Monday round-up

At the Associated Press, Mark Sherman reports that the Supreme Court “is making new legal filings available online starting [today], years behind the rest of the federal court system.” For The Washington Post, Robert Barnes reports that the court “is developing its own online system, rather than being part of PACER, which serves the other federal courts.”

At Law.com (subscription or registration required), Marcia Coyle reports that “[t]he U.S. Justice Department’s request that the Supreme Court consider sanctions against lawyers who advocated for an immigrant teenager at the center of an abortion case [, Hargan v. Garza,] has raised questions about the government’s motivation and threatened to jeopardize the reputation of the solicitor’s office before the justices.” In an op-ed at The Hill, David Luban argues that “[t]he irony is that filing frivolous accusations with the Supreme Court is itself an ethics violation — and DOJ’s accusations against Jane Doe’s lawyers come perilously close to crossing that line.” At The Faculty Lounge, Steve Lubet suggests that “when the government characterizes its own position as ‘at least arguably’ valid, that seems to be at least an admission of weakness, or perhaps an even greater concession.”

In an op-ed at the Huffington Post, Hannah Riley asserts that the cert petition in Hidalgo v. Arizona, which challenges Arizona’s death-penalty scheme and the death penalty nationwide, offers an opportunity for the Supreme Court to “transform— or even end — the death penalty in America.” In another Huffington Post op-ed, Ray Krone, an Arizona death-row exoneree, argues that “[t]he court should look at where we are as a country, find that a national consensus has emerged against the death penalty and rule it unconstitutional, once and for all.”

Briefly:

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