Docket No. | Op. Below | Argument | Opinion | Vote | Author | Term |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
20-397 | 10th Cir. | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD |
Issue: Whether the government must provide the written notice required to trigger the stop-time rule in a single document.
Date | Proceedings and Orders |
---|---|
Sep 25 2020 | Petition for a writ of certiorari filed. (Response due October 26, 2020) |
Sep 25 2020 | Pursuant to Rule 34.6 and Paragraph 9 of the Guidelines for the Submission of Documents to the Supreme Court's Electronic Filing System, filings in this case should be submitted in paper form only, and should not be submitted through the Court's electronic filing system. |
Nov 10 2020 | DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 12/4/2020. |
Dec 01 2020 | Response Requested. (Due December 31, 2020) |
Dec 16 2020 | Motion to extend the time to file a response from December 31, 2020 to February 12, 2021, submitted to The Clerk. |
Dec 17 2020 | Motion to extend the time to file a response is granted and the time is extended to and including February 12, 2021. |
Feb 10 2021 | Brief of respondent Hector Emiliano Portillo Martinez in opposition filed. |
Feb 24 2021 | DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 3/19/2021. |
NEW: After a request from the Biden administration yesterday, the Supreme Court just dismissed three pending cert petitions (requests to hear a case) about the Trump administration’s effort to withhold money from so-called sanctuary cities.
🚨 LIVE NOW 🚨 5PM on IGTV #SimplePolitics join me & @AHoweBlogger editor / reporter for the @SCOTUSblog for a great conversation on the recent decisions by the Supreme Court. There is so much to talk about.
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Tonight on #SimplePolitics, Bill Kristol and I have an in-depth conversation about Impeachment, what‘s next for ...
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ICYMI: We got Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s first majority opinion today.
SCOTUS rules against immigrant who has lived in the US without authorization for decades. The gov't sought to deport him based on a state misdemeanor conviction (he used a fake Social Security card to get a job). SCOTUS says 5-3 he's not eligible to seek protection from removal.
NEW: In Freedom of Information Act case, SCOTUS says federal government does not have to disclose documents that were produced as part of a rulemaking on "cooling water intake structures" under the Clean Water Act. The Sierra Club argued the docs should be disclosed under FOIA.
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