The US Supreme Court has been relatively quiet over the past three days, with no major new decisions or oral arguments scheduled. Justices continue to deliberate on pending cases from the term, including ongoing reviews of challenges to federal regulations on artificial intelligence oversight and state-level voting laws. On Thursday, Chief Justice John Roberts attended a private judicial conference in Colorado, discussing administrative matters amid whispers of potential retirements, though no announcements emerged. Meanwhile, controversy simmers from Tuesday's leak of a draft opinion in a high-profile abortion rights case related to post-Roe state restrictions, prompting bipartisan calls for an internal investigation into court security—echoing the 2022 Dobbs leak scandal. Justice Sonia Sotomayor publicly addressed the issue during a speech at Harvard Law School, stressing the need for transparency without confirming details. In related news, the court denied emergency relief yesterday to a group of death row inmates in Alabama challenging lethal injection protocols, upholding a scheduled execution for next week. Public attention also lingers on ethics reforms, as Senate Democrats renewed pushes for a binding code of conduct following recent disclosures of Justice Clarence Thomas's undisclosed trips. No emergency applications or blockbuster rulings have dropped, keeping the docket in a holding pattern until the summer recess.
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