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ARGUMENT ANALYSIS

Court appears likely to side with straight woman in reverse discrimination suit

at 2:59 p.m.

A solid majority of the court on Wednesday appeared ready to overturn a lower court ruling that required an Ohio woman to meet a higher bar for her case alleging reverse discrimination in the workplace to go forward than if she were a member of a minority group. Justice Gorsuch described Marlean Ames and her employer as in “radical agreement” over the law’s requirements.

Supreme Court building

The court heard Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services on Wednesday. (Katie Barlow)

OPINION ANALYSIS

Supreme Court grants Richard Glossip new trial in capital case

The court on Tuesday threw out Richard Glossip’s capital conviction and sent his case back for a new trial. Glossip, who has maintained that he is innocent, is on death row in Oklahoma for his role in the 1997 murder of motel owner Barry Van Treese. The justices ruled that prosecutors knowingly failed to correct false testimony from the key witness, the man who confessed to killing Van Treese, and Glossip is entitled to a new trial.

OPINION ANALYSIS

Court limits right to attorney’s fees for some civil rights suits

 at 3:01 p.m.

By a 7-2 vote, the court on Tuesday held that a group of Virginia drivers are not “prevailing parties” for the purposes of a federal law that allows the winners in some civil rights suits to recover attorney’s fees. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented, in an opinion joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

Petitions of the week

Maine man arrested with drugs in his backpack asks court to untangle Fourth Amendment knot

 at 9:34 a.m.

A weekly look at new and notable petitions seeking Supreme Court review. This week: A Maine man, arrested for buying drugs, asks the court to consider whether police can search a bag without a warrant when the owner of the bag is already in handcuffs and the bag is out of his reach.

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