Richard Glossip has eaten three "last meals" and been married twice while awaiting execution. Now, he is getting a new trial.
Lyndon Johnson would likely recognize the Republicans today who pledge unflinching loyalty to President Donald Trump.
All Texans deserve the right to freely criticize their government and speak out on issues in their communities without fear ...
Here’s how federal courts help determine the fate of controversial issues, such as immigration laws, in Texas and beyond.
The Supreme Court heard arguments Tuesday in a case about whether "intertwined" questions of law and fact must be heard by a ...
A federal judge found the House of Representatives' use of proxy voting to pass the 2023 federal spending law violated the ...
States that use the Colorado River say they don't want to go to the Supreme Court, but some are quietly preparing for ...
Argentina’s President Javier Milei temporarily appointed two Supreme Court judges by decree Tuesday, bypassing Congress ...
Whether or not a reasonable police officer violates clearly established law when he declines to check the features and ...
On February 21, 2025, in Pitts v Rivas, the Texas Supreme Court finally accepted and applied the “anti-fracturing rule” to ...
The SAVE plan lowered monthly payments for nearly everybody who took out a federal student loan to pay for school.
The justices reversed a lower court’s decision that had upheld Glossip’s conviction despite his allegations that prosecutors ...
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