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Supreme Court Tackles Gun Rights, National Security, and Statutory Interpretation in Packed Term Ahead
Published 2 months, 2 weeks ago
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The US Supreme Court is ramping up its docket with intense activity on several fronts. Just yesterday, a brief was filed in United States v. Ali Daniel Hemani, urging the justices to narrowly construe the federal ban on gun possession by unlawful drug users under 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(3). The filing argues for a "major-questions lenity" rule to limit it to those armed while impaired, avoiding Second Amendment clashes and providing clear guidance for lower courts on vague penal statutes.
SCOTUSblog reports the court added seventeen new relists this week—now totaling over 100 cases in contention—covering ten key issues like circuit splits on state secrets privilege in terrorism suits, Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act jurisdiction for Chabad's claims against Russian entities, cell phone data searches post-Carpenter, and challenges to sentencing guideline deference after Loper Bright. Multiple relisted cases attack Section 922(g)(1)'s lifetime felon disarmament ban as violating the Second Amendment, especially for non-violent offenders, with petitions like Gilbert v. United States, Chafin v. United States, and others pressing as-applied claims.
The court also plans to rule soon on corporate liability for aiding human rights abuses abroad, a major issue for multinationals, following January 9 grant of certiorari. Meanwhile, longstanding relists persist on police use of force, AEDPA deference to state habeas rulings, and judicial bias discovery standards.
This flurry signals a packed term ahead, blending gun rights, national security, and statutory interpretation battles.
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SCOTUSblog reports the court added seventeen new relists this week—now totaling over 100 cases in contention—covering ten key issues like circuit splits on state secrets privilege in terrorism suits, Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act jurisdiction for Chabad's claims against Russian entities, cell phone data searches post-Carpenter, and challenges to sentencing guideline deference after Loper Bright. Multiple relisted cases attack Section 922(g)(1)'s lifetime felon disarmament ban as violating the Second Amendment, especially for non-violent offenders, with petitions like Gilbert v. United States, Chafin v. United States, and others pressing as-applied claims.
The court also plans to rule soon on corporate liability for aiding human rights abuses abroad, a major issue for multinationals, following January 9 grant of certiorari. Meanwhile, longstanding relists persist on police use of force, AEDPA deference to state habeas rulings, and judicial bias discovery standards.
This flurry signals a packed term ahead, blending gun rights, national security, and statutory interpretation battles.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI