On Tuesday, a federal judge ruled that the law requiring classroom displays of the Ten Commandments by next year is ...
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Attorney General Liz Murrill, allowing school boards not involved in a lawsuit to implement Ten Commandments posters before the January deadline.
Professor Philip Hamburger said the administrative state had reached a tipping point as he toasted recent rulings.
This allows all Louisiana school boards not involved in the original lawsuit can move forward with implementing the Ten Commandment posters ahead of the Jan. 1 2025 deadline.
Design standards adopted in 2021 for constructing new federal courthouses were drafted by the judiciary without fully ...
DC Circuit Judge Neomi Rao and Florida federal judge Kathryn Mizelle raised a glass of champagne at a Federalist Society ...
The US Supreme Court will issue its first opinion of the term in an argued case on Nov. 22, earlier than in recent terms when ...
The Texas Supreme Court ruled that a legislative subpoena cannot be used to stop an execution, putting a decisive end to a ...
The Supreme Court’s approach toward religion in schools has been shifting, adding to uncertainty about legislation such as ...
A new Louisiana requirement that the Ten Commandments be displayed in every public classroom by Jan. 1 was temporarily ...
The Supreme Court seems likely to keep alive a class-action lawsuit accusing Nvidia of misleading investors about its ...