Ed.
Note:
A
weekly
roundup
of
just
a
few
items
from
Howard
Bashman’s
How
Appealing
blog,
the
Web’s
first
blog
devoted
to
appellate
litigation.
Check
out
these
stories
and
more
at
How
Appealing.
“Rastafarian
asks
Supreme
Court
to
let
him
sue
prison
guards
for
shaving
off
his
dreadlocks;
Religious
groups
argue
that
a
law
protecting
prisoners’
religious
rights
is
insufficient
without
the
right
to
sue;
The
state
says
that
would
make
it
even
harder
to
staff
prisons”: Maureen
Groppe
of
USA
Today
has this
report.
“Justice
Ketanji
Brown
Jackson’s
memoir
explores
prejudice,
parenting;
In
a
deeply
personal
book,
the
first
Black
woman
on
the
Supreme
Court
writes
about
struggling
to
understand
her
daughter’s
neurological
differences”: Ann
E.
Marimow
of
The
Washington
Post
has this
report.
“Pennsylvania
voters
can
cast
a
provisional
ballot
if
their
mail
ballot
is
rejected,
court
says”: Marc
Levy
of
The
Associated
Press
has this
report on an
unpublished
ruling that
a
divided
three-judge
panel
of
the Commonwealth
Court
of
Pennsylvania issued
today.
“Why
Trump’s
‘leave
it
to
the
states’
abortion
stance
ties
him
in
knots”: Columnist
Jackie
Calmes
has this
essay online
at
The
Los
Angeles
Times.
“The
Justices
Know
the
Supreme
Court’s
Ethics
Code
Is
a
Joke;
In
a
new
interview,
Justice
Ketanji
Brown
Jackson
expressed
support
for
a
more
robust
code
of
ethics
for
Supreme
Court
justices”: Madiba
K.
Dennie
has this
essay online
at
Balls
and
Strikes.
“Fight
over
$70,000
ring
in
Massachusetts
tests
rules
of
engagement”: Nate
Raymond
of
Reuters
has this
report.