Courts

How Appealing Weekly Roundup

The week in appellate news.

Gavel, scales of justice and law books

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Ed. Note: A weekly roundup of just a few items from Howard Bashman’s How Appealing blog, the Web’s first blog devoted to appellate litigation. Check out these stories and more at How Appealing.

“No Speed Limit for Native Americans; The latest McGirt mess is a Choctaw scofflaw immune from city fines”: This editorial will appear in Friday’s edition of The Wall Street Journal.

“The One Remaining Identity the Supreme Court Is Willing to Protect”: Law professor Craig Konnoth has this Jurisprudence essay online at Slate.

“Federal agency powers in the crosshairs at the US Supreme Court”: Andrew Chung and John Kruzel of Reuters have this report.

“Aim Lower: Liberals have lost the Supreme Court for a generation; Their only hope is to seize state courts and launch a counterrevolution.” Law professors Lara Bazelon and James Forman have this post at the “Intelligencer” blog of New York magazine.

“What else can the Supreme Court get away with?” You can access Monday’s episode of the “Strict Scrutiny” podcast via this link.