The Supreme Court opened the door for iPhone users to sue Apple over excessive prices on its exclusive App Store.
Author: Richard Wolf, USA TODAY
Supreme Court refuses to block Missouri inmate’s execution despite rare medical condition
A deeply divided Supreme Court ruled along ideological lines Monday that a Missouri inmate’s rare medical condition isn’t enough to stop his execution
Supreme Court blocks execution of Texas prisoner who was denied presence of Buddhist spiritual advisor
The Supreme Court blocked the execution of a Texas prisoner because he was not allowed to have his Buddhist spiritual advisor in the execution chamber.
The Supreme Court takes on gerrymandering. A cottage industry wants to prove it’s gone too far
A cottage industry of academics and entrepreneurs wants to convince Supreme Court justices that partisan gerrymandering has gone too far.
Justice Clarence Thomas breaks three-year silence in Mississippi case about racial bias in jury selection
The Supreme Court’s senior justice, who seldom speaks during oral argument, broke a three-year silence to ask questions in a race discrimination case.
Six trials for same murders: Supreme Court frowns on racial jury selection tactics of Mississippi prosecutor
After six trials for the same crime, Curtis Flowers from Mississippi reached the U.S. Supreme Court in hopes of winning another chance.
Divided Supreme Court makes it easier to detain noncitizens with criminal records
The Supreme Court handed the Trump administration a victory by making it easier to detain noncitizens with criminal records.
Supreme Court won’t block smokers’ lawsuits against big tobacco companies
The Supreme Court refused Monday to block Florida smokers’ lawsuits against twomajor tobacco companies.
Supreme Court blocks Louisiana abortion restrictions, handing anti-abortion movement a temporary setback
A divided Supreme Court halted abortion restrictions in Louisiana until the justices decide if the law varies from a Texas law they blocked in 2016.
Supreme Court refuses to consider appeal from high school football coach fired for praying after games
The justices refused to hear a dispute between a school district and a football coach fired for kneeling in prayer at the 50-yard line after games.