
Ronald Mann, Contributor
Ronald Mann is a professor of law at Columbia, where he teaches courses in commercial finance, payment systems and deals. He graduated from the University of Texas in 1985, and after clerking on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit (Judge Joseph Sneed) and the Supreme Court (Justice Lewis Powell), he worked in the U.S. solicitor general’s office under Kenneth Starr and Drew Days. He has written extensively about secured credit, credit cards and other electronic payments systems, the role of patents in financing innovation and related topics. For SCOTUSblog, he covers the court’s cases in the areas of commercial law and intellectual property.
OPINION ANALYSIS
Diverse six-justice majority rejects broad reading of computer-fraud law
Ronald Mann
June 3, 2021
Opinion analysis
Unanimous court rejects district court discretion to reduce appellate cost awards
Ronald Mann
May 28, 2021
SCOTUS News
Justices reject district courts’ discretion to reduce appellate cost awards
Ronald Mann
May 27, 2021
Argument analysis
Meandering argument sheds little light on mandatory awards of costs of appellate litigation
Ronald Mann
April 24, 2021
Opinion analysis
Justices decisively reject imposing issue exhaustion on Social Security claimants
Ronald Mann
April 23, 2021
Opinion analysis
Justices unanimously reject FTC’s authority to compel monetary relief
Ronald Mann
April 23, 2021
Breaking News
Justices reject issue-exhaustion requirement for Social Security claimants
Ronald Mann
April 22, 2021
Case preview
Justices to consider awards of costs of appellate litigation
Ronald Mann
April 20, 2021
Opinion Analysis
Justices validate Google’s use of Java platform in Android software code
Ronald Mann
April 6, 2021