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Headline: Supreme Court Rulings and AI Concerns Dominate Legal Landscape

Headline: Supreme Court Rulings and AI Concerns Dominate Legal Landscape

Published 2 months ago
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The Supreme Court has been active on several major fronts. The U.S. Supreme Court reversed a federal appeals court decision granting a new trial to Charles Brandon Martin, a Maryland man convicted of attempted murder. According to Mass Lawyers Weekly, the justices ruled that federal courts misapplied the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act when they ordered the new trial based on undisclosed forensic evidence. The Court found that other evidence linking Martin to the crime was too strong for the withheld evidence to matter.

Looking ahead, the Court scheduled oral arguments for the birthright citizenship case on April 1st, with the full March argument session running from March 23rd through April 1st. SCOTUSBlog reports this remains one of the most closely watched cases on the docket as President Trump challenges citizenship guarantees for those born in the United States.

Meanwhile, legal experts quoted by Davis Vanguard predict the Trump administration will face tougher sledding in 2026 compared to 2025, when the administration prevailed in nearly all of its Supreme Court cases. UC Davis Law Professor Vikram Amar notes that this year's docket includes cases with "institutional responsibility" rather than strategically selected matters, suggesting more balanced outcomes ahead on tariff authority, Federal Reserve independence, and other contentious issues.

In broader Supreme Court news, Lord Reed, President of the UK Supreme Court, raised alarms about artificial intelligence making judicial decisions, warning listeners that complex legal questions require human judgment and cannot be reduced to computerized responses. He cautioned that deploying AI in courts could destroy public trust in the justice system.

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