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Four major decisions were issued by the Supreme Court today June 29, 2026, but no decision in the birthright citizenship case. Here is what you need to know about the decisions so far: 1. Trump v. Lisa Cook: Lisa Cook keeps her seat on the Federal Reserve. The first attempted firing of a Fed Governor in 111 years, blocked.  The court ruled that Trump never gave her the process the law requires: no explanation of the evidence, no chance to respond, no deadline. A social media post demanding she resign isn’t due process.  2. Trump v. Slaughter: Overuled Humphrey’s Executor which was decided 91 years ago, and stripped removal protection from most independent agencies. Independent-agency for-cause protection is dead almost everywhere, except the Federal Reserve, which survives as a special carveout “sanctioned by history.” 3. Chatrie v. United States: Police got a geofence warrant directed at Google: a 150-meter circle around the credit union that had been robbed. The Court held accessing Google Location History is a Fourth Amendment search, even for just two hours, even from a third party. It extends the prior case of Carpenter from cell-site data to app-generated location data and to the geofence context specifically. The Court remanded the warrant’s validity (probable cause + particularity) to the Fourth Circuit, so it didn’t fully resolve the case. 4. Mississippi Secretary of State v. Republican National Committee: The federal election-day statutes set the day by which the electorate must make its choice, i.e., the day for voting but say nothing about when ballots must be received. So Mississippi can count absentee ballots postmarked by election day and received up to five business days later without being preempted. Share like and follow for more legal breakdowns. #SCOTUS #VotingRights #ExecitivePower #LegalAnalysis #BreakingNews
Four major decisions were issued by the Supreme Court today June 29, 2026, but no decision in the birthright citizenship case. Here is what you need to know about the decisions so far: 1. Trump v. Lisa Cook: Lisa Cook keeps her seat on the Federal Reserve. The first attempted firing of a Fed Governor in 111 years, blocked. The court ruled that Trump never gave her the process the law requires: no explanation of the evidence, no chance to respond, no deadline. A social media post demanding she resign isn’t due process. 2. Trump v. Slaughter: Overuled Humphrey’s Executor which was decided 91 years ago, and stripped removal protection from most independent agencies. Independent-agency for-cause protection is dead almost everywhere, except the Federal Reserve, which survives as a special carveout “sanctioned by history.” 3. Chatrie v. United States: Police got a geofence warrant directed at Google: a 150-meter circle around the credit union that had been robbed. The Court held accessing Google Location History is a Fourth Amendment search, even for just two hours, even from a third party. It extends the prior case of Carpenter from cell-site data to app-generated location data and to the geofence context specifically. The Court remanded the warrant’s validity (probable cause + particularity) to the Fourth Circuit, so it didn’t fully resolve the case. 4. Mississippi Secretary of State v. Republican National Committee: The federal election-day statutes set the day by which the electorate must make its choice, i.e., the day for voting but say nothing about when ballots must be received. So Mississippi can count absentee ballots postmarked by election day and received up to five business days later without being preempted. Share like and follow for more legal breakdowns. #SCOTUS #VotingRights #ExecitivePower #LegalAnalysis #BreakingNews

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