SCOTUS rules on warrantless searches, double convictions and election suits
The U.S. Supreme Court decided three cases Wednesday about political candidates’ standing to sue, warrantless searches, and double convictions.
The justices marked Jan. 14 as the first day in 2026 where they released multiple opinions.
Here are summaries of those opinions.
Case v. Montana
In a 9-0 decision, the court upheld the conviction of a Montana man for assaulting a police officer.
In 2021, police officers entered the home of William Case after a credible report that he was threatening suicide. While searching the home, one officer approached a bedroom closet in which Case was hiding.
Case threw open the closet curtain while holding an object that looked like a gun, according to court documents. The officer shot and injured Case.
Case argued the officers violated his Fourth Amendment right by entering his home without a warrant.
In a the majority opinion for the court, Justice Elena Kagan said the officers has reason to believe Case intended to take his own life or may already have shot himself.
“The officers may enter if, and only if, they have an ‘objectively reasonable basis for believing’ that an occupant faces serious danger,” Kagan wrote.
Kagan pointed to several other examples in the Supreme Court’s precedent where the justices upheld warrantless entries.
“We repeat today what we have held before: An officer may enter a home without a warrant if he has ‘an objectively reasonable basis for believing that an occupant is seriously injured or imminently threatened with such injury,'” Kagan wrote.
Barrett v. U.S.
In another opinion, the court clarified procedures for obtaining multiple criminal convictions for an individual act.
The case focused on Dwayne Barnett, an individual who committed a series of robberies between August 2011 and January 2012. In one robbery, Barrett’s accomplice shot and killed Gamar Dafalla, according to court documents.
Prosecutors sought to charge Barrett with two separate convictions: unlawful possession of a gun during a crime of violence and causing death while committing an offense.
In the court’s majority opinion, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said Congress does not allow an individual to be dually punished for the separate crimes when it stems from a single action.
“At the very least, Congress did not clearly manifest a contrary intention, as it would have to do if it wished to authorize two convictions in these circumstances,” Jackson wrote.
Bost v. Illinois State Board of Elections
In a 7-2 decision, justices on the court said an Illinois congressman has the right to sue the state over counting federal election ballots beyond Election Day.
U.S. Rep. Mike Bost, R-Murphysboro, filed a lawsuit against the state in 2022 for counting ballots postmarked on Election Day up to two weeks later. The court affirmed Bost had legal standing to sue without addressing whether states could allow mail-in ballots received after Election Day to be counted.
Chief Justice John Roberts, in a majority opinion for the court, said individuals who sue must display a personal stake in a case to have standing. As a candidate for office, Roberts said, Bost had that standing.
“Candidates are not common competitors in the economic marketplace. They seek to represent the people,” Roberts wrote. “And their interest in that prize cannot be severed from their interest in the electoral process.”
In their dissent, Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson took issue with Roberts’ claim that candidates have a special interest in the fair elections process that gives special standing to sue.
“In a democratic society like ours, the interest in a fair electoral process is common to all members of the voting public,” Jackson wrote. “The Court thus ignores a core constitutional requirement while unnecessarily thrusting the Judiciary into the political arena.”
Latest News Stories
Plastics industry one of ‘most powerful economic engines’ thanks to nation’s shale gas, ingenuity
Congressional candidate defends ‘dark humor’ video about Kirk assassination
Trump tells parents to get vaccines not available in U.S.
Grocery tax stalls in Chicago council, measure approved in Bloomington
GOP leader argues against Democrats’ descriptions of ICE
Illinois quick hits: Guatemalan national guilty of illegal presence; ‘peacekeeper’ arrested for battery
Lake Land College Formalizes Academic Restructuring with Faculty Association MOU
Trump tariffs drugs, furniture, heavy trucks to ‘protect’ U.S. markets
WATCH: Trump supports expanding Antifa terror designation internationally
Experts warn action needed to preserve Colorado River
WATCH: 2022 GOP nominee makes second run for governor
Oklahoma to start Turning Point chapters at all high schools