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SCOTUS. Unit V. Supreme Court of the United States. Supreme Court is the ultimate court of appeals in the United States. Usually this is determined by the rule of law or process..not the merit of the case.
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SCOTUS Unit V
Supreme Court of the United States • Supreme Court is the ultimate court of appeals in the United States. • Usually this is determined by the rule of law or process..not the merit of the case. • Their power to hear a case is discretionary and they do not have to give any reason for refusing to hear a case from their docket.
SCOTUS • If the Supreme Court chooses to hear a case, the lower court ruling stands. • If they chose to not a hear a case, they do not have to give any rationale for why why they have chosen not to hear the case..but sometimes they do.
Session • First Monday of October each year and usually continues in session through June. • Receives and disposes of approximately 5,000 cases a year. • A) Subject matter is not proper. • B) Subject matter is not sufficient to warrant a review of the full Court.
Session • Cases are heard with all the Justices sitting together in open court. • Each year the Supreme Court hears about 150 cases of national importance and 3/4ths of such decisions are announced in full published opinions. • Majority, Concurring, and Dissenting Opinions
U.S. Supreme Court • Located in back of the U.S. Capitol Building
John G. Roberts, Jr. • Chief Justice • Born in 1955 (54) • J.D. Harvard Law • U.S. Court of Appeals for DC in 2003 (GWB) • George W. Bush nominated him C.J in 2005 [78-22] • Roman Catholic
John Paul Stevens • Senior Associate Justice • Born in 1920 (89) • J.D. Northwestern • U.S Court of Appeals 7th Circuit in 1970 (Nixon) • Gerald Ford nominated him in 1975 [98-0] • Protestant
Antonin Scalia • Associate Justice • Born in 1936 (73) • LL.B Harvard • U.S. Court of Appeals D.C. in 1982 (Reagan) • Ronald Reagan nominated him in 1986 [98-0] • Roman Catholic
Anthony M. Kennedy • Associate Justice • Born in 1936 (73) • LL.B Harvard • U.S. Court of Appeals 9th Circuit in 1975 (Ford) • Ronald Reagan nominated him in 1988 [97-0] • Roman Catholic
Clarence Thomas • Associate Justice • Born in 1948 (61) • J.D. Yale • U.S. Court of Appeals D.C. in 1980 (GHWB) • George H.W. Bush nominated him in 1991 [52-48] • Roman Catholic
Ruth Bader Ginsburg • Associate Justice • Born in 1933 (76) • LL.B Columbia • U.S. Court of Appeals D.C. in 1980 (Carter) • Bill Clinton nominated her in 1993 [96-3] • Jewish
Steven G. Breyer • Associate Justice • Born in 1938 (71) • LL.B. Harvard • U.S. Court of Appeals D.C. in 1980 (Carter) • Bill Clinton nominated him in 1994 [87-9] • Jewish
Samuel A. Alito, Jr. • Associate Justice • Born in 1950 (59) • J.D. Yale • U.S. Court of Appeals 3rd Circuit in 1990 (GHWB) • George W. Bush nominated in 2006 [58-42] • Roman Catholic
Sonia Sotomayor • Associate Justice • Born in 1954 (55) • J.D. Yale • U.S Court of Appeals 2nd Circuit in 1998 (Clinton) • Barack Obama nominated her in 2009 [68-31] • Roman Catholic
Justices of the Supreme Court • Nine Justices led by a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. His/her main duty is administrational and ceremonial. • Nomination and confirmation can sometimes become very “political” • Conservative, Moderate, Liberal • Republican to Republican appointees • Democrat to Democrat appointees • Almost always…
Federal system • 94 district courts: criminal and civil cases • 13 appeals courts: appellate • Justices - on for life • 1 Supreme Court - Judicial review • Marbury v. Madison
SCOTUS Unit V