Supreme Court, Trump
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Brazil, Bolsonaro and Supreme Federal Court
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SAO PAULO (Reuters) -Brazil's Supreme Court said on Monday former President Jair Bolsonaro may be arrested if his press interviews are published on social media, raising questions about whether the right-wing leader is allowed to talk to journalists, as he faces backlash over the 50% tariffs U.S. President Donald Trump imposed on Brazil.
The NBA is urging the Supreme Court to give a definitive interpretation of a law enacted to protect video rental and viewing records.
If the justices step in, it wouldn’t necessarily have anything to do with the validity of the trafficking charges against the Epstein associate.
Paulette Jiles, a horse-riding poet and historical novelist who evoked the grit and grandeur of the American West in “News of the World,” died at 82. A fossil of a young carnivorous dinosaur fetched over $30 million at Sotheby’s. The auction house had estimated its value at $4 million to $6 million.
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Here's a timeline of Ferguson's activism, drawn from Charlotte Observer archives, his biography on the Ferguson, Chambers & Sumter, PA website, and a 2023 oral history interview conducted by the Legal Defense Fund in partnership with the Southern Oral History Program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
The film, Heightened Scrutiny, follows Chase Strangio as he prepares to argue in favor of gender-affirming care access for trans youth in U.S. v. Skrmetti at the high court, and captures the quiet radicalism of showing up.
The case centers around fees students paid for services that were not provided during the COVID-19 campus shutdown in 2020.
The Department of Education laid off roughly 1,400 employees in March and a federal judge paused the move. The Supreme Court now says it was permissible.