Tag: draft

  • Leaked abortion draft made us ‘targets of assassination’, Samuel Alito says

    Leaked abortion draft made us ‘targets of assassination’, Samuel Alito says

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    Samuel Alito said the decision he wrote removing the federal right to abortion made him and other US supreme court justices “targets of assassination” but denied claims he was responsible for its leak in draft form.

    “Those of us who were thought to be in the majority, thought to have approved my draft opinion, were really targets of assassination,” Alito told the Wall Street Journal in an interview published on Friday.

    “It was rational for people to believe they might be able to stop the decision in Dobbs by killing one of us.”

    Alito wrote the ruling in Dobbs v Jackson, the Mississippi case that overturned Roe v Wade, which established the right to abortion in 1973.

    Alito’s draft ruling was leaked to Politico on 2 May last year, to uproar and protest nationwide. The final ruling was issued on 24 June.

    On 8 June, an armed man was arrested outside the home of Brett Kavanaugh, with Alito one of six conservatives on the nine-justice court. Charged with attempted murder of a United States judge, the man pleaded not guilty.

    The conservative chief justice, John Roberts, voted against overturning Roe, but the three rightwingers installed by Republicans under Donald Trump ensured it fell regardless.

    Progressives charged that a conservative, perhaps the hardline Alito, might have orchestrated the leak in an attempt to lock in a majority for such a momentous decision.

    Alito said: “That’s infuriating to me. Look, this made us targets of assassination. Would I do that to myself? Would the five of us have done that to ourselves? It’s quite implausible.”

    The leak was investigated by the supreme court marshal, without establishing a perpetrator.

    Saying the marshal “did a good job with the resources that were available”, Alito said he had “a pretty good idea who is responsible, but that’s different from the level of proof that is needed to name somebody”.

    Alito said the leak “was a part of an effort to prevent the Dobbs draft … from becoming the decision of the court. And that’s how it was used for those six weeks by people on the outside, as part of the campaign to try to intimidate the court.”

    He also said the leak “created an atmosphere of suspicion and distrust”. The justices “worked through it”, he said, “and last year we got our work done … but it was damaging”.

    Last November, after a bombshell New York Times report, Alito denied leaking information about a decision in a 2014 case about contraception and religious rights.

    His Wall Street Journal interview seemed bound to further anger Democrats and progressives. Justices regularly claim not to be politically motivated, but even with a Democrat in the White House the court has made other momentous conservative rulings, notably including a loosening of gun-control laws.

    Joe Biden’s administration has shied from calls for reform, including the idea justices should be added to establish balance or give liberals a majority, reflecting Democratic control of the White House and Senate.

    Samuel Alito in March 2019.
    Samuel Alito in March 2019. Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP

    Alito told the Journal he did not “feel physically unsafe, because we now have a lot of protection”. He also said he was “driven around in basically a tank, and I’m not really supposed to go anyplace by myself without the tank and my members of the police force”.

    Complaining that criticism also stoked by corruption allegations against two more conservatives, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch, were “new during my lifetime”, Alito said: “We are being hammered daily, and I think quite unfairly in a lot of instances.

    “And nobody, practically nobody, is defending us. The idea has always been that judges are not supposed to respond to criticisms, but if the courts are being unfairly attacked, the organised bar will come to their defense.”

    Alito said legal authorities had, “if anything … participated to some degree in these attacks”.

    He declined to comment on reporting by ProPublica about Thomas’s friendship with Harlan Crow, a Republican mega-donor who has bestowed gifts and purchases which Thomas largely did not disclose.

    But Alito did complain about how Kavanaugh was treated when allegations of sexual assault surfaced during his confirmation process.

    “After Justice Kavanaugh was accused of being a rapist … he made an impassioned speech, made an impassioned scene, and he was criticised because it was supposedly not judicious, not the proper behavior for a judge to speak in those terms.

    “I don’t know – if somebody calls you a rapist?”

    Accusations against Kavanaugh included attempted rape while a high school student. On Friday, the Guardian reported that new information showed serious omissions in a Senate investigation of the allegations, mounted when Republicans controlled the chamber.

    Polling shows that public trust in the supreme court has reached historic lows.

    “We’re being bombarded,” Alito complained, “and then those who are attacking us say: ‘Look how unpopular they are. Look how low their approval rating has sunk.’

    “Well, yeah, what do you expect when … day in and day out, ‘They’re illegitimate. They’re engaging in all sorts of unethical conduct. They’re doing this, they’re doing that’?”

    Such attacks, he said, “undermine confidence in the government [as] it’s one thing to say the court is wrong; it’s another thing to say it’s an illegitimate institution”.

    With some court-watchers, the interview landed heavily.

    Robert Maguire, research director for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, an independent watchdog, said: “There is no depth to the pity [justices] – and Alito in particular – feel for themselves when they face public criticism.”



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    #Leaked #abortion #draft #targets #assassination #Samuel #Alito
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • NFL draft 2023 winners: Texans and Eagles make all the right moves

    NFL draft 2023 winners: Texans and Eagles make all the right moves

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    After months of rumor and speculation, Thursday night’s first round of the NFL draft featured less chaos than anticipated. There were few eyebrow-scorching picks and, instead, a steady stream of sensible selections.

    Let’s look at some of the winners from the opening night.

    Seattle Seahawks

    Think about this: 12 months ago, John Schneider and Pete Carroll, Seattle’s chief decision-makers, were at a crossroads. They were almost run out of town by a Russell Wilson-led revolt. Instead, they traded the quarterback to the Broncos, receiving a bounty of draft picks in return. Wilson proceeded to set fire to everything in his sight in Denver. Then the pair crushed last year’s draft, selecting six starters from nine picks, including Charles Cross, Abraham Lucas, Tariq Woolen and Kenneth Walker III, all budding stars at their positions. Oh, and there was the small matter of them finding Geno Smith on the quarterback scrap heap and resurrecting his career.

    Now this. On Thursday night they were able to land the top cornerback prospect in the class and the top receiving prospect, grabbing Illinois’ Devon Witherspoon with the fifth overall pick and Ohio State’s Jaxon Smith-Njigba at No 20. Witherspoon is a quintessential Carroll corner: He’s quick, feisty, and plays with an aggressiveness bordering on violence. Smith-Njigba will serve as the perfect complement to the DK Metcalf-Tyler Lockett receiving duo.

    In the span of a year, Carroll has gone from hearing chatter that he should retire to overhauling the Seahawks roster. What looked like a long rebuild in the wake of the Wilson trade now looks like one of the most talented, youthful rosters in the craptastic NFC.

    Questions about whether Smith is a viable long-term option at quarterback will linger. But the rest of the Seahawks roster is now set up for sustained success.

    Houston Texans

    Heading into draft night, there were whispers of a split in the Texans’ camp. Did the owner want to select a quarterback? What about DeMeco Ryans, the new head coach, a defense-first guy? Did he want the top defensive player on the board? What would Nick Caserio, the Texans’ GM and the man stuck in the middle, do?

    First-round draft selections

    How about grabbing them both! Caserio deserves credit. He spent two months, and most of the last two weeks, painting himself out to be a doofus. The rumor mill had the Texans down to pass on a quarterback with the second overall pick. Then it had them taking Kentucky’s Will Levis, who the league decided was not worthy of a first-round selection at all. And then it had them opting for Tyree Wilson ahead of Will Anderson, the Alabama star who was the top defensive player according to most analysts.

    Wrong. Caserio was targeting a quarterback and Anderson. With the second pick, he selected the franchise’s quarterback of the future: Ohio State’s CJ Stroud. Of all the quarterback prospects, Stroud was the cleanest. He doesn’t quite have the pizzazz of Bryce Young, Anthony Richardson, or even Levis (though it’s there in spurts), but he does all of the stuff that really matters, that adds up to consistency, efficiency and wins at the highest level.

    Houston weren’t done there. They dealt the 12th pick in the draft and a first-round pick in next year’s draft with the Cardinals to grab the third choice in the draft, selecting Anderson, the top edge-defender on the majority of draft boards – and a linchpin for the team’s new-look defense.

    The Texans’ roster is still a long, long way from being good enough to compete for a division title. But by adding Stroud and Anderson they now have cornerstones on either side of the ball.

    Philadelphia Eagles

    At what point does Roger Goodell just walk to the podium and announce “‘I am vetoing the Eagles pick. Howie Roseman can’t keep getting away with this”?

    So long as Goodell suppresses his inner Jessie Pinkman, Roseman, the Eagles general manager, will continue to lord over the draft process.

    I mean, seriously? How? First of all, the Eagles’ made the aggressive move to jump up a spot to grab Georgia defensive lineman Jalen Carter, for the lowly price of a fourth-round pick.

    Carter was one of the most biggest questions in the draft. He was the finest lineman on the best defense in football for two straight years. On Georgia’s historic 2021 unit – four of whom now play for the Eagles! – he was the standout player. Had he entered the draft last season, he would have been a favorite to go first overall.

    Off-the-field issues and questions about his football character gave some teams reservations. On the field, there were no questions. He is, in essence, Thanos on a football field: Too big, too quick, too strong for any player to contain him.

    Roseman took a gamble on the upside. The Eagles have one of the two most talented rosters in the NFC. With Jalen Hurts locked in a long-term deal at quarterback, they expect to contend for titles for the next season five years, at least. They won’t be drafting anywhere near the Top 10 again in the near future barring, an injury to their star quarterback. Roseman used the rare opportunity to grab a blue-chip prospect at the top of the draft, who just so happens to line up at the team’s biggest position of need and may be the most gifted player in the entire class.

    And that wasn’t all. Nolan Smith, Carter’s teammate at Georgia, slipped all the way from a top-10 projection to the Eagles’ second first-round selection with the 30th. It was the steal of the night, and will add another weapon to the Eagles’ formidable defensive line. Smith is the most explosive get-off-and-go pass-rusher in the class, who is a little shorter and a hair lighter than the NFL prototype.

    This offseason, the NFL’s leader in pressures and sacks a year ago lost one stud (Javon Hargrave) along their defensive line and gained two potential stars. Good luck, everyone else.

    Running backs

    Call it a comeback. The Falcons selected Texas running back Bijan Robinson with the eighth overall pick before the Lions offered the shocker of the night, tabbing Alabama’s Jahmyr Gibbs at No 12. Robinson, at least, was expected to go in the Top 10. But Gibbs was considered by many to be a fringe first-rounder who could sneak into the 20s.

    It’s the first time a running back has been drafted in the Top 20 since Saquon Barkley in 2018. And on Thursday two! And they both went before any receiver.

    Will the football nerds ever recover? The notion that running backs don’t matter has become a staple of the data-driven movement within the NFL. It has some validity. In certain schemes, the running back is the most interchangeable position on the field – but only in those particular schemes. And the position does carry an outsized injury risk, which always makes a first-round investment risky.

    The modern history of selecting first-round running backs has been iffy. Often, teams wind up with good players, but get forced into either letting them walk or offering contracts that become an burden on their salary cap.

    Neither Robinson nor Gibbs are pure runners, though. They’re matchup pieces, offensive weapons who can flex across the formation and make an impact in the passing game as receivers.

    The NFL is a matchup league. Plenty of oxygen is spent on Xs and Os, but most teams in the NFL run the same stuff. It’s about having pieces that can create matchup chaos or who have the individual skills to separate one-on-one. The league has been really creative with how its uses fungible players who can move from the backfield to a receiver spot, whether that’s a running back pushing out or a receiver like Deebo Samuel moving into the backfield.

    Old-school, downhill, thumping running backs may not matter. They may be interchangeable. But talented, near-positionless offensive pieces are not.

    Buffalo Bills

    Adding tight end Dalton Kincaid feels a little like putting a hat on a hat for the Bills. They already have Dawson Knox, a receiver-first tight end with a good two-man rapport with quarterback Josh Allen.

    The Bills didn’t need Kincaid. But his selection feels like a signifier of something broader. It’s clear the Bills have hit on an idea: If they can’t slow and stop the Chiefs (or Bengals) offense in January, they’re going to have to outscore them.

    It’s never a bad idea to add more pieces around Allen. By the end of last season, the Bills’ offense looked stale. It relied too much on Allen and heroball. They’ll have time over the next two days to add extra pieces on the offensive line and defense, a necessity heading into next season. But grabbing an athletic matchup piece who can function, ostensibly, as a big receiver over the middle of the field will bring fresh ideas to an offense that’s in need of some.

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    #NFL #draft #winners #Texans #Eagles #moves
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Alabama’s Bryce Young taken with No 1 pick in NFL draft by Carolina Panthers

    Alabama’s Bryce Young taken with No 1 pick in NFL draft by Carolina Panthers

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    Quarterbacks dominated the first part of the NFL draft.

    Bryce Young, CJ Stroud and Anthony Richardson were among the top four picks Thursday night, an expected result in a league where teams know finding a franchise QB is the quickest path to success.

    The Carolina Panthers selected Young, the slender and dynamic Alabama quarterback, with the No 1 pick, seven weeks after making a blockbuster trade with Chicago to move up to get their choice.

    First-round draft selections

    The Panthers chose the 2021 Heisman Trophy winner over Ohio State’s Stroud, Florida’s Richardson and Kentucky’s Will Levis. New coach Frank Reich said earlier in the week that the organization reached a consensus Monday after several weeks of deliberation.

    Stroud didn’t have to wait long. He went No 2 to the Houston Texans, who then made a blockbuster deal with Arizona to acquire the No 3 pick and selected Alabama edge rusher Will Anderson Jr.

    Richardson then went at No 4 to the Indianapolis Colts, who will begin a sixth straight season with a different starting QB.

    Heading into the draft, there was no consensus beyond the No 1 pick.

    A dual-threat playmaker with a strong arm and an elite combination of instincts and intelligence, Young also possesses the intangibles and characteristics coaches desire, including leadership ability and a strong work ethic.

    But the biggest question about Young is his size. He measured at 5ft 10in 1/8 and weighed 204lbs at the combine. Though he dominated the SEC, some scouts and coaches fear Young may not be able to physically withstand all the hits in the NFL.

    The Panthers couldn’t pass up his superior skills.

    Kyler Murray, the No 1 overall pick in 2019, is the only other QB since 2003 to be selected in the first round after weighing in at 207 pounds or less at the combine.

    “I’m confident in my abilities,” Young said Wednesday. “I don’t know how to play the game another way. I’ve been this size relative to the people around me my entire life. I focus on what I control, and I can’t grow. That doesn’t fall into that category. I can’t get any taller. I focus on myself. I’m confident in myself with what I’ve been able to do and I’m excited for the work it’s going to take.”

    The Panthers have sought an answer at quarterback since moving on from Cam Newton, who was the No 1 overall pick in 2011 and the NFL MVP in 2015 when he led the Panthers to a 15-1 record and a Super Bowl appearance.

    Young had a spectacular career at Alabama and the Panthers are hoping he can deliver the franchise’s first Lombardi Trophy. He played in a pro-style offense under offensive coordinator Bill O’Brien, the former Texans head coach who has returned to the NFL to run New England’s offense.

    Young threw for 4,872 yards with 47 touchdowns and seven interceptions in his first season starting as a sophomore in 2021. Last season, he had 3,328 yards passing with 32 TDs and five picks while playing with a new supporting cast.

    Stroud’s stock had seemingly dropped after reports that he scored poorly in the S2 Cognition test surfaced recently. He told the AP earlier in the day he didn’t know where he would end up going, even saying it could be top 20.

    Instead, Stroud, a finalist for the Heisman Trophy the past two seasons, goes to Houston to help the rebuilding Texans move past Deshaun Watson.

    Richardson might have the most upside of all the QBs in this draft class but he has the least experience. Colts owner Jim Irsay is fond of Philadelphia Eagles QB Jalen Hurts and Richardson has similar playmaking ability.

    He’ll play for Shane Steichen, who was the offensive coordinator in Philadelphia when Hurts developed into an MVP runner-up.

    Defense-needy Seattle took Illinois cornerback Devon Witherspoon at No 5 and the Cardinals moved up to No 6 to select Ohio State offensive lineman Paris Johnson. Las Vegas then chose Texas Tech edge Tyree Wilson and Atlanta made Bijan Robinson the first running back taken in the top 10 since Saquon Barkley went No 2 to the Giants in 2018.

    NFC champion Philadelphia moved up one spot to take troubled Georgia defensive tackle Jalen Carter at No 9 and Chicago went with Tennessee offensive lineman Darnell Wright with the 10th pick.

    At No 11, the Titans passed on Levis for Northwestern offensive lineman Peter Skoronski. Levis and Tennessee’s Hendon Hooker could make it five QBs in the first round a year after Kenny Pickett (No 20) was the only signal-caller to go in the first round.

    The Tampa Bay Buccaneers also passed on Levis at No 19, taking Pitt defensive tackle Calijah Kancey.

    It took until the 20th pick for the first wide receiver to go. The Seahawks chose Jaxon Smith-Njigba. That started a run of four wideouts in a row. The Chargers then took Quentin Johnston, the Ravens grabbed Zay Flowers to team up with Odell Beckham Jr, and the Vikings added Jordan Addison to go with Justin Jefferson.

    Two months after the hometown Kansas City Chiefs celebrated another Super Bowl title with a downtown parade, a sea of red-clad fans lined up in the streets where the century-old Union Station served as the backdrop for the draft.

    Super Bowl MVP Patrick Mahomes and All-Pro tight end Travis Kelce walked on stage with the Vince Lombardi Trophy and riled up the crowd before turning it over to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell.

    Mahomes implored fans to scream louder – they did. Kelce asked if they wanted to trade up for the No 1 pick.

    But the Chiefs don’t need a QB. Carolina, Houston and Indianapolis did.

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    #Alabamas #Bryce #Young #pick #NFL #draft #Carolina #Panthers
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • RBI issues draft rules for lending, borrowing of govt securities

    RBI issues draft rules for lending, borrowing of govt securities

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    New Delhi: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday issued draft guidelines for lending and borrowing government securities. It is aimed at improving liquidity and price discovery in the market.

    The central bank had first announced the borrowing and lending of government securities earlier this month while announcing the monetary policy.

    “Comments on the Draft Directions are invited from banks, market participants, and other interested parties by March 17, 2023,” the RBI said in a statement on Friday.

    RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das on February 8 proposed the borrowing and lending of government securities to improve liquidity and price discovery in the securities market.

    “This will provide investors an avenue to deploy their ideal securities, enhance portfolio returns, and facilitate wider participation,” he had said at that time.

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    #RBI #issues #draft #rules #lending #borrowing #govt #securities

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Supreme Court could not identify who shared draft abortion opinion

    Supreme Court could not identify who shared draft abortion opinion

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    supreme court new york gun law 66424

    The high court also released a 20-page report of the investigation, announced by Chief Justice John Roberts last May immediately after POLITICO’s publication of the draft opinion and conducted by Supreme Court Marshal Gail Curley.

    “No one confessed to publicly disclosing the document and none of the available forensic and other evidence provided a basis for identifying any individual as the source of the document,” Curley’s report said. “All personnel who had access to the draft opinion signed sworn affidavits affirming they did not disclose the draft opinion nor know anything about who did.”

    While not pinning blame for the leak on any individual, the review found that several court staffers had been cavalier in their handling of sensitive information, including about the abortion case in question, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.

    “Some individuals admitted to investigators that they told their spouse or partner about the draft Dobbs opinion and the vote count, in violation of the Court’s confidentiality rules,” the report said. “Several personnel told investigators they had shared confidential details about their work more generally with their spouses and some indicated they thought it permissible to provide such information to their spouses. Some personnel handled the Dobbs draft in ways that deviated from their standard process for handling draft opinions.”

    Curley’s investigation found no indication that the early disclosure of the opinion was the result of a hack or electronic intrusion, but added that “investigators cannot rule out the possibility” that the draft emerged because it was left in a public place inside or outside the court.

    Curley said investigators ran down various suggestions in public social media posts that particular law clerks were responsible for the leak, but found nothing to suggest that speculation was true.

    “Investigators looked closely into any connections between employees and reporters. They especially scrutinized any contacts with anyone associated with Politico. Investigators also assessed the wide array of public speculation, mostly on social media, about any individual who may have disclosed the document. Several law clerks were named in various posts,” the report said. “In their inquiries, the investigators found nothing to substantiate any of the social media allegations regarding the disclosure.”

    The final majority opinion the court released in June in Dobbs was largely identical to the draft Justice Samuel Alito wrote and POLITICO reported on more than a month earlier. The 5-4 vote to overturn Roe v. Wade was the same as the internal vote count POLITICO reported on in May.

    The court’s statement Thursday emphasized the thoroughness of the probe and said former Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff was retained to review Curley’s work. Chertoff, a widely-respected former federal appeals court judge before joining President George W. Bush’s Cabinet, said there was little else the court could do to solve the mystery.

    “The court has already taken steps to increase security and tighten controls regarding the handling of sensitive documents,” Chertoff wrote. “More significantly, the Chief Justice has also directed a comprehensive review of the Court’s information and document security protocols to mitigate the risk of future incidents….I cannot identify any additional useful investigative measures.”

    Despite the court’s assurances, questions about the rigor of the investigation are likely to linger. Neither the report nor Chertoff’s statement indicates whether the justices themselves were interviewed or whether they disclosed the draft or the vote count to their spouses. A Supreme Court spokesperson did not respond to a query about whether the justices were questioned.

    As word spread Thursday of the probe’s inconclusive result, some prominent Republicans sharply criticized the court’s failure to identify the source of the disclosure.

    “This is inexcusable,” Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) wrote on Twitter. “It means brazen attempts like this one to change the Court’s decisions—from within—will become more common. Someone ought to resign for this.”

    Hawley, who served as a law clerk to Chief Justice John Roberts, also said the leak had endangered the lives of “pregnancy care center volunteers [and] the justices themselves.”

    Former President Donald Trump called for the journalists involved in the POLITICO story to be drawn into the investigation.

    “Go to the reporter & ask him/her who it was. If not given the answer, put whoever in jail until the answer is given,” Trump wrote on Truth Social, a social media site he co-owns. “Stop playing games, this leaking cannot be allowed to happen. It won’t take long before the name of this slime is revealed!…Arrest the reporter, publisher, editor – you’ll get your answer fast. Stop playing games and wasting time!”

    Trump’s remarks drew a pointed retort from President Joe Biden’s White House, which opposed any efforts to question reporters.

    “The freedom of the press is part of the bedrock of American democracy,” White House spokesperson Andrew Bates said in a statement shared exclusively with POLITICO. “Calling for egregious abuses of power in order to suppress the Constitutional rights of reporters is an insult to the rule of law and undermines fundamental American values and traditions. Instead, it’s the responsibility of all leaders to protect First Amendment rights. These views are not who we are as a country, and they are what we stand against in the world.”

    Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) deplored the leak but painted the episode as part of a broader decline in ethics at the high court and urged Americans not to lose sight of the substance of the court’s ruling overturning abortion rights.

    “The leak of the majority draft opinion in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case was an unacceptable breach of the Supreme Court’s confidentiality and trust,” Durbin said in a statement. “It’s important that we address serious concerns about the Court’s lack of transparency and refusal to adopt a binding code of ethics….As the Marshal of the Supreme Court continues her investigation into the leak, it’s important that we allow her process to continue.”

    While Curley’s report asserts that the high court’s confidentiality policies clearly forbade disclosing a draft opinion, she suggests that there might be merit in making it a crime to disclose internal court documents. Some Republican legislators have suggested such a step.

    “Bills were introduced in the last Congress which would expressly prohibit the disclosure of the Supreme Court’s non-public case-related information to anyone outside the Court. Consideration should be given to supporting such legislation,” Curley wrote.

    Chris Cadelago and Marianne Levine contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )