Obituaries•
Games - New!•
ADN Store•
e-Edition•
Today's Paper•
Sponsored Content•
Promotions
Promotions•
Manage account
Connect
The court ruled 6-3 for designer Lorie Smith despite a Colorado law that bars discrimination based on sexual orientation, race, gender and other characteristics.
The court said Texas and Louisiana lacked the legal standing to challenge the executive branch’s priorities on who should be deported.
Lawyers for the Navajo Nation had characterized the tribe’s request as modest, saying they simply were seeking an assessment of the tribe’s water needs and a plan to meet them.
The details of gifts given to Jackson were among the reports provided by most members of the court in their annual filings, which give a partial window onto their finances.
A California man tried to trademark the phrase mocking the former president and put it on T-shirts.
The case involved images Warhol created of Prince as part of a 1984 commission for Vanity Fair magazine.
The Supreme Court said Monday it will decide whether public officials can block critics from commenting on their social media accounts, an issue that previously came up in a case involving former President Donald Trump.
In an order signed by Justice Samuel Alito, the court asked both sides to weigh in by Tuesday over whether lower court rulings restricting the approval of the drug should be allowed to take effect.
The Supreme Court ‘s conservative majority sounded sympathetic Monday to a Christian graphic artist who objects to designing wedding websites for gay couples.
A new stack of high-profile cases awaits the justices.
Decisions on voting rights and charitable-donor disclosures offered a glimpse of what the coming years of the right’s dominance could look like for the nation’s highest court.
The justices ruled 6-3 that hundreds of millions of dollars tied up in court should go to Alaska Native corporations rather than be spread among tribes around the U.S.
The court on Monday unanimously ruled that the NCAA can’t enforce certain rules limiting the education-related benefits — things like computers and graduate scholarships — that colleges offer athletes.
The Catholic foster care agency says its religious views prevent it from working with same-sex couples as foster parents.
Three justices said that since Congress is weighing whether to change the Military Selective Service Act, the court would not consider the case.