Jonathan and Reginald Carr, convicted in the notorious “Wichita massacre,” are seeking a formal resentencing hearing, challenging the joint sentencing they received.

Jonathan and Reginald Carr, convicted in the notorious “Wichita massacre,” are seeking a formal resentencing hearing, challenging the joint sentencing they received.

The Supreme Court has ruled that the Department of Veterans Affairs improperly calculated educational benefits of war veteran James Rudisill, who served in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The Supreme Court has ruled that the Department of Veterans Affairs improperly calculated educational benefits of war veteran James Rudisill, who served in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The Supreme Court has ruled that low-level drug dealers cannot receive shortened prison terms under the First Step Act, a bipartisan criminal justice overhaul.

The Supreme Court has unanimously ruled that public officials may be sued for blocking critics on social media, extending a precedent set during the Trump presidency.

The Supreme Court has unanimously ruled that public officials may be sued for blocking critics on social media, extending a precedent set during the Trump presidency.

Florida and the Seminole Tribe have a compact giving the tribe exclusive online sports betting and casino gambling rights, but legal challenges question the legality of bets.

Florida and the Seminole Tribe have a compact giving the tribe exclusive online sports betting and casino gambling rights, but legal challenges question the legality of bets.

Ohio University has paused the awarding of race-based diversity scholarships following the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down affirmative action in college admissions.

The Supreme Court cleared Idaho to execute Thomas Eugene Creech on Wednesday, but state employees failed to establish an IV line, ending the procedure.

The Supreme Court has rejected appeals from Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Thomas Massie and Ralph Norman, who challenged fines for not wearing face masks on the House floor in 2021.

A legal effort to remove former President Trump from the New York ballot will likely fail due to procedural issues, election attorney Joe Burns argues.

Christopher Clements, who is serving a life prison sentence for the 2014 death of a Tucson teenager, is now also facing a second murder trial in the 2012 disappearance of Isabel Celis.

A California county told a construction worker he’d have to pay $23,000 to obtain a building permit for a new house, so he sued. Now the Supreme Court will rule on the case.

The Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal from Richard Glossip, an Oklahoma death row inmate who claims innocence in a 1997 murder-for-hire case, officials say.

Wyoming Secretary of State Chuck Gray filed an amicus brief in support of former President Trump remaining on the primary ballot in neighboring Colorado.

A Supreme Court could reel in a legal precedent challenged by a group of fishermen who say the decades-old doctrine gave the administrative state too much power of their business.