Wednesday round-up

With the Court in recess this week, reporters and commentators continue to focus on the Court’s recent decisions.

Writing for SCOTUSblog, Kathryn McCann discusses the Court’s opinion in Milner v. Department of the Navy, in which the Court held that FOIA Exemption 2 shields only those records relating to employee relations and human resources issues. At the First Amendment Center, Tony Mauro also analyzes the decision in Milner, which he describes as “upend[ing] 30 years of federal government practice invoking the exemption at issue to withhold a broad swath of material.” At TIME, Michael Lindenberger discusses the implications of Monday’s decision in Skinner v. Switzer, the Section 1983 DNA evidence case. At Dorf on Law, Mike Dorf analyzes last week’s unanimous opinion in FCC v. AT&T. He explains why, although the opinion is “generally satisfactory (and admirably succinct),” “it is nonetheless a bit too textualist for [his] tastes.”  Finally, Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick discusses the Court’s decision in Snyder v. Phelps, which held that the First Amendment shields from tort liability those who stage a peaceful protest on a matter of public concern near a military funeral. She focuses on both sides’ “unspoken assumptions about whether funerals are private places” and the unanswered “question of whether the media plays any kind of role in converting private spaces into public ones.”

At his blog for The Atlantic, James Warren reports that Justice Sotomayor spoke at Northwestern University School of Law on Monday. In response to student questioning, she discussed the intrusive questions she was asked during the confirmation process — in particular, about dating — and suggested that “society has a double standard” with regard to the dating habits of male and female candidates.” The ABA Journal and the Washington Post also have coverage of Justice Sotomayor’s remarks.

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