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OPINION ANALYSIS

Supreme Court rules against union over strike liability

 at 12:59 p.m.

The justices ruled against a union of truck drivers in Washington who had gone on strike while some trucks were full of wet concrete. By a vote of 8-1, the court held that workers put Glacier Northwest’s property in “foreseeable and imminent danger” and were not protected by federal labor law.

A cement plant with trucks being loaded with cement.

The Glacier Northwest concrete works in Kenmore, Wash. (Joe Mabel via Wikimedia)

SCOTUS NEWS

Justices take up “Trump Too Small” trademark case

 at 11:22 a.m.

The justices on Monday agreed to take up a dispute over Steve Elster’s efforts to register the phrase “Trump Too Small” to sell on t-shirts. The Patent and Trademark Office rejected Elster’s application, relying on a federal law that that prohibits the registration of a trademark that uses the name of another living person without permission.

OPINION ANALYSIS

Supreme Court maintains focus on defendant’s subjective beliefs in False Claims Act cases

 at 2:56 p.m.

The justices sided with whistleblowers on Thursday in a dispute over whether two pharmacy giants – SuperValu and Safeway – knowingly overcharged Medicare and Medicaid for prescription drugs.

OPINION ANALYSIS

Justices limit suits challenging misleading securities registration statements

 at 3:08 p.m.

The court unanimously ruled that publicly traded companies are only liable for misleading statements related to registered shares. Slack Technologies, the justices found, was not liable for misleading statements related to its 2019 “direct listing” on the New York Stock Exchange.