Report: Probe into Supreme Court Leak Demands Clerks’ Phone Records, Affidavits
The Supreme Court’s probe into the leaked draft abortion opinion has reportedly intensified into requiring law clerks to hand over phone records and sign affidavits.

The Supreme Court’s probe into the leaked draft abortion opinion has reportedly intensified into requiring law clerks to hand over phone records and sign affidavits.

President Joe Biden is silent about leftists targeting the homes of Supreme Court justices following a weekend of pro-abortion protests.

NPR reporter Nina Totenberg said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week” that she believed that a conservative law clerk was the likeliest suspect for the leak of Justice Samuel Alito’s draft majority decision overturning the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision.

A group of radical pro-abortion activists gathered outside the homes of multiple U.S. Supreme Court Justices on Saturday to protest the Court’s expected decision to repeal Roe v. Wade.

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, a Republican, is aware of the protests at U.S. Supreme Court Justices’s homes and has ordered Virginia State Police to monitor them and provide assistance if necessary, a spokeswoman for the governor told Breitbart News.

Leftist activists are directing protestors to confront conservative Supreme Court Justices at their homes in Maryland and Virginia.

Carrie Severino said the left leaked the SCOTUS Roe v. Wade draft opinion, which upholds the Constitution and returns power to the people.

Chief Justice John Roberts ordered an investigation on Tuesday into the leaking of the draft opinion that overrules Roe v. Wade.

SCOTUS unanimously ruled against the City of Boston for denying a group the right to fly the Christian Flag outside the entrance of City Hall.

Wednesday on FNC’s “America Reports,” anchor John Roberts asked Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) if his comment that Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson would have defended Nazis at the Nuremberg Trials was a “bridge too far.”

Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) sparred with “Fox News Sunday” host John Roberts over some of the policy ideas laid out in Scott’s “Rescue America” plan.

The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments over the Trump-era “public charge” immigration rule on Wednesday.

NPR’s public editor refuses to correct its blatantly false story about a non-existent mask controversy at the Supreme Court.

Governor Glenn Youngkin (R-VA) said on this week’s broadcast of “Fox News Sunday” that when liberals say Critical Race Theory is not taught in school, it was an obfuscation of the fact because its “tenets” were being taught.

Both Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh did “not have a backbone” when they opted to side with their left-wing colleagues, voting to keep the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) vaccine mandate on healthcare workers, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) said during an appearance Friday on the variety program Ruthless.

Biden defended his mandate, calling it “a very modest burden,” and noting it would allow workers to avoid vaccination by wearing a mask at work and getting tested once a week.

WASHINGTON, DC – Vaccine mandates had a rough day at the Supreme Court Friday, as the justices appear poised to block President Joe Biden’s large employer vaccine mandate, though the fate of Biden’s healthcare provider mandate remains unclear.

Justice Gorsuch asked Biden’s Solicitor General, “Why isn’t this a major question that belongs in the states and in the halls of Congress?”

Chief Justice John Roberts of the U.S. Supreme Court blasted attempts to exert “inappropriate political influence” in his year-end report for 2021, as President Joe Biden and the Democrats consider proposals to expand or pack the Court with liberals.

SCOTUS heard oral arguments in a Maine case on whether students can use state aid to attend schools that provide religious instruction.

Whoopi Goldberg told her co-hosts Thursday on ABC’s “The View” that the Supreme Court has no right to question “what a fetus wants.”

The case deals with the interaction between Section 1806(f) of the Foreign Intelligence Act of 1978 (FISA) and state secrets privilege.

The Supreme Court of the United States heard oral arguments on Monday regarding Texas’s recently enacted pro-life legislation.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor cited sexism as the reason for a Supreme Court rule change during the Chinese coronavirus pandemic.

The Supreme Court of the United States will ultimately decide whether to reinstate Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s death sentence.

The Supreme Court on Wednesday struck down a California regulation forcing agricultural owners to allow union organizers to operate on private land, holding the regulation is an unconstitutional right to “physically invade” private property without compensation.

The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) on Thursday unanimously overturned a lower court ruling regarding the City of Philadelphia barring foster children from being placed with the Catholic Social Services due to its unwillingness to endorse same-sex couples.

The Supreme Court of the United States delivered a 6-3 decision in the case of Niz-Chavez v. Garland, Attorney General. At issue was a question of immigration law: whether “resident aliens” ordered removed from the country could legally remain by establishing continued residence for at least ten years.

Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee Chuck Grassley (R-IA) wrote an op-ed Tuesday, calling the Democrats’ current attempt to pack the Supreme Court “way off base.”

The Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision late on Friday that California must lift its coronavirus pandemic restrictions on in-home religious gatherings and prayer meetings.

The Supreme Court will address a procedural question of who can defend state abortion restrictions. The case, Cameron v. EMW Women’s Surgical Center, weighs Kentucky’s prohibition on surgical abortion used after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

A recent survey shows Justice Clarence Thomas is the Republican party’s most popular Justice on the Supreme Court of the United States, according to an Economist and YouGov poll.

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled 8-1 in favor of a Christian student who was barred from sharing his faith at Georgia Gwinnett College in 2016.

The fact that Democrat Sen. Pat Leahy – not Chief Justice John Roberts or Vice President Kamala Harris – will preside over former President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial should draw bipartisan condemnation as an assault on the very same democracy and U.S. Constitution that Democrats claim to be vindicating through that trial – and that Democrats know they’re headed to a political setback.

This latest impeachment is such a piece of failed political theater, even establishment toady John Roberts, the chief justice of the Supreme Court, refuses to participate.

Sen. Patrick Leahy, President pro tempore of the U.S. Senate, is expected to preside over the upper chamber’s second impeachment trial of President Donald Trump — not U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts — according to CNN and NBC News.

The U.S. Supreme Court granted an injunction Wednesday evening against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s restrictions on religious services in a 5-4 decision that saw Justice Amy Coney Barrett with the conservative majority — and Chief Justice John Roberts siding with the liberal minority.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-3 on Wednesday to grant a stay against “curbside” voting in Alabama, which would have allowed disabled Americans to avoid the additional risk of exposure to coronavirus posed by voting inside a polling place.

The Supreme Court rejected a Republican request to stay a Pennsylvania decision granting Democrats’ vote-by-mail request, with Roberts siding with the liberals.

Democrat VP candidate Kamala Harris implied while questioning SCOTUS nominee Amy Coney Barrett that she is ignorant about race issues.
