| 21-463 |
Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson |
Whether a state can
insulate from federal-court review a law that prohibits
the exercise of a constitutional right by delegating to
the general public the authority to enforce that prohibition through civil actions. |
| 21-453 |
Uber Technologies v. Gregg |
Whether agreements calling for individual
arbitration are enforceable under the Federal
Arbitration Act with respect to claims asserted under
the California Labor Code Private Attorneys General
Act. |
| 21-442 |
Reed v. Goertz |
Whether the statute of
limitations for a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim seeking DNA testing of
crime-scene evidence begins to run at the end of state-court litigation denying DNA testing, including any
appeals (as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit has held), or whether
it begins to run at the moment the state trial court
denies DNA testing, despite any subsequent appeal
(as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, joining the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, held
below). |
| 21-441 |
Siegel v. Fitzgerald |
Whether the Bankruptcy Judgeship Act violates the
uniformity requirement of the Constitution's bankruptcy clause by increasing quarterly fees solely in districts under the U.S. Trustee program, not in those under the Bankruptcy Administrator program. |
| 21-439 |
Nance v. Ward |
(1) Whether an inmate’s as-applied method-of-execution challenge must be raised in a habeas
petition instead of through a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action if the
inmate pleads an alternative method of execution
not currently authorized by state law; and (2) whether, if such a challenge must be raised in
habeas, it constitutes a successive petition when
the challenge would not have been ripe at the
time of the inmate’s first habeas petition. |
| 21-432 |
Arellano v. McDonough |
(1) Whether the rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling from Irwin v. Department of Veterans Affairs applies to the one-year statutory
deadline in 38 U.S.C. § 5110(b)(1) for seeking
retroactive disability benefits, and, if so, whether the
government has rebutted that presumption; and (2) whether, if 38 U.S.C. § 5110(b)(1) is amenable to
equitable tolling, this case should be remanded
so the agency can consider the particular facts
and circumstances in the first instance. |
| 21-427 |
Lamoureux v. Montana |
Whether a statute that criminalizes speech intended to annoy or offend is unconstitutionally overbroad under the First Amendment. |
| 21-420 |
Postmates, LLC v. Santana |
Whether agreements calling for individual
arbitration are enforceable under the Federal
Arbitration Act with respect to claims asserted under
the California Labor Code Private Attorneys General
Act. |
| 21-418 |
Kennedy v. Bremerton School District |
(1) Whether a public-school employee who says a
brief, quiet prayer by himself while at school and visible to students is engaged in government speech
that lacks any First Amendment protection; and (2) whether, assuming that such religious
expression is private and protected by the free speech
and free exercise clauses, the establishment clause
nevertheless compels public schools to prohibit it. |
| 21-406 |
Impax Laboratories v. Federal Trade Commission |
(1) Whether the presence of a “reverse payment”
that exceeds a patentee’s saved litigation costs and the
value of any services provided by a patent challenger
suffices to render a patent settlement unlawful,
despite the Supreme Court’s holding to the contrary in Federal Trade Commission v. Actavis, Inc.; and (2) whether courts reviewing antitrust challenges
to patent settlements can disregard evidence of the
strength of the patents at issue, as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit
held here, or instead whether they must consider what
“the patent’s strength would otherwise permit,” as the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit held in King Drug Co. of Florence v.
Smithkline Beecham Corp. |
| 21-404 |
U.S. v. Washington |
Whether a state workers’ compensation law that applies exclusively to federal contract workers who perform services at a specified federal facility is barred by
principles of intergovernmental immunity, or is instead
authorized by 40 U.S.C. § 3172(a), which permits the application of state workers’ compensation laws to federal
facilities “in the same way and to the same extent as if
the premises were under the exclusive jurisdiction of
the State.” |
| 21-401 |
ZF Automotive US v. Luxshare, Ltd. |
Whether 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a), which permits
litigants to invoke the authority of United States
courts to render assistance in gathering evidence for
use in “a foreign or international tribunal,”
encompasses private commercial arbitral tribunals,
as the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the 4th and 6th
Circuits have held, or excludes such tribunals, as the
U.S. Courts of Appeals for the 2nd, 5th and
7th Circuits have held. |
| 21-396 |
Delta Air Lines v. Oman |
Whether, consistent with the commerce clause
and the deregulatory preferences of the Airline Deregulation Act, California may extend its wage-and-hour laws to flight attendants who spend the vast
majority of their workweek outside of California
simply because they report to a California airport to
begin their multi-day, multi-state work shift. |
| 21-395 |
McCarthy v. Pelosi |
Whether the speech-and-debate clause forecloses
judicial review of the constitutionality of the proxy
voting resolution in this action against the speaker of the house,
the clerk and the sergeant-at-arms; and (2) whether the U.S. House of Representatives
resolution allowing members to cast floor
votes by proxy is unconstitutional. |
| 21-388 |
John K. MacIver Institute for Public Policy v. Evers |
Whether the government’s selective exclusion of
members of the press from the incoming governor's official
press conferences and briefings implicates the equal treatment
guarantee of the First Amendment’s press clause, as
the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the 1st, 2nd and District of Columbia Circuits have held, or
instead should be analyzed under the speech clause’s
forum analysis, as the U.S. Court of Appeals for 7th Circuit below and the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit have held. |
| 21-383 |
Wyoming v. Mahaffy |
Whether the Supreme Court’s rejection in Rodriguez v. United States of de minimis
extensions to traffic stops abrogated or limited Arizona v. Johnson,
thereby prohibiting officers from posing any unrelated
questions even where the inquiry does not measurably
extend the duration of the stop. |
| 21-382 |
Strauss v. Credit Lyonnais, S.A. |
Whether a person who knowingly transfers substantial funds to a designated foreign terrorist organizations aids and abets that
organization’s terrorist acts for purposes of civil liability under Justice
Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act. |
| 21-381 |
Weiss v. National Westminster Bank, PLC |
Whether a person who knowingly transfers substantial funds to a designated foreign terrorist organizations aids and abets that
organization’s terrorist acts for purposes of civil liability under Justice
Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act. |
| 21-380 |
Brackeen v. Haaland |
(1) Whether the Indian Child Welfare
Act of 1978’s placement preferences —
which disfavor non-Indian adoptive families in child-placement proceedings involving an “Indian child”
and thereby disadvantage those children — discriminate on the basis of race in violation of the U.S. Constitution; and (2) whether ICWA’s placement preferences exceed
Congress’s Article I authority by invading the arena
of child placement — the “virtually exclusive province
of the States,” as stated in Sosna v. Iowa — and otherwise commandeering state courts
and state agencies to carry out a federal child-placement program. |
| 21-379 |
Texas v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue |
(1) Whether an agency rule delegating rulemaking
authority to a private entity violates the nondelegation
doctrine; and (2) whether the statute of limitations applicable to a
challenge to an agency rule that delegates rulemaking
authority to a private entity starts to run when the
agency delegates the authority or when the private entity exercises the delegated authority. |
| 21-378 |
Texas v. Haaland |
(1) Whether Congress has the power under the Indian commerce clause or otherwise to enact
laws governing state child-custody proceedings
merely because the child is or may be an Indian; (2) whether the Indian classifications used in the
Indian Child Welfare Act and its implementing regulations violate
the Fifth Amendment’s equal-protection guarantee; (3) whether ICWA and its implementing regulations violate the anticommandeering doctrine
by requiring states to implement Congress’s
child-custody regime; and (4) whether ICWA and its implementing regulations violate the nondelegation doctrine by allowing individual tribes to alter the placement
preferences enacted by Congress. |
| 21-377 |
Cherokee Nation v. Brackeen |
(1) Whether the en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit erred by invalidating
six sets of Indian Child Welfare
Act provisions — 25 U.S.C. §§1912(a), (d),
(e)-(f), 1915(a)-(b), (e), and 1951(a) — as impermissibly
commandeering states (including via its equally divided
affirmance); (2) whether the en banc 5th Circuit erred by reaching the
merits of the plaintiffs’ claims that ICWA’s placement
preferences violate equal protection; and (3) whether the en banc 5th Circuit erred by affirming (via
an equally divided court) the district court’s judgment
invalidating two of ICWA’s placement preferences, 25
U.S.C. §1915(a)(3), (b)(iii), as failing to satisfy the rational-basis standard of Morton v. Mancari. |
| 21-376 |
Haaland v. Brackeen |
(1) Whether various provisions of the Indian Child Welfare Act of
1978 — namely,
the minimum standards of Section 1912(a), (d), (e), and (f);
the placement-preference provisions of Section 1915(a)
and (b); and the recordkeeping provisions of Sections
1915(e) and 1951(a) — violate the anticommandeering doctrine of the 10th Amendment; (2) whether the individual plaintiffs have Article III
standing to challenge ICWA’s placement preferences
for “other Indian families” and for
“Indian foster home[s]”; and (3) whether Section 1915(a)(3) and (b)(iii) are rationally related to legitimate governmental interests and
therefore consistent with equal protection. |
| 21-365 |
Branch Banking & Trust Company v. Sevier County Schools Federal Credit Union |
Whether the Federal Arbitration Act displaces a
state common-law rule forbidding companies from
adding an arbitration requirement to their standard-form contract with customers unless the contract
already includes a dispute-resolution clause. |
| 21-347 |
Jackson v. Hudson |
Whether a federal prisoner is entitled to bring a
habeas claim under the saving clause of 28 U.S.C. § 2255(e)
to challenge the unlawful application of a mandatory
minimum sentence, and imposition of a sentence that
exceeded the proper statutory maximum, when his
challenge was previously precluded by binding circuit
precedent that has since been overruled by the circuit
sitting en banc on the basis of an intervening decision
of the Supreme Court. |
| 21-335 |
Begani v. U.S. |
Whether the Constitution permits the
court-martial of retired servicemembers for offenses
committed after their discharge from active duty. |
| 21-328 |
Morgan v. Sundance |
Whether the arbitration-specific requirement that the proponent of a
contractual waiver defense prove prejudice violates
the Supreme Court’s instruction in AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion that lower courts must “place
arbitration agreements on an equal footing with other
contracts." |
| 21-312 |
Volkswagen Aktiengesellschaft v. Ohio, ex rel. Yost |
Whether the Clean Air Act preempts
state and local governments from regulating manufacturers’ post-sale, nationwide updates to vehicle emission systems. |
| 21-311 |
Willis v. U.S. |
(1) Whether the discretionary-function exception of the Federal Tort Claims Act shields the government from suit whenever a
government agent fails to fulfill a mandatory duty
that applies only in certain circumstances, on the
theory that the agent must have determined those
circumstances did not exist; and (2) whether the discretionary-function exception
shields a government agent’s undisputed failure to
exercise discretion. |
| 21-309 |
Southwest Airlines Co. v. Saxon |
Whether workers who load or unload goods
from vehicles that travel in interstate commerce, but
do not physically transport such goods themselves,
are interstate “transportation workers” exempt from
the Federal Arbitration Act. |
| 21-275 |
Stars Interactive Holdings v. Kentucky, ex rel. Brown |
(1) Whether an award of statutory damages violates
due process when it exceeds by a factor of more than 30
any conceivable harm; and (2) whether the excessive-fines clause prohibits a
state from punishing a defendant by imposing a penalty
50 times in excess of the defendant’s revenue earned from
the prohibited conduct. |
| 21-273 |
Brune v. U.S. |
Whether, under the Fifth Amendment’s double-jeopardy
clause, upon a defendant’s plea of guilty, jeopardy
attaches when the district court accepts the defendant’s
plea of guilty, when the district court adjudges the defendant guilty of the offense or independent of a specific event. |
| 21-267 |
Broadnax v. Lumpkin |
Whether, under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) and Cullen v. Pinholster, a federal habeas petitioner
may present evidence of a prosecutor’s racially discriminatory intent in support of a claim under Batson v. Kentucky when the evidence was not available to the petitioner during state
court Batson proceedings. |
| 21-258 |
Oklahoma v. Davis |
Whether McGirt v. Oklahoma should be overruled. |
| 21-248 |
Berger v. North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP |
(1) Whether a state agent authorized by state law
to defend the state’s interest in litigation must
overcome a presumption of adequate representation
to intervene as of right in a case in which a state
official is a defendant; (2) whether a district court’s determination of
adequate representation in ruling on a motion to
intervene as of right is reviewed de novo or for abuse
of discretion; and (3) whether petitioners Philip Berger, the president pro tempore of the state senate, and Timothy Moore, the speaker of the state house of representatives, are entitled to intervene
as of right in this litigation. |
| 21-241 |
Monsanto Company v. Hardeman |
(1) Whether the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act preempts a state-law failure-to-warn claim when the warning cannot be added to a
product without the Environmental Protection Agency's approval and the EPA has repeatedly concluded that the warning is not appropriate; and (2) whether the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit’s standard for admitting expert testimony — which departs from other
circuits’ standards — is inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s
precedent and Federal Rule of Evidence 702. |
| 21-234 |
George v. McDonough |
Whether, when the Department
of Veterans Affairs denies a veteran’s claim for
benefits in reliance on an agency interpretation that
is later deemed invalid under the plain text of the
statutory provisions in effect at the time of the denial,
that is the kind of “clear and unmistakable error” that
the veteran may invoke to challenge VA’s decision. |
| 21-221 |
Cretacci v. Call |
Whether a prisoner who
submits a filing through the prison mail system loses the
benefit of the mailbox rule if he has counsel. |
| 21-219 |
Clear Channel Outdoor, LLC v. Raymond |
Whether a tax singling out off-premises billboards is
subject to heightened scrutiny under the First Amendment. |
| 21-211 |
Valueland Auto Sales v. U.S. |
Whether, when the district court dismisses all criminal charges against a defendant, that court has jurisdiction over a motion to expunge the records relating to those charges, as held by the U.S Courts of Appeals for the 2nd, 10th and D.C. Circuits, or whether the district court lacks jurisdiction over such motions, as held by the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the 1st, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th and 11th Circuits. |
| 21-210 |
Wisconsin v. Jensen |
(1) Whether a person’s statement expressing fear about a possible future crime is testimonial under the Sixth Amendment’s confrontation clause; and (2) whether, when a person reports ongoing psychological domestic abuse and expresses fear about future physical harm, the person’s statement aimed at ending an ongoing emergency is non-testimonial. |
| 21-198 |
Knights v. U.S. |
(1) Whether a court analyzing if a Fourth Amendment seizure has occurred is categorically barred from considering a person’s race; and (2) whether a seizure occurred under all the circumstances of this case. |
| 21-196 |
SNH SE Ashley River Tenant, LLC v. Arredondo |
Whether the Federal Arbitration Act preempts the South Carolina Supreme Court’s arbitration-specific approach to construing comprehensive powers of attorney to preclude an agent’s power to agree to arbitrate future claims. |
| 21-195 |
Belmora LLC v. Bayer Consumer Care AG |
(1) Whether, in view of the principle of trademark
territoriality, the zone of interests encompassed by
Lanham Act Sections 43(a) and 14(3) extends to the foreign
owner of a foreign trademark that has not registered
or used the mark in the United States; and (2) whether, in the absence of an express
limitations period in the Lanham Act, the timeliness
of a Section 43(a) suit for false association and false
advertising is governed by the most analogous state-law statute of limitations, or instead, by laches. |
| 21-187 |
Mohamud v. Weyker |
Whether a constitutional remedy is available against federal officers for individual instances of law enforcement overreach in violation of the Fourth Amendment. |
| 21-184 |
Byrd v. Lamb |
Whether, under either step of the Abbasi test, line-level federal officers may be sued for violating the Fourth Amendment. |
| 21-171 |
Zupnik v. U.S. |
Whether 18 U.S.C. § 2422(b), which prohibits using a facility or means of interstate commerce to “persuade, induce, entice, or coerce” a minor to engage in any sexual activity that is forbidden by state law, sweeps in any conduct that simply attempts to cause commission of unlawful sexual activity (as the court below and some other Circuits have held), or whether the verbs also require something more—an effort by the defendant to transform the minor’s will, alter the minor’s mental state, or otherwise secure the minor’s assent (as several other Circuits have held). |
| 21-152 |
Estate of Madison Jody Jensen v. Tubbs |
Whether private medical personnel working in correctional or mental-health facilities can assert qualified immunity. |
| 21-144 |
Seattle’s Union Gospel Mission v. Woods |
(1) Whether the First Amendment protects Seattle’s Union Gospel Mission’s right to hire coreligionists; (2) whether denying the Mission a total exemption from non-discrimination law that the state grants to secular, small businesses violates the Free Exercise Clause; and (3) whether the Washington Supreme Court violated the Free Exercise Clause by showing at least a “slight suspicion” of hostility to religious beliefs in deleting a total exemption the legislature bestowed. |
| 21-138 |
González-Bermúdez v. Abbott Laboratories P.R. |
(1) Whether comparator evidence can support an inference of discrimination if the plaintiff and comparators do not share the same position, duties, and supervisor; and (2) whether a jury’s disbelief of an employer’s proffered reason for an adverse employment action can sustain an inference of discrimination or retaliation. |
| 21-133 |
Rojas v. Federal Aviation Administration |
Whether the 9th Circuit, in a sharply divided en banc decision, erred by adopting the consultant corollary and holding that “intra-agency memorandums or letters” in Freedom of Information Act’s Exemption 5 (5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5)) encompasses documents prepared by APTMetrics, a private, outside consultant. |
| 21-119 |
Postmates, LLC v. Rimler |
Whether agreements calling for individual arbitration are enforceable under the Federal Arbitration Act with respect to claims asserted under the California Labor Code Private Attorneys General Act. |
| 21-118 |
Apple Inc. v. Optis Cellular Technology, LLC |
Whether the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit may review, by appeal or mandamus, a decision of the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office denying a petition for inter partes review of a patent, where review is sought on the grounds that the denial rested on an agency rule that exceeds the PTO’s authority under the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, is arbitrary or capricious, or was adopted without required notice-and-comment rulemaking. |
| 21-111 |
NC Financial Solutions of Utah, LLC v. Virginia |
Whether a state attorney general who is not a signatory to an arbitration agreement may bring claims that are covered by the agreement and seek individualized relief on those claims on behalf of persons who are signatories to the agreement and thus would be required to arbitrate if they brought those claims themselves. |
| 21-86 |
Axon Enterprise v. Federal Trade Commission |
(1) Whether Congress impliedly stripped federal district courts of jurisdiction over constitutional challenges to the Federal Trade Commission’s structure, procedures, and existence by granting the courts of appeals jurisdiction to “affirm, enforce, modify, or set aside” the Commission’s cease-and desist orders; and (2) whether, on the merits, the structure of the Federal Trade Commission, including the dual-layer for-cause removal protections afforded its administrative law judges, is consistent with the Constitution. |
| 21-84 |
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education v. Victim Rights Law Center |
Whether a movant who seeks to intervene as of right, under FRCP 24(a)(2), on the same side as a governmental litigant must overcome a presumption of adequate representation. |
| 21-82 |
Alpine Securities Corp. v. Securities and Exchange Commission |
Whether the Security and Exchange Commission’s assertion of independent authority to interpret and enforce the Bank Secrecy Act contravenes Congress’s decision to entrust enforcement of the Bank Secrecy Act’s comprehensive anti-money-laundering regime to the Treasury Department, a politically accountable executive agency. |
| 21-80 |
Outdoor Amusement Business Association v. Department of Homeland Security |
Whether Congress, consistent with the nondelegation doctrine and clear-statement rule, impliedly authorized the Secretary of Labor individually to promulgate legislative rules for the admission of H-2B workers and adjudicate H-2B labor certifications. |
| 21-68 |
Janis v. U.S. |
(1) Whether Standard Condition 12 of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, codified in U.S.S.G. § 5D1.3(c)(12), unconstitutionally delegates authority to the probation officer; and (2) whether Standard Condition 12 is unconstitutionally vague. |
| 21-57 |
Frasier v. Evans |
(1) Whether training or law enforcement policies can be relevant to whether a police officer is entitled to qualified immunity; and (2) whether it has been “clearly established” since at least 2014 that the First Amendment protects the right of individuals to record police officers carrying out their duties in public. |
| 21-51 |
Central Payment Co., LLC v. Custom Hair Designs by Sandy, LLC |
Whether a class may be certified under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure when the class claims turn on materially different contractual rights and obligations between the defendant and each class member. |
| 21-48 |
Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center Commission v. John Doe |
(1) Whether professional judgment rather than deliberate indifference is the proper constitutional standard for a claim of inadequate medical care brought against a secure juvenile detention center by a minor immigrant detainee in federal custody; and (2) whether a minor’s claim for injunctive relief seeking constitutionally adequate medical treatment from a secure juvenile detention center may be redressed by the court without a parent, guardian, or legal custodian joined as a party to the case. |
| 21-31 |
Fast Auto Loans v. Maldonado |
Whether California’s McGill rule, under which agreements for individualized arbitration are invalidated when a plaintiff seeks public injunctive relief, is preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act. |
| 21-27 |
Arrow Highway Steel v. Dubin |
(1) Whether the dormant commerce clause may be used to invalidate the application of a state's neutral, non-discriminatory tolling statute to defeat the enforcement of a former resident's stipulated judgment where there is no showing of any burden on or discrimination against interstate commerce; and (2) whether the dormant commerce clause applies to a state statute with no intended or demonstrated effect on interstate commerce. |
| 21-26 |
Billetts v. Mentor Worldwide, LLC |
Whether preemption under the Medical Device Amendments to the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act supports Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal of state common law claims alleging failure to warn by virtue of inaccurate post-approval, post-sale public reporting of adverse events, and claims alleging defective manufacture of medical devices. |
| 21-17 |
Hargreaves v. Nuverra Environmental Solutions |
Whether the doctrine of equitable mootness is inconsistent with the federal courts’ “virtually unflagging” obligation to hear and decide cases within their jurisdiction. |
| 20-1817 |
Ezaki Glico Co. v. Lotte Int'l America Corp. |
(1) Whether trade dress is “functional” if it is “essential to the use or purpose of the article” or “affects the cost or quality of the article,” as the Supreme Court and nine circuit courts have held, or if it is merely “useful” and “nothing more,” as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit held below; and (2) whether the presence of alternative designs serving the same use or purpose creates a question of fact with respect to functionality, where the product’s design does not affect cost or quality and is not claimed in a utility patent. |
| 20-1790 |
Campbell v. U.S. |
(1) Whether a trial court violates a defendant’s rights under the Confrontation clause by prohibiting cross-examination of accomplice witnesses about the sentencing benefits they hope to receive in exchange for their cooperation with the government; and (2) whether appellate courts should review violations of the Confrontation clause de novo or for abuse of discretion. |
| 20-1788 |
City of New York v. Frost |
Whether, where a Section 1983 plaintiff alleges that his pretrial detention was influenced by fabricated evidence, and the existence of probable cause independent of the challenged evidence defeats his Fourth Amendment claim, he may still pursue a due process-based claim based on alleged use of the same challenged evidence in securing the same pretrial detention. |
| 20-1779 |
Morales-Vázquez v. QBE Seguros |
Whether the traditional doctrine of uberrimae fidei (“utmost good faith”) continues to apply in its strict form (as held by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit in the decision below and also by the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the 3rd, 9th, and 11th Circuits), or is the doctrine limited to cases in which the insurer relied on a mistake or omission when issuing the policy (as held by the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the 2nd and 8th Circuits), or is the traditional doctrine no longer part of federal maritime law (as held by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit), or should the doctrine be modified to limit an insurer’s ability to avoid the policy (which would restore uniformity with the law in England). |
| 20-1732 |
Bryant v. U.S. |
Whether Section 1B1.13 of the United States Sentencing Guidelines is an “applicable” policy statement that binds a district court in considering a defendant-filed motion for compassionate release under 18 U.S.C. 3582(c)(1)(A), as amended by the First Step Act of 2018. |
| 20-1709 |
Pon v. U.S. |
Whether an appellate court reviewing a cold criminal trial record may determine that an error at trial was harmless by applying an “overwhelming evidence of guilt” test that considers only the potential effect of the error on the government’s case and not on the defense. |
| 20-1704 |
Simmons v. U.S. |
Whether a court can summarily dismiss a pro se habeas petition as untimely for failure to adequately allege a causal connection when petitioner explains how a government impediment “prevented” him from filing timely but does not allege with specificity how he discovered and attempted to remedy that impediment. |
| 20-1676 |
Public Watchdogs v. Southern California Edison Company |
Whether the Hobbs Act deprives a federal district court of subject matter jurisdiction over state law and Price-Anderson Act claims asserted by a private actor against private party Nuclear Regulatory Commission licensees, on the ground such claims are “ancillary or incidental to” an NRC final order. |
| 20-1648 |
Fischer v. Forrest |
(1) Whether the name of the author of a copyrighted work is copyright management information or whether it must also be apparent from context that the name is copyright-related; and (2) whether the name of the copyright owner of a copyrighted work is copyright management information or whether it must also be apparent from context that the name is copyright-related. |
| 20-1641 |
Marietta Memorial Hospital Employee Health Benefit Plan v. Davita |
(1) Whether a group health plan that provides uniform reimbursement of all dialysis treatments observe the prohibition provided by the Medicare Secondary Payer Act that group health plans may not “take into account” the fact that a plan participant with end stage renal disease is eligible for Medicare benefits; (2) whether a plan that provides the same dialysis benefits to all plan participants, and reimburses dialysis providers uniformly regardless of whether the patient has end stage renal disease, observe the prohibition under the Medicare Secondary Payer Act that a group health plan also may not “differentiate” between individuals with end stage renal disease and others “in the benefits it provides”; and (3) whether the Medicare Secondary Payer Act is a coordination-of-benefits measure designed to protect Medicare, not an antidiscrimination law designed to protect certain providers from alleged disparate impact of uniform treatment. |
| 20-1614 |
Leontaritis v. U.S. |
(1) Whether, if a jury is instructed to “determine” a fact by indicating a “unanimous finding beyond a reasonable doubt” and does so, the resulting verdict indicates a finding beyond a reasonable doubt, as opposed to a mere failure to find; and (2) whether, if a jury verdict finds a fact beyond a reasonable doubt, a district court’s sentencing decision must accept the jury’s determination or instead may base the sentence on its own independent finding that contradicts the jury’s. |
| 20-1598 |
Project Veritas Action Fund v. Rollins |
(1) Whether a recording law, which makes it a felony for individuals to secretly record under any circumstances, is not facially overbroad under the First Amendment; and (2) whether a party challenging a speech suppressive law has the burden to precisely articulate every type of contemplated speech activity to satisfy ripeness for as-applied challenges. |
| 20-1499 |
American Civil Liberties Union v. U.S. |
(1) Whether the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court, like other Article III courts,
has jurisdiction to consider a motion asserting that
the First Amendment provides a qualified public right
of access to the court’s significant opinions, and
whether the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review has jurisdiction to consider an
appeal from the denial of such a motion; and (2) whether the First Amendment provides a
qualified right of public access to the FISC’s
significant opinions. |
| 20-1389 |
Savage v. U.S. |
Whether the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit properly held — in conflict with decades of federal practice endorsing flexible procedures to assemble a complete record on appeal — that an appellant seeking a complete appellate
record must overcome procedural impediments lacking any basis in Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 10’s text: namely, that when an appellant lacks any “means” to “prepare
a statement of” untranscribed “proceedings” under
Rule 10(c), the district court has no obligation to assist in reconstructing those proceedings unless the appellant first files a declaration “saying he does not remember what happened,” and that when an appellant wishes to review
and supplement the record with undocketed trial correspondence in the district court’s possession, he must
first show how the correspondence would “give rise to
‘any difference[s]’ about whether the record truly discloses what occurred in the district court.” |
| 20-994 |
Volkswagen Group of America Inc. v. Environmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough County, Florida |
Whether the Clean Air Act preempts
state and local governments from regulating manufacturers’ post-sale, nationwide updates to vehicle emission systems. CVSG: 9/27/2021 |