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Tennessee joins 24 states in Supreme Court brief on birthright citizenship
In a 30-page amicus brief, the coalition argues that the 14th Amendment's Citizenship Clause — which states that "all persons born or naturalized in the United States" are citizens — has been interpreted too broadly.
A 2018 Supreme Court decision opened the floodgates to legalized sports-betting industry, now worth billions of dollars a year, even as it recognized that the decision was controversial. That high-court ruling is back in the spotlight after the arrests on Thursday of more than 30 people,
The ruling could have major implications for states like Tennessee, where gun ownership is part of daily life and marijuana remains illegal under both state and federal law.
With Supreme Court ruling still pending, judge says she’ll agree to extend block on Guard in Chicago
A federal judge in Chicago already blocked deployment of Guard troops to the Chicago area for two weeks. On Wednesday, Judge April Perry agreed to extend that order by 30 days. But she said each party could discuss the extension further before meeting again at 3 p.m. local time, noting they would not be able to issue another one.
The United States Supreme Court is set to decide if a federal law that prohibits illegal drug users from owning guns is a violation of the Second Amendment of the constitution.• Video Above: What do the different “schedules” of drugs mean?
Attorneys General from half of the United States, led by those from Tennessee and Iowa, filed a brief with the Supreme Court Friday challenging the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution.
As the Supreme Court is about to revisit some major decisions, Justice Thomas said there's nothing sacred about precedent.
The case concerns the same law former President Joe Biden's son Hunter Biden was convicted of violating before his father pardoned him.
The appeal over gun rights for drug users joins another case already on the docket this term regarding concealed carry.
For decades courts have used section two to protect the voting power of racial minorities when legislatures draw electoral-district maps. That era may soon end, however, and if it does, the change may offer Republicans new and potent possibilities for partisan gerrymandering to entrench party power.