Tuesday round-up

And what a day it was.  Yesterday the Court released additional orders from its September 29 Conference.  The long list of cases in which the Court denied review included – to the surprise of many – all seven of the petitions arising from challenges to state bans on same-sex marriage.  Lyle Denniston covered the denials for this blog, while I covered them in Plain English.  Also at this blog, Suzanne Goldberg and Neil Siegel weighed in on the denials.  

Andrew Hamm rounded up early coverage of and commentary on the denials and the problems in the press room that surrounded the release of yesterday’s order list.  Other coverage comes from Nina Totenberg of NPR, Brent Kendall and Jess Bravin of The Wall Street Journal, Alison Sacriponte of JURIST, Joan Biskupic of Reuters, and Ben Winslow of Fox13 (who focuses on events in Utah).  And in The National Law Journal (registration or subscription required), Tony Mauro notes that yesterday’s orders will intensify the spotlight on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, where several challenges to state bans on same-sex marriage are pending.  Commentary on yesterday’s developments comes from Lisa McElroy at Slate, Richard Socarides in The New Yorker, in The New York Review of Books from David Cole, from Dahlia Lithwick of Slate, and from Cass Sunstein at Bloomberg View,

And although it may have seemed like all of the action took place outside the courtroom yesterday, the Justices were in fact busy hearing oral arguments in Heien v. North Carolina, in which they are considering whether a police officer’s mistake about the law provides the individualized suspicion needed to justify a traffic stop.  Orin Kerr reported on the oral argument for The Volokh Conspiracy, with other coverage and commentary coming from Edward Lee at the IIT Chicago-Kent Faculty Blog and Kent Scheidegger at Crime and Consequences.

Today the Court will hear oral arguments in two cases.  First up is Holt v. Hobbs, in which the Court will consider whether an Arkansas prison policy that prohibits Muslim prisoners from growing a half-inch beard violates the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act.  I previewed the case for this blog, while Nina Totenberg did the same for NPR.  Ronald Mann previewed the second case slated for argument today, Dart Cherokee Basin Operating Co. v. Owens, for this blog.

Briefly:

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[Disclosure: John Elwood, a frequent contributor to this blog, is among the counsel to the petitioner in Elonis.]

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