The Supreme Court says Trump has some immunity from prosecution The decision likely ensures that the case against Trump won’t be tried before the election, and then only if he is not reelected. Nina Totenberg
What the Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity means for Trump The U.S. Supreme Court, in a 6-3 decision, ruled that a former president has absolute immunity for his core constitutional powers — and is entitled to a presumption of immunity for his official acts. Nina Totenberg
What does a Supreme Court reversal mean for clean water and car safety? NPR's Michel Martin talks to legal affairs journalist David Kaplan about the Supreme Court's reversal of a longtime precedent giving government agencies leeway to interpret federal regulations. Michel Martin
What to know about Louisiana's new surgical castration law Louisiana’s governor signed a controversial bill that will make his state the first to allow surgical castration for people found guilty of certain sex crimes against children. Jaclyn Diaz
Supreme Court blocks opioid settlement with Purdue Pharma that shielded Sacklers We look at the Supreme Court decision to throw out a multi-billion dollar bankruptcy deal involving the makers of Oxycontin, that would've shielded the owners of Purdue Pharma from civil lawsuits. Brian Mann
The Supreme Court overruled decades of administrative law. What happens now? NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with law professor Jody Freeman about what the Supreme Court's overturning of the Chevron case means for how federal agencies can regulate. Scott Detrow
After Roe v Wade, Supreme Court overturns another major legal precedent NPR's Danielle Kurtzleben asks Harvard Law professor Andrew Mergen about the Supreme Court's decision to overrule the "Chevron doctrine." Danielle Kurtzleben
Daniel Robinson vanished 3 years ago. His father still hopes for his safe return Despite leads from the public that have poured in over the last three years, there have been no solid answers regarding the 24-year-old geologist’s disappearance in Arizona on June 23, 2021. Jonathan Franklin
We break down the overturning of the Chevron doctrine In a momentous decision that will affect vast swaths of American life, the Supreme Court made it far more difficult for federal agencies to issue rules that carry out broad mandates from Congress. Nina Totenberg
Does the US Supreme Court ruling on public camping bans criminalize homelessness? The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Friday that cities can ban camping and sleeping in public, even if there is no shelter to send them to, overturning a previous ruling that has guided cities' approaches to homelessness for years. Dyer Oxley