PodcastsBusinessThe High Court Report

The High Court Report

SCOTUS Oral Arguments
The High Court Report
Latest episode

460 episodes

  • The High Court Report

    Case Preview: Trump v. Barbara | Born Here, But Not American?

    03/20/2026 | 14 mins.
    Trump v. Barbara | Case No. 25-365 | Docket Link: Here | Argument: 4/1/26
    Question Presented: Does the Executive Order denying birthright citizenship to children of undocumented or temporary-visa mothers comply with the Fourteenth Amendment's Citizenship Clause?
    Overview: President Trump's Executive Order attempts to redefine birthright citizenship, challenging 150 years of constitutional understanding that birth on American soil—with narrow exceptions—creates citizenship.
    Posture: District court enjoined Order; First Circuit unanimously affirmed; Supreme Court granted certiorari before judgment.
    Main Arguments:
    Government:
    (1) "Subject to the jurisdiction" requires complete political allegiance, not mere obedience to law;
    (2) Founding-era commentators excluded children of "transient aliens" from birthright citizenship;
    (3) Wong Kim Ark addressed only domiciled aliens—temporary visitors and undocumented immigrants fall outside that holding.

    Families:
    (1) English common law granted citizenship based on birth, not parentage—the Framers enshrined that rule;
    (2) Wong Kim Ark specifically rejected any domicile requirement, holding temporary visitors fall under U.S. jurisdiction;
    (3) 8 U.S.C. § 1401(a) independently guarantees citizenship based on prevailing 1940 understanding.

    Implications:
    Government victory transforms citizenship from a birthright into a privilege contingent on parental immigration status—potentially questioning the citizenship of millions born to immigrant parents over generations.
    Family victory preserves 150-year constitutional bedrock: birth on American soil, with narrow exceptions, makes you American.

    The Fine Print:
    Fourteenth Amendment, Section 1: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."
    8 U.S.C. § 1401(a): "The following shall be nationals and citizens of the United States at birth: (a) a person born in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof."

    Primary Cases:
    United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898): U.S.-born child of Chinese immigrant parents obtained citizenship at birth; the Citizenship Clause enshrines the common-law rule of birthright citizenship.
    Elk v. Wilkins (1884): Tribal Indians born on American soil lacked citizenship because they owed allegiance to their tribes—a sovereign-to-sovereign exception inapplicable to ordinary immigrants.
  • The High Court Report

    Case Preview: Pitchford v. Cain | Blocked, Then Blamed: Jury Selection Bind

    03/19/2026 | 13 mins.
    Pitchford v. Cain | Case No. 24-7351 | Docket Link: Here | Argument: 3/31/26
    Overview: Death row inmate Terry Pitchford argues prosecutor Doug Evans deliberately excluded Black jurors in his 2006 capital murder trial and that no court ever fairly examined that claim because Mississippi's courts called it forfeited.
    Question Presented: Whether Mississippi's courts unreasonably declared forfeited a racial jury-selection challenge the trial court itself blocked.
    Posture: Fifth Circuit affirmed denial of federal habeas relief; Supreme Court granted certiorari.
    Main Arguments:
    Pitchford:
    (1) Three on-the-record Batson objections cannot constitute intentional waiver of a known constitutional right;
    (2) Mississippi wrongly blocked comparative juror analysis on appeal, contradicting Miller-El v. Dretke (2005) and Snyder v. Louisiana (2008);
    (3) Batson violations constitute structural error requiring automatic reversal.

    Mississippi:
    (1) Mississippi courts applied a lawful, long-standing rule requiring defendants to raise pretext arguments before the trial court or forfeit them; (2) Pitchford's own post-conviction filings admitted he failed to preserve the Batson record, and his trial attorney swore under oath she never raised those arguments; (3) The cert grant covers only the AEDPA waiver question — not the underlying Batson merits or the form of habeas relief.

    Implications:
    A Pitchford victory sends the case back to Mississippi courts for the first Batson Step Three examination in nineteen years — testing whether Evans's race-neutral explanations for striking four Black jurors amounted to pretext.
    A Mississippi victory leaves Pitchford on death row and establishes that AEDPA deference shields state forfeiture rulings even when trial courts themselves foreclosed the underlying challenge — chilling Batson enforcement at Step Three nationwide.

    The Fine Print:
    28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) (AEDPA): "An application for a writ of habeas corpus...shall not be granted with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings unless the adjudication of the claim resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law...or resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts."
    U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1: "No State shall...deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."

    Primary Cases:
    Batson v. Kentucky (1986): The Equal Protection Clause prohibits prosecutors from exercising peremptory strikes to exclude jurors on the basis of race; courts must assess purposeful discrimination through a three-step inquiry.
    Flowers v. Mississippi (2019): Courts must consider a prosecutor's history of racially discriminatory strikes in assessing a Batson challenge; the same prosecutor Doug Evans removed 41 of 42 Black jurors across six trials of Curtis Flowers before the Court reversed.
  • The High Court Report

    Case Preview: Jules v. Andre Balazs Properties | Paused for Arbitration — Does the Court Stay in Charge??

    03/18/2026 | 12 mins.
    Jules v. Andre Balazs Properties | Case No. 25-83 | Docket Link: Here | Argument: 3/30/26
    Overview: A former hotel security guard lost his arbitration entirely, then argued the federal court he originally chose lacked power to confirm the award — forcing the Court to resolve when federal courts retain post-arbitration jurisdiction.
    Question Presented: When a federal court pauses a lawsuit for arbitration, does it keep the power to confirm or throw out the arbitration result — even without independent jurisdictional grounds.
    Posture: S.D.N.Y. confirmed award; Second Circuit affirmed; Supreme Court granted cert on the jurisdictional question.
    Main Arguments:
    Jules (Petitioner): (1) FAA Section 8 expressly grants "retain jurisdiction" language for maritime cases only — Congress deliberately omitted it from Sections 9 and 10; (2) Badgerow v. Walters (2022) forecloses jurisdiction because the confirm-or-vacate application lacks any independent federal basis on its face; (3) the jurisdictional-anchor theory incentivizes pointless federal lawsuits, directly undermining the FAA's purpose of keeping arbitrable disputes out of court
    Balazs Respondents: (1) 28 U.S.C. § 1367's supplemental jurisdiction statute — enacted separately from the FAA — grants courts power over all related claims in the same pending case, no new jurisdictional basis needed; (2) Badgerow addressed only freestanding new post-arbitration lawsuits, not pending federal cases already vested with original jurisdiction; (3) Jules's theory forces two simultaneous court tracks — federal appeal of the pre-arbitration order plus state-court post-arbitration proceedings — creating procedural chaos Congress never endorsed

    Implications: A Jules victory forces winning arbitration parties to re-file in state court, pay new fees, re-serve defendants, and educate a new court from scratch — benefiting recalcitrant defendants. A respondents' victory preserves the rule in seven circuits: one court, one proceeding, one appeal resolves the entire dispute, giving businesses and employees certainty about where arbitration enforcement lands.
    The Fine Print:
    FAA Section 8, 9 U.S.C. § 8: "the court shall then have jurisdiction to direct the parties to proceed with the arbitration and shall retain jurisdiction to enter its decree upon the award"
    28 U.S.C. § 1367(a): "in any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction, the district courts shall have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to claims in the action within such original jurisdiction that they form part of the same case or controversy under Article III"

    Primary Cases:
    Badgerow v. Walters (2022): Federal courts cannot use a "look-through" method to establish jurisdiction over FAA Section 9 and 10 applications — the application itself must reveal an independent jurisdictional basis
    Cortez Byrd Chips, Inc. v. Bill Harbert Construction Co. (2000): The court with power to stay an action under FAA Section 3 holds the further power to confirm any ensuing arbitration award
  • The High Court Report

    Case Preview: Abouammo v. United States | Where's Your Trial, Home Turf or Government's Pick?

    03/17/2026 | 15 mins.
    Abouammo v. United States | Case No. 25-5146 | Docket Link: Here | Argument: 3/30/36
    Question Presented: Whether venue lies in a district where no offense conduct occurred, so long as the statute's intent element contemplates effects that could occur there.
    Overview: Ahmad Abouammo created a fake invoice in his Seattle home during an FBI interview, then emailed it to San Francisco agents. The Court now decides whether prosecutors can try document falsification where the targeted investigation sits, not where the defendant acted.
    Posture: Ninth Circuit upheld Northern District of California venue; Supreme Court granted certiorari December 2025.
    Main Arguments:
    Abouammo:
    (1) Venue tracks the offense's essential conduct elements — falsification occurred entirely in Seattle;
    (2) Intent elements cannot anchor venue because mental state does not constitute conduct;
    (3) The Founders embedded the vicinage right twice in the Constitution specifically to reject effects-based prosecution

    United States:
    (1) The Constitution permits venue where a crime's effects are intentionally directed and felt, not just where the defendant stood;
    (2) Section 1519 defines an inchoate offense — like conspiracy — and the targeted investigation's location forms part of the crime's commission;
    (3) Even under Abouammo's own theory, emailing the fake PDF to San Francisco created a duplicate falsified record there, independently satisfying venue

    Implications: Abouammo victory anchors venue to a person's physical location, giving protection against distant prosecution. On the other hand, it hamstrings prosecutors from bringing digital obstruction crimes that reflects today's technology realities. Government victory allows prosecution in the district of any targeted investigation, giving federal prosecutors broad forum-selection power for any obstruction-related offense nationwide.
    The Fine Print:
    18 U.S.C. § 1519: "Whoever knowingly alters, destroys, mutilates, conceals, covers up, falsifies, or makes a false entry in any record, document, or tangible object with the intent to impede, obstruct, or influence the investigation or proper administration of any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States . . . shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both."
    U.S. Const. Amend. VI: "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law."

    Primary Cases:
    United States v. Cabrales (1998): Venue tracks the location of the specific prohibited conduct — not collateral circumstances; money laundering in Florida could not face trial in Missouri simply because the underlying drug proceeds originated there.
    Ford v. United States (1927): Acts done outside a jurisdiction but intended to produce and producing detrimental effects within it warrant prosecuting the defendant as if present at the effect — the foundational intent-and-effects venue principle.
  • The High Court Report

    Case Preview: Flower Foods, Inc. v. Brock | Interstate Worker or Local Laborer?

    03/16/2026 | 12 mins.
    Flower Foods, Inc. v. Brock | Case No. 24-935 | Docket Link: Here | Argument: 3/25/26
    Question Presented: Whether last-mile delivery drivers who never cross state lines qualify as transportation workers "engaged in interstate commerce" under FAA Section 1.
    Overview: Flowers Foods required its Colorado bread delivery driver, Angelo Brock, to arbitrate wage disputes. Brock never crossed a state line. The Court must decide whether the 1925 FAA's transportation worker exemption covers last-mile drivers.
    Posture: D. Colo. denied arbitration; Tenth Circuit affirmed; four-circuit split prompted cert grant.
    Main Arguments:
    Flowers Foods (Petitioner):
    (1) Section 1 covers only workers who directly and actively move goods across state or international borders;
    (2) historical 1925 labor schemes excluded purely local intrastate workers;
    (3) the Tenth Circuit's multi-factor test turns simple arbitration threshold questions into costly mini-trials

    Angelo Brock (Respondent):
    (1) century of Supreme Court precedent defined last-mile workers finishing an interstate goods journey as "engaged in interstate commerce";
    (2) seamen and railroad employees in 1925 included last-mile workers who never crossed a border;
    (3) Flowers argued its last-mile drivers qualify as interstate workers under the Motor Carrier Act — and won — directly contradicting its position here

    Implications: A Flowers win strips court access from last-mile drivers at FedEx, UPS, Amazon Logistics, and the U.S. Postal Service — forcing employment disputes into private arbitration and shielding company labor practices from judicial review. A Brock win preserves court access for workers serving more than 170 million delivery addresses and anchors a century of interstate commerce precedent in the modern gig economy.
    The Fine Print:
    9 U.S.C. § 1: "nothing herein contained shall apply to contracts of employment of seamen, railroad employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce"
    9 U.S.C. § 2: "A written provision in any...contract evidencing a transaction involving commerce to settle by arbitration a controversy...shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable"

    Primary Cases:
    Southwest Airlines Co. v. Saxon (2022): Transportation workers must play a direct and necessary role in the free flow of goods across borders to qualify for the FAA Section 1 exemption
    Bissonnette v. LePage Bakeries Park St., LLC (2024): Transportation workers need not work for a transportation industry company to qualify for Section 1, but must actively engage in transporting goods across borders

More Business podcasts

About The High Court Report

The High Court Report makes Supreme Court decisions accessible to everyone. We deliver comprehensive SCOTUS coverage without the legal jargon or partisan spin—just clear analysis that explains how these cases affect your life, business, and community. What you get: Case previews and breakdowns, raw oral argument audio, curated key exchanges, detailed opinion analysis, and expert commentary from a practicing attorney who's spent 12 years in courtrooms arguing the same types of cases the Supreme Court hears. Why it works: Whether you need a focused 10-minute update or a deep constitutional dive, episodes are designed for busy professionals, engaged citizens, and anyone who wants to understand how the Court shapes America. When we publish: 3-5 episodes weekly during the Court's October-June term, with summer coverage of emergency orders and retrospective analysis. Growing archive: Oral arguments back to 2020 and expanding, so you can hear how landmark cases unfolded and track the Court's evolution. Your direct line to understanding the Supreme Court—accessible, thorough, and grounded in real legal expertise.**
Podcast website

Listen to The High Court Report, Proven Podcast and many other podcasts from around the world with the radio.net app

Get the free radio.net app

  • Stations and podcasts to bookmark
  • Stream via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
  • Supports Carplay & Android Auto
  • Many other app features

The High Court Report: Podcasts in Family

Social
v8.8.3 | © 2007-2026 radio.de GmbH
Generated: 3/21/2026 - 8:15:31 PM