how-appealing-weekly-roundup

How Appealing Weekly Roundup

Gavel, scales of justice and law books

(Image via Getty)

Ed. Note: A weekly roundup of just a few items from Howard Bashman’s How Appealing blog, the Web’s first blog devoted to appellate litigation. Check out these stories and more at How Appealing.

“Why the Supreme Court’s abortion pill ruling might not end legal fight; If justices rule that the anti-abortion doctors who filed the lawsuit don’t have standing to sue, three conservative states could step into their place”: Ann E. Marimow and Caroline Kitchener of The Washington Post have this report.

“US appellate courts split on threshold for lawsuits challenging diversity programs”: Alison Frankel’s “On the Case” from Reuters has this post.

“Judge Recuses From Gaza Case After Wartime Trip to Israel; 9th Cir. Ryan Nelson made wartime trip to Israel with other judges; Recuses from Palestinian challenge over aid for Israel”: Jacqueline Thomsen of Bloomberg Law has this report.

“Concurrences Are All the Rage”: Adam Feldman has this post at his “Empirical SCOTUS” blog.

“Leonard Leo Built the Conservative Court. Now He’s Funneling Dark Money Into Law Schools. The megadonor’s plan for a $25 million research center at Cornell fell apart. So he took his money to Texas A&M.” Shawn Musgrave recently had this report online at The Intercept.

“For The Post, a Supreme black eye; Deference to Justice Alito hands a scoop to the New York Times”: Washington Post media critic Erik Wemple has this essay online at that publication.