In the latest developments from the US Supreme Court, the justices issued a unanimous ruling upholding a federal law that allows American victims of international terrorism to sue perpetrators in US courts. This decision, in the combined cases of Fuld v. Palestine Liberation Organization and United States v. Palestine Liberation Organization, validates a law championed by Oklahoma Senator James Lankford. The Court, led by Chief Justice John Roberts, rejected arguments from the Palestinian Authority and Palestinian Liberation Organization that such lawsuits would violate constitutional due process. The justices found that the federal government's unique authority under the Fifth Amendment, especially in matters of foreign policy and protecting Americans abroad, supports jurisdiction in these cases. However, the Court stopped short of defining the outer limits of federal power to bring foreign defendants into US courts.
Elsewhere, attention remains sharply focused on the Supreme Court’s ongoing impact on abortion rights. The Associated Press reports that former President Donald Trump's judicial appointments, which now make up a substantial portion of the federal bench, continue to align with a legal landscape that allows states significant leeway on abortion regulations. Advocates on both sides recognize that recent and future Supreme Court decisions—and the composition of the Court—will play a critical role in shaping national abortion policy as states test the boundaries post-Roe v. Wade.
Second Amendment litigation is also on the Court’s horizon. According to OPB, a Washington State gun shop is seeking Supreme Court review after the state’s highest court ruled that bans on high-capacity magazines do not infringe on constitutional rights, characterizing magazine limits as reasonable regulations. The petition to the justices rests on arguments that such magazine bans conflict with previous Supreme Court interpretations of the Second Amendment, and that there is now division among lower courts requiring resolution.
While the Court is currently on its traditional summer recess, headlines continue to reflect on administrative law and the Court’s relationship with the so-called “administrative state.” The Regulatory Review highlights ongoing debates about how far federal agencies’ power should go, illustrating that even among justices there are deep divides on questions of regulatory authority, due process, and the use of non-binding guidance by government bodies.
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