The Citizen’s Guide to the Supreme Court
Government & Organizations:National
This week's episode is slightly abbreviated, because Nazim is injured and can't laugh without screaming in pain. With that in mind, the case of Kansas v. Glover is discussed, which asks whether the police can assume the registered driver of a vehicle is the driver of that vehicle before performing a stop. It's both more and less complicated than it sounds. Law starts at (07:50), and we're covering the DACA case next week.
Revenge of the Enemy Combatants
A New Take on Police Shootings
SCOTUS Takes On Our Clogged Toilet Government
Handing Over the Smoking Gun
Have a Happy [Establishment-Clause-Approved] Holiday
Results in Shaw and Salman
Who Will Think of the Children?!?
How to Sue People, In 600 Easy Steps
The Likely Result of Election-Based Lawsuits
Sex Offenders and Facebook
Trans Rights, Bank Fraud and White Collar Crime
A Fireside Chat with Brett and Nazim
Historical Failures Appointing Supreme Court Justices
Donald Trump and the Supreme Court
What's the Deal with Elena Kagan?
Big Sam on Free Speech
How Similar are Kennedy and Sandra Day O'Connor?
Sotomayor vs. Police Incompetence
The Creative Lawyering of Ruth Bader Ginsburg
The Scalia-Thomas One-Two Punch
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Mark and the Millennials
Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park
WCR > Women Chefs & Restaurateurs Podcast
Oral Arguments from the Eighth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals
The National Archives Podcast Series