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Access to Justice
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March 31, 2026
Bias Challenge To Juror Strike Wasn't Waived, Justices Told
A Black man on Mississippi's death row told the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday that state courts failed to properly address his objections to the prosecution's peremptory juror strikes at his 2006 trial, which he said were racially motivated.
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March 31, 2026
10th Circ. Revives Suit Over Tulsa Officer Killing Unarmed Man
A Tenth Circuit panel has denied qualified immunity to an officer who shot an unarmed Black man, finding in a reversal that the officer's "use of force was unreasonable," allowing a civil rights case brought by the man's family to go to trial.
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March 30, 2026
Sotomayor Says Court Let Wrongful Murder Conviction Stand
A man serving life in prison for a 1998 Louisiana murder was unfairly denied a writ of certiorari by the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday, despite the fact that his co-defendant had his conviction vacated when bringing up the same favorable evidence, dissenting justices said.
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March 30, 2026
Navajo Nation Fears For Voting Rights With SAVE America Act
A Navajo Nation committee has passed legislation that formally establishes the tribe's opposition to the SAVE America Act over concerns that the legislation will disproportionately affect Indigenous communities across the country, including a significant blow to elders who often lack birth certificates.
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March 27, 2026
Up Next At High Court: Birthright Citizenship, Arbitration
The U.S. Supreme Court will close out its March oral arguments session by hearing a nationwide class's blockbuster challenge to President Donald Trump's limited view of birthright citizenship, as well as a dispute over federal courts' authority to confirm or vacate arbitration awards in cases they've formerly overseen.
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March 26, 2026
Groups Can't Undo Deal Paying El Salvador To Jail Deportees
A D.C. federal judge has tossed immigrant advocacy groups' bid to vacate the United States' deal with El Salvador to imprison deported noncitizens in exchange for money, finding that they lacked standing since vacatur wouldn't stop deportation as the power to remove is grounded under the Immigration and Nationality Act.
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March 25, 2026
Wash. Panel Revives Prison Drug Swab Suit
A Washington state appeals court has partially revived a lawsuit brought by incarcerated people who claim their constitutional rights were violated by prison officials who used tests known to produce false positives to enforce a random drug testing policy inside state prisons.
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March 25, 2026
Mich. Judge Lets Brothers' Wrongful Conviction Suit Proceed
A Michigan federal judge has denied summary judgment to a retired Oakland County detective and a former state police polygraph examiner accused of helping wrongfully convict two brothers who spent 25 years in prison for first-degree murder before their convictions were vacated four years ago.
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March 25, 2026
Murky Video Leads 7th Circ. To Reverse Officer Immunity
A man arrested during an early morning methamphetamine search at a rural Wisconsin property in 2018 may continue his battle against a police officer he says deliberately hit him in the head with a rifle, using excessive force, a Seventh Circuit panel has said in a reversal.
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March 24, 2026
Immigrant Minors Seek End To Repeat Sponsor Checks
A youth advocacy attorney nearly came to tears as she told a D.C. federal judge of immigrant children being torn from their parents Tuesday, urging the judge to block a Trump administration policy requiring that previously approved custodians reapply to sponsor "unaccompanied" children while the minors are held in government facilities.
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March 23, 2026
Sotomayor Blasts 'Inexplicable' Test Refusal In Capital Case
After the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a death penalty appeal Monday, Justice Sonia Sotomayor argued in dissent that the high court should have taken up a constitutional challenge to Texas prosecutors' "inexplicable" refusal to allow DNA testing on a murder weapon.
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March 20, 2026
DOJ Wants Charges Dropped In Breonna Taylor Warrant Case
The U.S. Department of Justice on Friday filed a request to end the criminal case against two former Louisville Metro Police Department officers who obtained the no-knock search warrant used by police in the raid on the home of Breonna Taylor that led to her fatal shooting in March 2020.
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March 20, 2026
Balancing The Scales: $3M Jury Verdict, GEO Appeal Denial
A Philadelphia federal judge rejected bids to disturb a $3 million jury award and impose sanctions on plaintiff's counsel arising from proceedings he described as "near-daily Festivus celebrations, where everyone got to air their grievances 'for the sake of the record'" and a Detroit man saw his murder conviction vacated after 27 years due to the case's reliance on a coerced confession and a lack of physical evidence, among other access to justice stories you may have missed.
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March 20, 2026
The Quest For A 'Sound Basic Education' In North Carolina
Robb Leandro was the original named plaintiff in one of the longest-running lawsuits in Tar Heel State history, centered on the state's constitutional obligation to provide children with a "sound basic education." Over three decades, a series of eponymous North Carolina Supreme Court opinions have steered the state toward what could be a multibillion-dollar remedy to improve public education. He's now waiting alongside millions of residents for the state's justices to release what could be a far-reaching opinion, more than two years after hearing oral argument.
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March 20, 2026
How 1st Circ. Ruling Is Shaping Heck Rule In Probation Cases
A First Circuit ruling that pretrial probation is not a conviction under the Heck doctrine is now shaping civil rights cases, allowing plaintiffs to pursue claims after criminal charges are dismissed without any guilty plea or admission.
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March 20, 2026
The Hypnosis That Helped Send A Man To Death Row
The capital murder conviction of Charles Don Flores, a man on Texas’ death row, hinged on a courtroom identification by a witness who had previously undergone hypnosis. His lawyers are now asking the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene, after Texas’ top court shot down his claims that the hypnosis session contaminated the witness’s memory and tainted her identification.
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March 20, 2026
11th Circ. Lets Lethal Injection Continue Despite Pain Claims
The Eleventh Circuit has ruled that the state of Georgia can proceed with the lethal injection of a man who claims that the execution method would cause him extreme pain because his veins cannot support intravenous access, making it cruel and unusual punishment.
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March 20, 2026
'Community Justice' Plan Aims To Meet DC Legal Needs
A Washington, D.C., court program launching next month aims to empower nonattorneys to provide some legal assistance, as a court task force found that a majority of district residents face civil legal issues without attorneys.
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March 18, 2026
Split 2nd Circ.: NY Officials Belong In Inmate Mental Health Suit
A split Second Circuit has revived a man's lawsuit alleging state prison officials unconstitutionally placed him in solitary confinement, worsening his mental health condition and ultimately causing him to stab his mother after his release.
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March 18, 2026
Ex-Cop, Examiner Fight Brothers' Wrongful Conviction Suit
A Michigan federal judge heard arguments Wednesday regarding whether two brothers' lawsuit over their wrongful conviction for murder should head to a jury, with the plaintiffs and a former law enforcement officer and an ex-polygraph examiner debating if the decision to prosecute the brothers actually hinged on a witness's polygraph test that was later found to be erroneous.
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March 17, 2026
NJ High Court Eyes Global Plea Deal After Nixed Conviction
A man who pled guilty to two indictments urged the New Jersey Supreme Court to let him withdraw his global guilty plea Tuesday, saying that an appellate win in one of the cases has strengthened his negotiating position.
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March 16, 2026
Colo. High Court Requires Competency Before Mental Exams
A divided Colorado Supreme Court on Monday reversed a murder conviction for a woman who hit her boyfriend with a car, finding she must be deemed mentally competent before she can submit to mental health testing required for her defense.
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March 16, 2026
4th Circ. Revives SC Prisoner Suit Over Exercise Restrictions
The Fourth Circuit has ruled that a disabled incarcerated person in South Carolina can continue his pro se lawsuit against administrators who ordered he be held in his cell nearly constantly without access to adequate exercise for over 10 months.
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March 16, 2026
3rd Circ. Grants Man Serving Life A Shot At Habeas Relief
A man convicted of murder in Philadelphia and sentenced to life without parole will have another chance to argue that a police officer who testified in his case and whose niece he dated was biased against him, a Third Circuit panel found in a split decision.
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March 16, 2026
Mass. Justices Won't Boost Pay For Court-Appointed Attys
Massachusetts' highest court on Monday declined a request to let state judges offer higher hourly rates to induce attorneys to accept court-appointed cases, a proposal meant to alleviate a shortage of appointed counsel in two of the state's busiest counties.
Expert Analysis
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States Can't Ignore Biden Admin Police Misconduct Findings
While the federal government retreats from Biden-era Department of Justice findings of police misconduct, those same findings may have triggered significant legal obligations for state and local prosecutors under the Brady rule, says Matthew Segal at the ACLU.
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Justices' Sentencing Ruling Is More Of A Ripple Than A Wave
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last week in Esteras v. U.S., limiting the factors that lower courts may consider in imposing prison sentences for supervised release violations, is symbolically important, but its real-world impact will likely be muted for several reasons, say attorneys at Perkins Coie.
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The Reforms Needed To Fight Sexual Abuse By Prison Staff
Prisoners sexually assaulted by corrections staff, such as the California women who recently won a consent decree against FCI Dublin, often delay reporting out of fear of retaliation by their abusers, but several practical reforms could empower prisoners to disclose abuse while the evidence necessary to indict perpetrators is still available, says Jaehyun Oh at Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law.
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Calif. Protests May Fuel A New Wave Of Excessive Force Suits
The protests in Los Angeles this week may spur a new round of excessive force suits against law enforcement, wading into an underdeveloped area of law being shaped by similar cases filed after Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, and generating crucial precedents in a new age of activism, says Scott Brooks at Levy Firestone.
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Shaping Warrantless Arrest Standard Post-Certiorari Denial
Though the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the Gonzalez v. U.S. warrantless arrest case, Justice Sonia Sotomayor's statement regarding the denial suggests that the defense bar should continue pursuing federal court arguments that the Fourth Amendment incorporates an in-the-presence limitation, say attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell.
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Reading Tea Leaves In High Court's Criminal Law Decisions
The criminal justice decisions the U.S. Supreme Court will announce in the coming weeks will reveal whether last term’s fractured decision-making has continued, an important data point as the justices’ alignment seems to correlate with who benefits from a case’s outcome, says Sharon Fairley at the University of Chicago Law School.
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State Efforts To End Slavery Loophole Are Just The Start
Though several states have changed their constitutions to close the 13th Amendment’s carveout that allows slavery as punishment for a crime, it is now incumbent on the legal profession to transform the amendments into effectuated rights, says Adam Davidson at University of Chicago Law School.
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Court-Involved Supervised Release Shows Promising Results
With questions about supervised release currently before the U.S. Supreme Court, the whole of our criminal justice system should look to a successful court-involved supervised release model created by U.S. District Judge Richard Berman, which provides a blueprint for improving reintegration outcomes post-incarceration, say Carrie Cohen and Savanna Leak at MoFo, and Marjorie Berman at Krantz & Berman.
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The Growing Role Of Wearable Health Tech In Criminal Probes
The use of data from health-tracking devices such as Fitbits and Apple Watches as criminal evidence raises significant constitutional and reliability concerns, and practice tips for defense counsel include questioning the direct correlation between aberrant data and criminal behavior, say attorneys at Barclay Damon.
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10 Years After Obergefell, Dignity Rights Hang In The Balance
A decade after the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, it's clear that the right to equal dignity remains a selectively granted privilege, a stratification that must change with a shift in American legal practice, says Iván Espinoza-Madrigal at Lawyers for Civil Rights.
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What A Federal Kidnapping Case Means For Recovery Agents
A recent Eighth Circuit decision in U.S. v. Lozier reversing a ruling ordering a bounty hunter to face federal kidnapping charges, and ordering a new trial, raises pressing questions on the risks surrounding fugitive recovery and the balance between state and federal authority, says Ken Good at The Good Law Firm.
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11th Circ. Ruling Shows How AEDPA Limits Habeas Relief
The Eleventh Circuit's recent decision to uphold an Alabama man's death sentence reveals how the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act can prevent meaningful review and has eroded the power of habeas corpus petitions by forcing federal courts to pay extraordinary deference to state-level rulings, says Paul Shechtman at Yale Law School.
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Deterring Dubious Prosecutions Could Avoid Pardon Issues
The controversial pardons by former President Joe Biden and President Donald Trump should spur a few key reforms to deter dubious prosecutions, ensuring that the legal system gets it right initially and earns the confidence of all Americans, say Marc Levin and Khalil Cumberbatch at the Council on Criminal Justice.
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Accountant-Owned Law Firms Could Blur Ethical Lines
KPMG’s recent application to open a legal practice in Arizona represents the first overture by an accounting firm to take advantage of the state’s relaxed law firm ownership rules, but enforcing and supervising the practice of law by nonattorneys could prove particularly challenging, says Seth Laver at Goldberg Segalla.
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DC Circ. Cellphone Ruling Upends Law Enforcement Protocol
The D.C. Circuit’s recent U.S. v. Brown decision, holding that forcibly requiring a defendant to unlock his cellphone with his fingerprint violated the Fifth Amendment, has significant implications for law enforcement, and may provide an opportunity for defense lawyers to suppress electronic evidence, says Sarah Sulkowski at Gelber & Santillo.