| 25-365 |
Trump v. Barbara |
Whether Executive Order No. 14,160 complies on its face with the citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment and with 8 U.S.C. § 1401(a), which codifies that clause.
|
| 25-364 |
Trump v. Washington |
Whether Executive Order No. 14,160 complies on its face with the citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment and
with 8 U.S.C. § 1401(a), which codifies that clause. |
| 25-253 |
Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians v. Howe |
Whether Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, 52 U.S.C. § 10301, is enforceable by private plaintiffs through 42 U.S.C. § 1983, an implied right of action, or both. |
| 25-248 |
District of Columbia v. R.W. |
(1) Whether a court assessing the existence of reasonable suspicion under the Fourth Amendment may exclude a fact known to the officer, or instead must assess all the evidence when weighing the totality of the circumstances; and (2) whether, under the totality-of-the-circumstances test, the officer in this case had
reasonable suspicion to conduct an investigative stop. |
| 25-243 |
Allen v. Caster |
(1) Whether Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act requires Alabama to create a new majority-Black district; (2) whether creating a new majority-Black district would violate the 14th or 15th Amendments; and (3) whether Section 2 creates a privately enforceable right. |
| 25-233 |
Miller v. Civil Rights Department |
(1) Whether the free speech clause’s protection against compelled participation in a ceremony only applies where third parties would view that participation as expressing endorsement of the ceremony; (2) whether proving a lack of general applicability under the free exercise clause requires showing unfettered discretion or categorical exemptions for identical secular conduct; and (3) whether Employment Division v. Smith should be overruled. |
| 25-170 |
Suncor Energy Inc. v. County Commissioners of Boulder County |
Whether federal law precludes state-law claims seeking relief for injuries allegedly caused by the effects of interstate and international greenhouse-gas emissions on the global climate. |
| 25-132 |
West Virginia Citizens Defense League v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives |
Whether a federal law that bans licensed sales of handguns and handgun ammunition to law-abiding 18-to-20-year-old adults violates the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution. |
| 25-125 |
Davis v. Ermold |
(1) Whether the First Amendment free exercise
clause provides an affirmative defense to tort liability based solely on emotional distress damages with no
actual damages in the same manner as the free
speech clause under Snyder v. Phelps; (2) whether a government official stripped of
Eleventh Amendment immunity and sued in her
individual capacity based solely on emotional distress
damages with no actual damages is entitled to assert
individual capacity and personal First Amendment
defenses in the same or similar manner as any other
individual defendant like in Snyder; and (3) whether Obergefell v. Hodges and substantive due
process should be overturned. |
| 25-114 |
La Anyane v. Georgia |
(1) Whether Georgia's implied consent statute – under which a driver arrested for driving under the influence who refuses to consent to a blood draw has his driver’s license suspended for at least a year, with the refusal usable as evidence of guilt at a criminal trial – violates the unconstitutional conditions doctrine; and (2) whether Georgia's implied consent statute, due to substantial adverse consequences of refusal to consent, is impermissibly coercive so as to render consent involuntary. |
| 25-112 |
Chatrie v. U.S. |
(1) Whether the execution of a geofence warrant violated the Fourth Amendment; and (2) whether the exclusionary rule should apply to the evidence derived from a geofence warrant. |
| 25-107 |
Gilliam v. Gerregano |
Whether the messages paid for and chosen by car owners on personalized license plates, commonly known as “vanity” plates, are government speech. |
| 25-106 |
Vines v. U.S. |
Whether attempted armed bank robbery under 18 U.S.C. § 2113(d) and the first paragraph of § 2113(a) involves the “use, attempted use, or threatened use of force” in all possible hypothetical circumstances, such that it qualifies as a crime of violence under § 924(c). |
| 25-83 |
Jules v. Andre Balazs Properties |
Whether a federal court that initially exercises jurisdiction and stays a case pending arbitration maintains
jurisdiction over a post-arbitration Section 9 or 10 application where jurisdiction would otherwise be lacking. |
| 25-77 |
Foote v. Ludlow School Committee |
Whether a public school violates parents’ constitutional rights when, without parental knowledge or consent, the school encourages a student to transition to a new “gender” or participates in that process. |
| 25-52 |
Clark v. Sweeney |
(1) Whether the Fourth Circuit violated the party-presentation principle by granting federal habeas relief based on putative errors in the state trial proceedings that the respondent never alleged; (2) whether the Fourth Circuit improperly circumvented the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act's exhaustion requirement by applying a “special circumstances” exception derived from Frisbie v. Collins and Granberry v. Greer; and (3) whether the Fourth Circuit flouted the AEDPA merits standard by granting federal habeas relief in the absence of clearly established federal law as determined by the holdings of the Supreme Court. |
| 25-50 |
Fitzhugh v. Patton |
Whether Article III permits a plaintiff with moot claims to continue a putative class action based on the possibility that a future motion to define the class might later confer standing on some undefined class. |
| 25-43 |
Freedom Foundation v. Int'l Brotherhood of Teamsters |
Whether public-sector unions that invoke the aid of state officials to deduct union dues from a nonconsenting public-sector employee act “under color of law” for purposes of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. |
| 25-29 |
Villarreal v. Alaniz |
(1) Whether it obviously violates the First Amendment to arrest someone for asking government
officials questions and publishing the information they volunteer; and (2) whether qualified immunity is unavailable to public officials who use a state statute in a way that obviously violates the First Amendment, or whether qualified immunity shields those officials. |
| 25-025 |
Avianca Group Int'l Limited v. Burnham Sterling and Company LLC |
Whether, for purposes of Section 365(d) of the Bankruptcy Code, the "obligation" of a Chapter 11 debtor under a lease "aris[es]" as soon as the obligation is incurred, rather than when payment becomes due. |
| 25-24 |
McCoy v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives |
(1) Whether federal laws banning 18- to 20-year-olds from purchasing handguns from federally licensed firearm dealers violates the Second Amendment's guarantee of the right to keep arms; and (2) whether the Fourth Circuit erred by finding that the district court's certification of a nationwide class action pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(2) constituted an abuse of discretion because the district court's certification came after it granted summary judgment for the plaintiffs but prior to its issuance of a final order. |
| 25-14 |
Hierholzer v. Loeffler |
Whether a small-business owner who was denied entry into the Small Business Administration's Section 8(a) Business Development Program for failing to prove “social disadvantage” has Article III standing to challenge a race-based presumption that excuses certain applicants from making that showing. |
| 25-5 |
Noem v. Al Otro Lado |
Whether an alien who is stopped on the Mexican side of the U.S.–Mexico border “arrives in the United States” within the meaning of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. 1101 et seq., which provides that an alien who “arrives in the United States” may apply for asylum and must be inspected by an immigration officer. |
| 25-2 |
Reese v. U.S. |
Whether the court should overrule Pinkerton v. United States, under which an individual may be convicted of crimes he did not commit – or even participate in – so long as they are the foreseeable result of a conspiracy he joined. |
| 25-1 |
Skinner v. Louisiana |
Whether Louisiana courts erred in refusing to apply Wearry v. Cain to an individual's Brady v. Maryland claims. |
| 24-1329 |
Paris v. Second Amendment Foundation |
Whether firearms laws imposing a minimum age of 21 violate the purported Second Amendment rights of 18- to 20-year-olds. |
| 24-1322 |
Barings, LLC v. AG Centre Street Partnership |
Whether an appellate court can materially alter a consummated plan of reorganization without permitting a new vote of creditors or whether a material alteration by an appellate court requires a vacatur of the order confirming the plan and a new creditor vote. |
| 24-1309 |
East Penn Mfg. Co. v. Chavez-DeRemer |
(1) Whether time spent on “integral and indispensable” activities is measured based on reasonable
duration or actual duration; and (2) whether the court should overrule Steiner v. Mitchell. |
| 24-1306 |
Klee v. Int'l Union of Operating Engineers |
Whether a public-sector union that invokes the aid of state officials to deduct union dues from a nonconsenting public-sector employee acts “under color of law” for purposes of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. |
| 24-1305 |
Todd v. American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees |
When a public-sector union gets the government to divert an employee’s pay by stating that he consented to join the union, is it a state actor such that the “clear and compelling evidence” First Amendment standard of Janus applies? |
| 24-1299 |
Planet Green Cartridges v. Amazon.com |
Does Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, 47 U.S.C. § 230, immunize internet platforms from civil claims based on their own conduct, including using algorithms to generate targeted advertising and product recommendations for their users? |
| 24-1281 |
Gesture Technology Partners, LLC v. Unified Patents, LLC |
Whether the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has the authority to conduct administrative adjudications regarding the validity of expired patents, and thereby extinguish private property rights through a non-Article III forum without a jury, even though the patent owner no longer possesses the right to exclude the public from its invention. |
| 24-1280 |
Gesture Technology Partners, LLC v. Apple Inc. |
Whether the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has the authority to conduct administrative adjudications regarding the validity of expired patents, and thereby extinguish private property rights through a non-Article III forum without a jury, even though the patent owner no longer possesses the right to exclude the public from its invention. |
| 24-1268 |
Reed v. Goertz |
Whether Article 64 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, as
authoritatively construed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, violates due
process by arbitrarily denying prisoners access to
postconviction DNA testing, rendering illusory prisoners’ state-created right to prove their innocence
through newly discovered evidence. |
| 24-1267 |
Densmore v. Colorado |
Whether custodial interrogation by a child-protection caseworker is subject to Miranda’s requirements where the interrogation concerns matters that may trigger the caseworker’s legal duty to report to law enforcement. |
| 24-1261 |
Cambridge Christian School v. Florida High School Athletic Association |
(1) Whether Santa Fe Independent School
District v. Doe compels a finding of government speech where two
private Christian schools sought to engage
in communal prayer over a loudspeaker
before a football game organized by a
state athletic association that otherwise
permitted a wide array of private speech
over the loudspeaker, and should therefore
be overruled in light of this court’s later
holdings; and (2) whether the endorsement factor of the
government-speech doctrine revives the “endorsement test offshoot” of Lemon v. Kurtzman that
“this Court long ago abandoned,” by providing a special veto
for a private party’s religious speech on any
government owned platform. |
| 24-1259 |
Rush v. U.S. |
Whether the Second Amendment secures the right to possess unregistered short-barreled rifles that are in common use for lawful purposes. |
| 24-1244 |
McMaster v. Pennsylvania |
Whether it is an improper expansion of the “emergency aid exception” and/or “protective sweep doctrine” to authorize a warrantless entry into a home without any objective evidence that anyone was in the home and needed aid, where an officer is concerned, based on his experiences involving individuals under the influence of controlled substances, that there could be a person in the home suffering from a potential overdose or medical emergency. |
| 24-1196 |
Collymore v. U.S. |
Whether a district court may impose consecutive terms of imprisonment for convictions of attempt and conspiracy under the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a), that share the same object and arise from the identical course of conduct. |
| 24-1192 |
Ovation Fund Management II, LLC v. Nossaman LLP |
Whether a federal court overseeing an equity receivership has the power to enjoin and extinguish claims that belong to non-receivership entities against non-receivership third parties without the claimants’ consent. |
| 24-1185 |
National Rifle Association v. Glass |
Whether Florida’s law banning 18-to-20-year-olds from purchasing firearms violates the Second Amendment. |
| 24-1095 |
Koetter v. Manistee County Treasurer |
(1) Whether the government violates the due process clause of the 14th Amendment or
takings clause of the 5th Amendment by denying just compensation
to property owners who miss a narrow and
premature window to preserve their right to
just compensation; and (2) whether, to the extent it authorizes Michigan’s
confiscatory claim statute, the Supreme Court should
overrule Nelson v. City of New York. |
| 24-994 |
National Basketball Association v. Salazar |
(1) Whether a consumer claiming that he was
harmed by disclosure of his personal information
must plead that his information was revealed to the
public to establish standing under Article III of the Constitution, or instead the consumer need only plead that his information was disclosed to any third party without his
consent; and (2) whether the Video Privacy Protection Act bars a business from disclosing information about consumers who do not
subscribe to its audiovisual goods or services. |
| 24-969 |
Community Financial Services Association of America, Limited v. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau |
Whether, in order to obtain judicial relief, a party
challenging governmental action taken by an
individual who remained in office against the
president’s wishes due to an unconstitutional
removal restriction must show that a hypothetical
replacement officer would have taken a different
action. |