The Daily Brief

findcourtcases.com

Learn the legal cases and Supreme Court decisions that shape American life—what happened, what the court decided, and why it matters today. One landmark court decision. Explained in plain English. Every day. Presented by findcourtcases.com, a free legal research library with 4 million+ case summaries, built to make the law more accessible to everyone.

  1. 29/12/2025

    Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)

    Episode 17 — December 29, 2025 Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) Full case summary: https://www.findcourtcases.com/summaries/united-states-supreme-court/plessy-v-ferguson-1896-46pxn8/  Today’s brief covers Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)—the U.S. Supreme Court decision that upheld racial segregation under the doctrine of “separate but equal” and shaped American law for more than half a century. In this episode, we break down how Homer Plessy deliberately challenged Louisiana’s segregated railway law, why the state argued that separating passengers by race was a reasonable exercise of its police power, and how the case reached the Supreme Court. We explain why the majority concluded that segregation did not violate the Thirteenth or Fourteenth Amendments so long as facilities were deemed equal, and how the Court drew a sharp—and controversial—line between legal equality and what it called “social” equality. Finally, we explore the lasting impact of the decision, including Justice Harlan’s powerful dissent warning that the Constitution is “color-blind,” and how Plessy later became a symbol of constitutional failure that would ultimately be repudiated by Brown v. Board of Education. The Daily Brief is a date-stamped snapshot of the law—one landmark court decision, explained in plain English, every day. Presented by ⁠⁠findcourtcases.com⁠⁠, a free legal research library with over 4 million case summaries, built to make the law more accessible to everyone.

    10 min
  2. 27/12/2025

    New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964)

    Episode 15 — December 27, 2025 New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964) Full case summary: https://www.findcourtcases.com/summaries/united-states-supreme-court/new-york-times-company-v-sullivan-1964-46m0c5/  Today’s brief covers New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964)—the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that reshaped defamation law and gave the press broad constitutional protection when criticizing public officials. In this episode, we break down how a civil rights–era advertisement in the New York Times led an Alabama city commissioner to sue for libel, why some statements in the ad were factually inaccurate, and how state courts awarded damages without requiring proof of intent. We explain why the Supreme Court rejected that approach, holding that public officials must prove actual malice—that a statement was made with knowledge of its falsity or reckless disregard for the truth—before they can recover damages. Finally, we explore why the Court saw this demanding standard as essential to protecting free debate on public issues, ensuring that criticism of government officials is not silenced by fear of costly defamation lawsuits, even when the speech is sharp, controversial, or mistaken. The Daily Brief is a date-stamped snapshot of the law—one landmark court decision, explained in plain English, every day. Presented by ⁠⁠findcourtcases.com⁠⁠, a free legal research library with over 4 million case summaries, built to make the law more accessible to everyone.

    11 min
  3. 26/12/2025

    Loving v. Virginia (1967)

    Episode 14 — December 26, 2025 Loving v. Virginia (1967) Full case summary: https://www.findcourtcases.com/summaries/united-states-supreme-court/loving-v-virginia-1967-2lgwm9/  Today’s brief covers Loving v. Virginia (1967)—the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that struck down laws banning interracial marriage and affirmed marriage as a fundamental constitutional right. In this episode, we break down how Mildred Jeter and Richard Loving were prosecuted under Virginia’s antimiscegenation laws after marrying in Washington, D.C., why the state claimed its statutes applied “equally” to both spouses, and how the case forced the Court to confront the role of race in marriage laws. We explain why the justices rejected the idea that equal punishment could save a racially discriminatory law, how strict scrutiny applies to race-based classifications, and why preserving so-called “racial integrity” could never be a legitimate state interest. Finally, we explore the Court’s dual holding that marriage is a fundamental liberty protected by due process—and that denying that right on the basis of race violates the core promise of equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. The Daily Brief is a date-stamped snapshot of the law—one landmark court decision, explained in plain English, every day. Presented by ⁠⁠findcourtcases.com⁠⁠, a free legal research library with over 4 million case summaries, built to make the law more accessible to everyone.

    11 min
  4. 25/12/2025

    New York Times Co. v. United States (1971)

    Episode 13 — December 25, 2025 New York Times Co. v. United States (1971) Full case summary: https://www.findcourtcases.com/summaries/united-states-supreme-court/new-york-times-company-v-united-states-1971-2laj9z/  Today’s brief covers New York Times Co. v. United States (1971)—the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that slammed the door on the government’s attempt to stop the press from publishing the Pentagon Papers. In this episode, we break down how the New York Times and the Washington Post obtained a massive classified Defense Department history of U.S. decision-making in Vietnam, why the Nixon administration rushed into court to block publication, and how the case reached the Supreme Court at breakneck speed. We explain the constitutional idea at the center of the fight—prior restraint, meaning government censorship before something is published—and why the Court said the government carries an extraordinarily heavy burden to justify it. Finally, we explore why the justices concluded that burden wasn’t met here: the government did not make a clear, specific showing of direct and immediate national-security harm that could outweigh the First Amendment’s protection of a free press, and the injunctions were therefore unconstitutional—allowing publication to continue. The Daily Brief is a date-stamped snapshot of the law—one landmark court decision, explained in plain English, every day. Presented by ⁠⁠findcourtcases.com⁠⁠, a free legal research library with over 4 million case summaries, built to make the law more accessible to everyone.

    12 min
  5. 24/12/2025

    Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969)

    Episode 12 — December 24, 2025 Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969) Full case summary: https://www.findcourtcases.com/summaries/united-states-supreme-court/tinker-v-des-moines-independent-community-school-district-1969-2ljuuc/  Today’s brief covers Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969)—the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that defined the free-speech rights of students in public schools. In this episode, we break down how a group of Iowa students wore black armbands to quietly protest the Vietnam War, why school officials banned the armbands and suspended the students, and how the dispute raised a fundamental question about constitutional rights in the classroom. We explain why the Court treated the armbands as symbolic speech, why schools cannot suppress student expression based on discomfort or disagreement alone, and how the justices drew a clear line between protected speech and conduct that materially disrupts school operations. Finally, we explore the lasting rule that emerged from the case: students do not “shed their constitutional rights at the schoolhouse gate,” and school officials may limit speech only when it would substantially interfere with discipline or infringe on the rights of others. The Daily Brief is a date-stamped snapshot of the law—one landmark court decision, explained in plain English, every day. Presented by ⁠⁠findcourtcases.com⁠⁠, a free legal research library with over 4 million case summaries, built to make the law more accessible to everyone.

    11 min
  6. 23/12/2025

    Texas v. Johnson (1989)

    Episode 11 — December 23, 2025 Texas v. Johnson (1989) Full case summary: https://www.findcourtcases.com/summaries/united-states-supreme-court/texas-v-johnson-1989-10ci8j/  Today’s brief covers Texas v. Johnson (1989)—the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision holding that burning the American flag in protest is protected speech under the First Amendment. In this episode, we break down how a political demonstration during the 1984 Republican National Convention led Gregory Lee Johnson to burn a flag outside Dallas City Hall, why Texas prosecuted him under its flag desecration law, and how the case forced the Court to answer a blunt question: can the government punish an act simply because it’s deeply offensive when it’s also clearly political? We explain why the Court treated flag burning as expressive conduct, why Texas’s main justification—protecting the flag’s symbolic value—was ultimately tied to suppressing a message rather than preventing real-world harm, and why the “keep the peace” argument didn’t fit the facts when no actual disturbance occurred. Finally, we explore the principle at the heart of the ruling: the First Amendment doesn’t just protect polite or popular speech—it protects the right to express dissent, even through powerful symbols, even when many people hate what’s being said. The Daily Brief is a date-stamped snapshot of the law—one landmark court decision, explained in plain English, every day. Presented by ⁠⁠findcourtcases.com⁠⁠, a free legal research library with over 4 million case summaries, built to make the law more accessible to everyone.

    11 min

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Learn the legal cases and Supreme Court decisions that shape American life—what happened, what the court decided, and why it matters today. One landmark court decision. Explained in plain English. Every day. Presented by findcourtcases.com, a free legal research library with 4 million+ case summaries, built to make the law more accessible to everyone.