Terance Martez Gamble, Petitioner v. United States

  1. July 03, 2019

    Biggest Native American Rulings Of 2019: Midyear Report

    The U.S. Supreme Court handed close wins this year to two Native American tribes, backing their rights to be shielded from a state fuel tax and to hunt under their treaties, while circuit courts protected tribe members' access to broadband and heightened tribal officers' exposure to tort suits. Here, Law360 looks back at some of the top decisions in Native American law in the first half of 2019.

  2. June 17, 2019

    Feds, States Can Prosecute Same Crime, Justices Rule

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday upheld a long-standing exception to the Constitution's double jeopardy clause allowing states and the federal government to prosecute an individual for the same criminal acts, pointing to 170 years of precedent blessing the practice.

  3. June 05, 2019

    7 Cases To Watch As Supreme Court Enters Home Stretch

    With the end of the term just weeks away, the U.S. Supreme Court must now tackle the tough cases it has saved for last, which tend to produce bitter divisions on the court and major changes in the law. Here is a look at seven of the biggest cases awaiting decisions.

  4. December 13, 2018

    Gorsuch, Kavanaugh Show Early Differences On High Court

    They've only been colleagues for a few months, but President Donald Trump's two appointees to the U.S. Supreme Court may be showing early signs of differences in their judicial approaches.

  5. December 06, 2018

    Justices Unlikely To Curb Dual Prosecutions By States, Feds

    The U.S. Supreme Court appeared ready Thursday to reject a historic challenge to separate prosecutions by states and the federal government for the same offense, as both liberal and conservative justices expressed reservations about overturning "170 years" of precedent.

  6. November 30, 2018

    Up Next At High Court: AIA, Double Jeopardy

    The U.S. Supreme Court will examine patent eligibility under the America Invents Act, a securities enforcement action and a historic double jeopardy case when it returns to the bench Monday for the final week of arguments in 2018.