
via
Getty)
Ed.
note: A
weekly
roundup
of
just
a
few
items
from
Howard
Bashman’s How
Appealing
blog,
the
Web’s
first
blog
devoted
to
appellate
litigation.
Check
out
these
stories
and
more
at
How
Appealing.
“Emergency
Docket
Tops
Year’s
Highlights
at
Supreme
Court”: Justin
Wise
and
Jordan
Fischer
of
Bloomberg
Law
have this
report.
“Judges
who
ruled
against
Trump
say
harassment
and
threats
have
changed
their
lives;
More
than
100
pizzas
were
delivered
to
the
homes
of
judges
and
their
families
this
year,
some
with
signs
of
foreign
involvement;
Judges
say
the
message
is
clear:
We
know
where
you
live.” Lawrence
Hurley
of
NBC
News
has this
report.
“Supreme
Court
Rejects
Trump
Bid
to
Use
National
Guard
in
Chicago”: Greg
Stohr
of
Bloomberg
News
has this
report.
You
can
access
today’s
order
of
the U.S.
Supreme
Court at this
link.
“How
Charlie
Javice’s
Legal
Fees
Hit
$74
Million:
Gummy
Bears
and
Star
Lawyers;
A
list
of
legal
expenses
from
her
lawyers
included
$530
in
gummy
bears,
a
seafood
tower
and
thousands
of
dollars
on
hotel
upgrades,
new
court
documents
reveal.” Alexander
Saeedy
of
The
Wall
Street
Journal
has this
report.
“Judge
orders
Trump
admin
to
offer
relief
to
men
deported
under
Alien
Enemies
Act;
But
the
judge,
James
Boasberg,
stopped
short
of
ordering
the
Trump
administration
to
facilitate
the
immediate
return
of
the
men
to
the
U.S.” Kyle
Cheney
and
Josh
Gerstein
of
Politico
have this
report.
“Court
watchers
give
SCOTUS
poor
marks
as
Trump
bulldozes
judiciary
in
2025;
Trump’s
return
to
office
served
as
a
stress
test
for
high
court’s
beleaguered
shadow
docket,
highlighting
the
careful
balance
of
power
between
the
judiciary
and
the
executive”: Kelsey
Reichmann
of
Courthouse
News
Service
has this
report.
“How
the
Supreme
Court’s
Mail-In
Ballot
Ruling
Could
Affect
Voters;
Hundreds
of
thousands
of
Americans
in
rural
and
urban
areas
alike
could
see
their
votes
rejected
if
the
court
decides
that
ballots
must
arrive
by
Election
Day”: Nick
Corasaniti
and
Christine
Zhang
of
The
New
York
Times
have this
report.
