch, wrote that the state produced overwhelming evidence that Andrew participated in her husband's murder and would have left the conviction and ...
Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch dissented from the other justices, who appeared to agree that lower courts did not properly weigh whether Andrew received a fair trial. They argued that ...
But it’s not unusual for Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch to vote against them, so their dissent is unsurprising in Tuesday’s ruling in favor of a woman who was convicted in her ...
A top law firm is representing the president as he appeals his conviction in the one criminal case of his that went to trial before he won the 2024 presidential election.
When President Donald Trump fired at least 12 inspectors general without notifying Congress as required by law, it was only partly about the inspectors.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday gave Brenda Evers Andrew another chance to challenge her death sentence and conviction for the murder of her estranged husband. Andrew, who was sentenced to death in 2004,
President Donald Trump’s dramatic pause of federal grants and loans is queuing up a Supreme Court showdown over the Constitution that will test the court’s recently muscular commitment to curb executive power.
Supporters of charter schools and church-state separation describe a ‘tumultuous moment’ as the debate heads for April oral arguments.
Oklahoma's only female death row inmate, Brenda Andrew, 61, could get another chance in court due to "sex-shaming" during her trial, per a Tuesday Supreme Court ruling.