Sotomayor makes rare break with Ketanji Brown Jackson
Digest more
Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote a scathing dissent of the court's ruling allowing for people to be deported to "potentially dangerous countries without notice."
The former dean of Harvard Law School emerges as more likely than her liberal colleagues to make common cause with conservatives.
12d
The New Republic on MSNSotomayor Warns No One Is Safe After Birthright Citizenship RulingLiberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor torched the Supreme Court for siding with Trump on birthright citizenship—and putting every civil right under attack.
Her dissenting position from a 7-2 Supreme Court rebuke of a rogue judge would harm the judiciary.
11don MSNOpinion
This decision may well save public schools from themselves by encouraging a return to core educational priorities.
Explore more
Who is Sonia Sotomayor? Sonia Sotomayor is the 111th associate justice to serve on the Supreme Court. She previously served on the New York-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit.
The Supreme Court's conservative justices sided with the DHS, allowing, for now, the administration to deport to third countries.
In a scathing dissent against the Supreme Court’s birthright citizenship decision on Friday, Justice Sonia Sotomayor is clear about what just happened: The Trump administration set a trap for ...
The Justice was on campus for the dedication of Sonia Sotomayor Hall, formerly known as 36 University Place. In the announcement regarding the renaming, Eisgruber described Sotomayor as a “trailblazing student, a loyal alumnus, a University trustee, and an extraordinary jurist.”. Sonia Sotomayor Hall houses the Emma Bloomberg Center for Access and Opportunity, the Center for Career ...
"If this Court wishes to permit the Government to flout the fundamental rights guaranteed by the Due Process Clause, it cannot avoid accountability for that lawlessness." The post 'The administration has the Supreme Court on speed dial': Sotomayor singles out Alito and hurls invective at SCOTUS colleagues in third-country deportation case dissent first appeared on Law & Crime.