Supreme Court of the United States

Today at the Court - Friday, Nov 15, 2024


  • The Supreme Court Building is open to the public from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
  • The Justices will meet in a private conference to discuss cases and vote on petitions for review.
  • The Court will release an order list on Monday, November 18.
  • The Court may announce opinions on Friday, November 22. Opinions will be posted on the homepage after announcement from the Bench.
  • Courtroom Lectures available within the next 30 days.
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Oral Arguments

Week of Monday, November 11


Tuesday, November 12
       
Velazquez v. Garland, Att'y Gen. (23-929)
       
Delligatti v. United States (23-825)

Wednesday, November 13
       
NVIDIA Corp. v. E. Ohman J:or Fonder AB (23-970)

 

The audio recordings and transcripts of all oral arguments heard by the Supreme Court of the United States are posted on this website on the same day an argument is heard by the Court. Same-day transcripts are considered official but subject to final review.


Earlier Transcripts | Earlier Audio

Recent Decisions


November 04, 2024
       
Hamm v. Smith (23-167) (Per Curiam)
The judgment is vacated and the case is remanded to the Eleventh Circuit to clarify the basis for its decision affirming the District Court’s judgment that Smith is ineligible for the death penalty due to intellectual disability.



More Opinions...

Did You Know...

A Court Decision Leads to Broadway


Lorraine Vivian Hansberry based her 1959 play, A Raisin in the Sun, on her family’s experience purchasing a home in the Washington Park subdivision of Chicago, Illinois, which maintained a racially restrictive covenant. After her father, Carl, put a down payment on a home in the neighborhood, white neighbors sued to enforce the covenant and won based on a ruling in a previous class action lawsuit. Hansberry appealed to the Supreme Court, and in Hansberry  v. Lee (1940), the Justices ruled that while racially restrictive covenants were legal, Hansberry’s suit could be contested because Hansberry’s interests were not adequately represented in the prior class action lawsuit. In 2010, Chicago named the house after Ms. Hansberry and designated it a city landmark.

The Court returned to the question of racially restrictive covenants a few years later, in Shelley v. Kraemer (1948), ruling that state court enforcement of them was a violation of the Equal Protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

 

Dramatist Lorraine Hansberry at the opening of her play, A Raisin in the Sun, in New Haven, Connecticut, 1959. Ms. Hansberry became the first Black female author to have a play on Broadway and it received four Tony Award nominations the following year, including Best Play.
Dramatist Lorraine Hansberry at the opening of her play, A Raisin in the Sun, in New Haven, Connecticut, 1959. Ms. Hansberry became the first Black female author to have a play on Broadway and it received four Tony Award nominations the following year, including Best Play.
New York Public Library


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