Computer models can determine the authorship of unsigned legal decisions with startling accuracy.
Voters handed control of the scandal-ridden Pennsylvania Supreme Court to Democrats, in a race remarkable for its vitriol.
The state claims that affirming a reservation in eastern Oklahoma could lead to thousands of state criminal convictions being thrown out. But that argument doesn’t seem to be based on facts.
The Supreme Court temporarily allowed the administration to begin construction. That doesn’t mean victory for the president is certain.
Amid the partisan crossfire of Washington, Gill v. Whitford provides the latest example of the justices keeping their heads down.
It’s official. Barrett is joining the Supreme Court.
With the moderate Republican governor of Nevada reportedly being vetted, two Atlantic staffers consider whether the move is a brilliant strategem or a hopeless strategic blunder.
The death penalty is not about to vanish overnight—but the Supreme Court's tolerance for it is diminishing rapidly
In what could be one of his most enduring legacies, the president announced Tuesday night he had selected the 49-year-old federal judge to fill Antonin Scalia’s vacant seat.