Wednesday round-up

Coverage continues of Monday’s three new cert grants. At CNN, Ariane de Vogue reports that “[t]he Supreme Court agreed … to take up the death penalty case of Russell Bucklew, a Missouri inmate who claims his execution would likely cause him ‘needless suffering’ because he suffers from a rare disease.” Steven Mazie notes at The Economist’s Democracy in America blog that under the court’s precedent, “[i]t may fall on Mr Bucklew … to show that Missouri has a viable way to kill him that is demonstrably less liable to cause him excruciating pain than would lethal injection.” At Bloomberg, Greg Stohr reports that in Frank v. Gaos, the court “will use a privacy case involving Google to consider making it harder for companies to settle class-action lawsuits without providing direct compensation to those affected.” Kevin Lessmiller reports for the Courthouse News Service that the justices will decide in Lamps Plus Inc. v. Varela “whether the Federal Arbitration Act precludes state-law interpretations of arbitration contracts that would allow class-wide arbitration.”

At Dorf on Law, Michael Dorf explains why Jesner v. Arab Bank, in which a splintered court held last week that foreign corporations cannot be sued under the Alien Tort Statute, provides a more coherent framework for understanding the cause of action associated with the statute. At the Human Rights at Home blog, Margaret Drew suggests that after Jesner, “[k]eeping an eye on upcoming cases on the rights of individuals versus business entities will clarify how much corporate shielding the court is willing to do while eliminating some remedies for individual human rights violations.”

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