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46 Stories on David H. Souter
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Time.com: When the Supremes Get Along

Despite two dramatic 5-4 decisions, the court is actually starting to move beyond its predictable ideological split

CNNMoney: High court reduces Exxon oil spill damages

The Supreme Court on Wednesday reduced a $2.5 billion punitive damages award against energy giant Exxon for its role in an infamous 1989 maritime oil spill off the coast of Alaska.

Time.com: Court Slashes Judgment in Exxon Valdez Case

The Supreme Court on Wednesday slashed the $2.5 billion punitive damages award in the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster to $500 million

Time.com: What the Gitmo Ruling Means

A majority ruling allowing terror suspects to challenge their detention provokes fierce criticism from conservative justices and politicians

Justices are well-off, well-traveled

Most of the Supreme Court justices piled up a lot frequent flyer miles in 2007, jetting to such exotic locales as Austria, India and Hawaii, according to financial disclosure reports released Friday.

Justices: Child porn is not protected speech

The Supreme Court on Monday upheld a law aimed at preventing child pornography, ruling a provision dealing with "pandering" illicit material does not violate constitutional protections on free speech.

High court upholds Indiana's voter ID law

The Supreme Court on Monday backed Indiana's law requiring voters to show photo identification, despite concerns thousands of elderly, poor and minority voters could be locked out of their right to cast ballots.

Time.com: Supreme Court: Photo ID Law Stays

The Supreme Court ruled Monday that states can require voters to produce photo identification without violating their constitutional rights, validating Republican-inspired voter ID laws

Supreme Court tackles 'Millionaires' Amendment'

The Supreme Court on Tuesday debated whether a provision of federal election law that allows opponents of certain self-financed candidates to exceed campaign spending limits unfairly punishes those who self-finance.

High court upholds lethal injection method

The Supreme Court, in a 7-2 ruling, upheld Kentucky's use of lethal injection as a means of executing prisoners, ruling that the method -- used in 35 states -- is properly and humanely applied.

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