Supreme Court Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch were flown to Italy
These are a few of the things detailed in the annual financial disclosure forms released Wednesday by seven members of the Supreme Court. The paperwork – mandated by federal law – requires members of the judiciary to publicly disclose their personal financial interests over the past year and detail income, investments, gifts and spousal salaries.
And Sotomayor was flown to Edinburgh, Scotland, in July by New York University to partake in its law school’s leadership conference, according to her form, which also said she took trips to St. Louis and Chicago at other points during the year. Of the justices that released their forms on Wednesday, Barrett and Justice Elena Kagan reported taking the most trips – six apiece – with Kagan mostly traveling to US cities to deliver speeches to universities.
France Dernières Nouvelles, France Actualités
Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.
Supreme Court justices release new financial disclosures – but not for Thomas, AlitoA fresh batch of financial records for justices of the U.S. Supreme Court was published by the federal judiciary on Wednesday,
Lire la suite »
Supreme Court justices release new financial disclosures - but not for Thomas, AlitoThe records released Wednesday offer a glimpse into the personal finances of the justices/
Lire la suite »
Man's Bid To Trademark Mocking 'Trump Too Small' Phrase Heads To Supreme Court'Trump too small' references Trump's 2016 campaign exchange Florida senator and then-GOP presidential rival Marco Rubio.
Lire la suite »
Facebook's Supreme Court Receives an Appeal Every 24 SecondsThe Facebook Oversight Board overturned 75% of Meta's initial content moderation decision in 12 high-profile cases disputed last year, per a new report.
Lire la suite »
Utahns have no right against partisan gerrymandering, congressmen tell Supreme CourtIn a brief quietly submitted to the Utah Supreme Court this spring and obtained by The Salt Lake Tribune, Utah’s congressmen laid bear what they think about the redistricting process and the lawsuit alleging the rearranged district boundaries disenfranchise Utah voters.
Lire la suite »
Supreme Court Won’t Hear Industry Challenge to California Offshore Fracking BanThe U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the fossil fuel industry’s challenge to a 2018 court-ordered moratorium on offshore fracking in federal Pacific Ocean waters off the coast of California.
Lire la suite »