This week, the Supreme Court will have the opportunity to right that historic wrong. In 2000, the FDA illegally approved mifepristone under rules that allow the agency to approve drugs that ...
The anti-choice case relies on outlandish legal leaps. And if they can’t win there, they’ll redouble efforts to win the White ...
The Supreme Court’s decision to keep Donald Trump on the ballot, coupled with its consideration of his immunity claim, has ...
A decision by the justices could cut off prescriptions by telemedicine and pills sent by mail, and also have implications for ...
The Supreme Court ruled that low-level drug dealers are ineligible ... "Today, we agree with the Government's view of the criminal-history provision," Justice Elena Kagan wrote for the majority ...
The Supreme Court has ruled that thousands of low-level drug dealers are ineligible ... “Today, we agree with the Government's view of the criminal-history provision,” Justice Elena Kagan ...
Melissa Murray, a law professor at New York University and a host of the Supreme Court podcast “Strict Scrutiny,” is a co-author of “The Trump Indictments: The Historic Charging Documents ...
The plaintiffs in the “morning after pill” case believe life begins at conception—and they’re certain that the Almighty is on their side.
The U.S. Supreme Court ... filed with the court describe the pill's safety in vastly different terms: Medical professionals call it “among the safest medications” ever approved by the FDA ...