Supreme Court




The Supreme Court is the highest form of the Judiciary system in the United States. It is comprised of nine justices who are appointed by the president and confirmed by the senate. The purpose of the Supreme Court is to judge whether a decision or verdict is correct and constitutional. The justices all serve life terms on the Court allowing them to be completely unaffected by outside opinions or thoughts. They are used to decide the biggest legal cases in the United States. They are presented with over seven thousand cases every year and of which they choose seventy to a hundred to debate and review. Many of these cases are cases that we decided on a lower level than the Supreme Court and they are asked to reverse the decision. Many of the most high profile cases were decided within the Supreme Court including Marbury V. Madison and allowing homosexuals to get married. Each judge works within his or hers own office where they have a staff of secretaries and legal staff that help the judge gather information on a subject so they can present it to the oval table of the other justices. So the judges work on their own and then as a group decide on the fate of that particular case. In the past the judges we used as moves to allow the current president establish power and leave a lasting effect on the government. This including stacking the court with judges so a president can exercise his will after he leaves office. But a lot of the time that this happens the judges immediately remove themselves from that president allowing for the integrity of the court to remain intact.Supreme Court rejects Trump claim of 'absolute immunity' from ...

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