NPR's A Martinez talks to Amanda Frost, a law professor at the University of Virginia, who testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Supreme Court ethics. The Supreme Court has adopted its ...
In private meetings and memos, the justices made new rules for themselves — then split on whether they could, or should, be enforced. Credit...Chantal Jahchan Supported by By Jodi Kantor and Abbie ...
The code of conduct issued on Monday, following reports of undisclosed travel and gifts, includes no enforcement mechanism and lets individual justices decide ethics questions for themselves. By Adam ...
The U.S. Supreme Court’s refusal to adopt a written code of ethics is a 50-year-old story that has recently gotten lots of fresh attention — for good reasons attributable to the justices’ own poor ...
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday announced it has formally adopted what it called a new code of conduct following allegations of ethics lapses, although its impact is likely to be limited ...
ProPublica reported April 6 that U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas accepted tens of thousands of dollars in gifts from a Texas billionaire without including them on financial disclosures. The ...
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is the first Black woman to serve on the Supreme Court — and she's determined not to be the last. Jackson's new memoir, "Lovely One," which will be released Tuesday, ...
The Supreme Court has adopted its first code of ethics. All nine Supreme Court justices signed on to the self-imposed code seven months after the public learned that two justices had accepted lavish ...