Supreme Court Rules for Jan. 6 Defendant Who Challenged Obstruction Charge
Supreme Court ruled in favor of Jan. 6 defendant Joseph Fischer, former police officer charged under an accounting reform law after four minutes in the capitol.
Supreme Court Temporarily Allows Emergency Abortions in Idaho
The Biden administration had argued the state’s law violated a federal law about ‘patient dumping’ that required stabilizing care for emergency room patients.
DOJ Sues 5 Pro-Life Activists for Repeatedly Obstructing Access to Abortion Clinics
DOJ filed a lawsuit against pro-life advocates, alleging violations under the FACE Act, a law that prevents interfering with women entering abortion clinics.
Supreme Court Limits SEC’s Enforcement Powers
SCOTUS ruled against SEC use of in-house courts, holding defendants who face civil penalties must receive a jury trial under 7th Amendment of Constitution.
Supreme Court Pauses EPA’s ‘Good Neighbor’ Rule That Cracks Down on Smog
Supreme Court voted 5–4 to temporarily put on hold the EPA’s “good neighbor” rule cracking down on states whose industries are said to be contributing to smog.
Supreme Court Rejects Purdue Pharma’s Multibillion-Dollar Opioid Settlement
At issue was whether bankruptcy law permits the drug maker’s restructuring to include legal protections for the family who founded the company.
James Clapper, Mr. October Surprise: How Obama’s Intel Czar Rigged 2016 and 2020 Debates...
Before Trump and Clinton faced off in presidential debate, Clapper and Obama hatched plan to put out warning that "the Russian government" was interfering in election.
Finland to Start Bird Flu Vaccinations for Humans
Finland to offer avian influenza vaccinations to some workers with exposure to animals health authorities said, making it first country in the world to do so.
CDC Issues Warning of Increased Dengue Virus Risk Across US
CDC sent a health alert that warned doctors to be on alert for dengue fever cases as the mosquito-borne disease continues to spread worldwide.
Louisiana Hit With Lawsuit Over Law Requiring Ten Commandments in Schools
Louisiana’s law requiring schools to post the Ten Commandments violates the U.S. Constitution, parents say in lawsuit that asks federal court to block statute.
WikiLeaks Founder Assange Walks Free After Pleading Guilty, Will Return to Australia
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange walked free after pleading guilty to a single felony charge related to the publication of classified U.S. military information.
Two Biden laptop letter signers were CIA contractors, agency brass knew of effort
At least two of 51 signatories of letter labeling Hunter Biden laptop as a potential “Russian information operation” were CIA contractors when they signed.