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Supreme Court Roundup: June 12th Insights and New Cert Grants

Supreme Court Roundup: June 12th Insights and New Cert Grants

Season 2024 Episode 88 Published 9 months, 1 week ago
Description

In this episode, we analyze the Supreme Court's recent activities across three key areas:

  • Six near unanimous decisions released on June 12th, 2025
  • Two major cases granted certiorari via June 16th, 2025 Order

In this episode, we analyze the Supreme Court's recent activities across three key areas:

  1. Term statistics and remaining docket overview
  2. Six decisions released on June 12th, 2025
  3. Two major cases granted certiorari via June 16th, 2025 Order

2024 Term Statistics

  • Total cases heard: 62 unique cases this term
  • Cases decided: 41 (approximately 66%)
  • Cases pending: 21 (approximately 33%)
  • Methodology: Consolidated cases counted once (e.g., Trump v. CASA/Washington/New Jersey)
  • Timing significance: June typically brings most consequential decisions

Key Observations from June 12th, 2025 Decisions

  1. Observation #1: Unanimity Reigned Supreme. June 12th consensus: 4 unanimous (9-0) decisions, 2 near-unanimous (8-1) decisions. Two-week pattern: 9 unanimous decisions and 3 8-1 splits out of 12 total case. Historical context: Must go back 15 opinions to find more than 2 dissents (May 22nd Oklahoma Charter School case). Full-term data: 29 of 41 decided cases unanimous or near-unanimous (71% consensus)
  2. Observation #2: Opinion Assignments Tell a Story. Recent distribution: 8 of 9 justices wrote majority opinions in past two weeks; Justice Kavanaugh who wrote sole opinion the week before)
  3. Observation #3: Speed Suggests Strategic Docket Management. Rapid turnaround: 6-10 weeks from oral argument to decision. Contrast with pending cases: U.S. v. Skrmetti (transgender medical care): 6+ months since December 4th argument; Hewitt v. United States (First Step Act): pending since January 13th; and Stanley v. City of Sanford (ADA): pending since January 13th.
  4. Observation #4: Uncle Sam Had a Bad Day. Government losses: 5 of 6 cases involved citizens vs. government agencies. Case types: FBI raid victims, disabled student vs. school district, veterans vs. benefits administration, prisoner vs. federal procedures, taxpayer vs. IRS. Pattern: Court prioritizing individual redress against institutional power. Only government win: Rivers v. Guerrero, which involved stricter habeas petition standards.
  5. Observation #5: The Court as Error Corrector. Reversal rate: 10 of 12 cases vacated or reversed (83%). Term comparison: Higher than overall 66% reversal rate. "Kick it back" approach: Court often vacates with instructions rather than final resolution
  6. Observation #6: Roberts' Perfect Record. Chief Justice pattern: 41 cases, 41 majority opinions joined. Zero concurrences, zero dissents. Contrast with other justices:Justice Thomas: 5 dissents, Justice Gorsuch: 4 dissents (including both June 12th dissents) and Justice Jackson: 3 dissents authored, 1 joined.

June 16th, 2025 Certiorari Grants

1. First Choice Women's Resource Centers v. Matthew Platkin | Case No. 24-781 | Docket Link: Here.

Question Presented: Where the subject of a state investigatory demand has established a reasonably objective chill of its First Amendment rights, is a federal court in a first-filed action deprived of jurisdiction because those rights must be adjudicated in state court?

Key Facts:

  • New Jersey Attorney General issued civil investigatory subpo
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