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
3 women say Kentucky’s abortion laws are at odds with their Jewish faith in lawsuit A group of Jewish women is challenging Kentucky’s near-total abortion ban, saying it violates their religious beliefs. Similar lawsuits are advancing in Indiana and Missouri. Sylvia Goodman
Supreme Court limits a legal tool the DOJ has used to prosecute Jan. 6 defendants The Supreme Court has narrowed the Justice Department's use of an obstruction law to prosecute people who rioted at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Carrie Johnson
Supreme Court says cities can punish people for sleeping outside The U.S. Supreme Court says cities can punish people for sleeping and camping in public places, overturning lower court rulings that deemed it cruel and unusual. Jennifer Ludden
Supreme Court says prosecutors improperly charged some Jan. 6 defendants The statute is also the basis for one of the four obstruction counts brought against former President Donald Trump in the criminal case currently pending against him in federal court in Washington. Nina Totenberg
Supreme Court just made it harder for federal agencies to regulate in sweeping ruling The decision overturned Chevron v. The Natural Resources Defense Council, a 1984 decision that was not particularly controversial when it was announced 40 years ago. Nina Totenberg