235 episodes

Bloomberg Law's Cases and Controversies brings you the latest from the Supreme Court. Each week we preview oral arguments at the Court or feature in-depth interviews. We explore critical legal issues with Supreme Court advocates, judges, law professors, lawyers, and legal journalists. Hosts: Kimberly Robinson and Lydia Wheeler.

Cases and Controversies Bloomberg Industry Group

    • News
    • 3.8 • 139 Ratings

Bloomberg Law's Cases and Controversies brings you the latest from the Supreme Court. Each week we preview oral arguments at the Court or feature in-depth interviews. We explore critical legal issues with Supreme Court advocates, judges, law professors, lawyers, and legal journalists. Hosts: Kimberly Robinson and Lydia Wheeler.

    Programming Note & UnCommon Law Episode: AI Trained on Famous Authors’ Copyrighted Work. They Want Revenge – Part 1

    Programming Note & UnCommon Law Episode: AI Trained on Famous Authors’ Copyrighted Work. They Want Revenge – Part 1

    Cases and Controversies is on hiatus for a bit while we create some great new episodes for you. Until then, we're pleased to offer a special presentation of our ABA Silver Gavel award-winning series, UnCommon Law.
    Generative AI tools are already promising to change the world. Systems like OpenAI's ChatGPT can answer complex questions, write poems and code, and even mimic famous authors with uncanny accuracy. But in using copyrighted materials to train these powerful AI products, are AI companies infringing the rights of untold creators?
    This season on UnCommon Law, we'll explore the intersection between artificial intelligence and the law. Episode one examines how large language models actually ingest and learn from billions of online data points, including copyrighted works. And we explore the lawsuits filed by creators who claim their copyrights were exploited without permission to feed the data-hungry algorithms powering tools like ChatGPT.
    If you like this episode and want to hear part 2, visit news.bloomberglaw.com/podcasts, or search for UnCommon Law in your podcast app.
    Guests:

    Matthew Butterick, founder at Butterick Law, and co-counsel with the Joseph Saveri Law Firm on class-action lawsuits against OpenAI and others

    Isaiah Poritz, technology reporter for Bloomberg Law

    James Grimmelmann, professor of digital and information law at Cornell Tech and Cornell Law School

    • 28 min
    Official Act Is Sticking Point in Trump Immunity Claim

    Official Act Is Sticking Point in Trump Immunity Claim

    Donald Trump may still get a victory even if the Supreme Court rejects his claim for blanket immunity from criminal prosecution.
    Several key justices seemed inclined during arguments on Thursday to send Trump’s case back to the trial court to determine whether he was acting in his official capacity when he tried to overturn the 2020 election and during the run-up to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot by his supporters.
    Cases and Controversies hosts run through the lively and, at times, surprising arguments in Trump’s appeal, and discuss how the court’s decision could delay any future trial until after the November election.
    Do you have feedback on this episode of Cases & Controversies? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

    • 12 min
    Idaho Abortion Ban Getting Supreme Court Review

    Idaho Abortion Ban Getting Supreme Court Review

    The Supreme Court will hear its second abortion case of the term, this time on Idaho’s ban and the reach of federal law in anti-abortion states.
    The Biden administration argued that the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act requires hospitals to provide an abortion when there is a serious risk of harm to the mother.
    Alliance Defending Freedom’s John Bursch joins Cases and Controversies to explain why Idaho says its state law requires an abortion only when necessary to save the mother’s life.
    Do you have feedback on this episode of Cases & Controversies? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

    • 22 min
    US Supreme Court Considers Novel Charges Over Jan. 6

    US Supreme Court Considers Novel Charges Over Jan. 6

    The Supreme Court will consider whether prosecutors went too far in charging Jan. 6 rioters with an Enron-era statute, in a case that could have implications for the criminal prosecution of former President Donald Trump.
    Former Boston Police officer Joseph Fischer, who participated in the Capitol breach, hopes to tap into concerns by some justices that prosecutors have too much discretion. It's something the court's pulled back on in recent terms.
    Bloomberg Law judiciary reporter Suzanne Monyak joins Cases and Controversies to discuss the implications for Jan. 6 defendants, federal courts, and Trump, whose bid for immunity from criminal prosecution over alleged election interference will be heard April 25. Special Prosecutor Jack Smith has charged Trump under the same provision, which prohibits interference with an official proceeding.
    Do you have feedback on this episode of Cases & Controversies? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

    • 15 min
    Homeless Dispute Getting Rare Supreme Court Hearing

    Homeless Dispute Getting Rare Supreme Court Hearing

    A fight over an Oregon city’s attempt to outlaw homelessness would make headlines in any other term. But the case, said to be the first of its kind in decades and set for argument April 22, has flown under the radar.
    The justices are being asked if the Eighth Amendment ban on cruel and unusual punishment prohibits Grants Pass from enforcing an ordinance that makes it unlawful to sleep on public property.
    “This is the first case the Supreme Court has taken up on homelessness in 40 years,” said Antonia Fasanelli, the executive director of the National Homelessness Law Center.
    Fasanelli joins Cases and Controversies to discuss what’s at stake in a case that raises an issue of national importance as cities try to find solutions to a rise in homelessness.
    Do you have feedback on this episode of Cases & Controversies? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

    • 16 min
    Supreme Court Abortion Pill Argument Light on Merits

    Supreme Court Abortion Pill Argument Light on Merits

    Arguments in the challenge to the abortion drug mifepristone suggest the Supreme Court will nix the dispute on technical standing grounds.
    Justices from across the ideological spectrum suggested the anti-abortion doctors at the center of the case were asking too much.
    Cases and Controversies hosts run through the lopsided arguments that focused little on the merits and almost exclusively on whether the doctors could prevent access to the drug nationwide.
    They also discuss how the Supreme Court’s action—or inaction—means South Carolina can use an unconstitutional voting map in the upcoming election.
    Do you have feedback on this episode of Cases & Controversies? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

    • 15 min

Customer Reviews

3.8 out of 5
139 Ratings

139 Ratings

trust meeeee ,

Only one problem

Good synopsis of the law. But focuses heavily on the breakdown of the court and partisanship. Insistent on framing judges as conservative and liberal is not that productive. Would be more interesting if focused on methodology of the justices rather than perceived partisanship or lack thereof.

tivenner1 ,

Extreme leftist bias

Sessions focus on sour grapes and claims that US Supreme Court is illegitimate

Vicky Christy ,

Biased & no care for the constitution

I expected Bloomberg to be impartial and deliver neutral podcast about the law, cases, and court decisions. However, they ignore the constitution and showcase unprofessionalionalism I expected to find in a trashy grocery aisle magazine, never in a legal podcast

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