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Israel passes law to give death penalty to Palestinians convicted of lethal attacks | Israel

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Israel’s parliament has passed a law imposing the death penalty on Palestinians convicted of fatal attacks, a measure sharply criticised as discriminatory by European nations and rights groups.

The legislation makes the death penalty the default punishment for Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank found guilty of intentionally carrying out deadly attacks deemed acts of terrorism by a military court.

According to the bill, those sentenced to death will be held in a separate facility with no visits except for from authorised personnel, with legal consultations conducted only by video link. Executions will be carried out within 90 days of sentencing.

Israel has rarely used the death penalty, applying it only in exceptional cases, with the Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann the last person to be executed, in 1962.

The national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, one of the bill’s strongest backers, has repeatedly worn a noose-shaped lapel pin, symbolising executions under the proposal. He described hanging as “one of the options” alongside the electric chair or “euthanasia”, claiming some doctors had offered to assist.

A security committee made some amendments to the bill, which last week passed its first vote. Israel’s public broadcaster KAN reported that executions would be carried out by hanging.

The measure will allow courts to impose the death penalty without a request from prosecutors and without requiring unanimity, instead permitting a simple majority decision. Military courts in the occupied West Bank will also be empowered to hand down death sentences, with the defence minister able to submit an opinion.

For Palestinians under occupation, the bill closes off avenues for appeal or clemency, while prisoners tried inside Israel could see their sentences commuted to life imprisonment.

The legislation, initiated by the far-right Otzma Yehudit party led by Ben-Gvir, has drawn sharp criticism from opponents who warn it would mark a significant escalation in Israel’s penal policy.

Military officials and ministries have warned the bill could breach international law and expose Israeli personnel to arrest abroad.

Once enacted, the law formally enters into force but it can still be reviewed – and potentially struck down – by Israel’s supreme court.

Last month UN experts called on Israel to withdraw the bill, warning it would violate the right to life and discriminate against Palestinians in the occupied territories. They said the measure removed judicial discretion, preventing courts from weighing individual circumstances or imposing proportionate sentences. They said hanging constituted torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment under international law.

The EU’s diplomatic service also condemned the proposal, saying capital punishment breached the right to life and risked violating the absolute prohibition on torture.

In February, Amnesty International urged Israeli lawmakers to reject the legislation, which it said “would allow Israeli courts to expand their use of death sentences with discriminatory application against Palestinians”.

On Sunday, Britain, France, Germany and Italy expressed “deep concern” over the legislation, which they said risked “undermining Israel’s commitments with regards to democratic principles”.



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IMF warns Middle East conflict will lead to higher prices and slower global growth | US-Israel war on Iran

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The International Monetary Fund has warned that “all roads lead to higher prices and slower growth worldwide” should the conflict in the Middle East continue to throttle the amount of oil, gas and fertiliser making its way out of the Gulf.

In a stark message that countries on all continents will be affected, the Washington-based organisation said a rise in energy and food costs would harm economic growth this year and could leave lasting scars on the global economy.

Coming only hours after Donald Trump threatened to obliterate Iran’s energy infrastructure unless it agreed to a peace deal, the IMF’s analysis is likely to be viewed as a warning to the White House over the war’s lasting consequences for struggling households.

In a blogpost by the IMF’s main department heads, including the chief economist, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, the IMF said governments with high levels of borrowing will also have limited access to funds that could be used to cushion the worst effects of the crisis.

“Although the war could shape the global economy in different ways, all roads lead to higher prices and slower growth,” it said.

While some countries that are net exporters of oil and gas, such as the US, will gain from higher fossil fuel prices, the rise in bills for petrol, diesel and food will harm living standards, the analysis found. Businesses are also forecast to come under pressure to raise prices, possibly forcing central banks to raise interest rates to combat inflation.

“A short conflict might send oil and gas prices soaring before markets adjust, while a long one could keep energy expensive and strain countries that rely on imports,” the blogpost warned. “Or the world may settle somewhere in between – tensions linger, energy stays costly, and inflation proves hard to tame – with ongoing uncertainty and geopolitical risk.”

“Much depends on how long the conflict lasts, how far it spreads, and how much damage it inflicts on infrastructure and supply chains,” it said, adding: “Historically, sustained oil‑price spikes have tended to push inflation higher and growth lower.

About a third of fertiliser production travels through the strait of Hormuz, pushing up prices. UN Food and Agriculture Organisation projections indicate that global prices could average 15% to 20% higher in the first half of 2026 if the crisis persists.

Natural gas prices have more than doubled in the UK since last December to about £140 a therm, while a barrel of Brent crude that cost about $60 before the conflict hit more than $116 on Monday before falling back to $112.

Forecasts for sharp rises in the cost of gas and electricity in Europe next winter are forcing governments to consider higher subsidies and welfare payments to the worst-affected households.

The IMF added: “In Europe, the shock is reviving the spectre of the 2021–22 gas crisis, with countries such as Italy and the UK especially exposed by their reliance on gas‑fired power, while France and Spain are relatively protected by their greater nuclear and renewables capacity.”



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Missing Santa Rosa banker identified twice as John Doe decades apart

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A grim discovery by a family searching for seashells along a Northern California beach has unraveled a decades-old mystery — one so unusual investigators say the same man was identified twice.

Human remains found in 2022 along Sonoma County’s Salmon Creek State Beach have been identified as Walter Karl Kinney, a 59-year-old former banker from nearby Santa Rosa who vanished in 1999, according to the DNA Doe Project and local authorities.

What makes the case even more interesting is what investigators uncovered next. 

Portions of Kinney’s remains had already been found years earlier and identified, making this a rare case in which the same person was identified in two separate investigations decades apart.

‘LOVERS’ LANE’ MURDERS SUSPECT NABBED DECADES AFTER COUPLE FOUND DEAD IN CAR

Walter Karl Kinney, a California man who disappeared in 1999

Walter Karl Kinney, a former Santa Rosa banker who disappeared in 1999 and was later identified through DNA after remains were found on a Northern California beach. (DNA Doe Project/Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office)

“This case was unusual – it’s not often we see someone end up as a John Doe twice,” Traci Onders, a team leader with the DNA Doe Project, said on the group’s website. “But thanks to investigative genetic genealogy, we were able to resolve this mystery and provide some answers to everyone involved in this case.”

The latest break in the case traces back to June 17, 2022, when a family walking along Salmon Creek Beach spotted a single long bone protruding from the sand. 

FLORIDA COLD CASE BREAKTHROUGHS: SHERIFF’S UNIT CRACKS TWO LONG-UNSOLVED KILLINGS

Coastal cliffs and waves along the Sonoma County shoreline near Bodega Bay, California

The surf along Sonoma Coast State Beach at Gibson Beach is viewed during a stormy afternoon on May 5, 2017, near Bodega Bay, California. (George Rose/Getty Images)

The bone, believed to be part of a leg and containing surgical hardware, offered one of the only initial clues. A search of the surrounding area did not uncover any additional remains.

With few leads, the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office partnered with the DNA Doe Project, a nonprofit specializing in identifying unknown remains through genetic genealogy. 

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A DNA profile was developed and uploaded to a genealogy database in early 2026, allowing volunteer researchers to begin building out family connections.

Within just over a week, the team zeroed in on Kinney.

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Coast Guard cadets run along Salmon Creek Beach in Bodega Bay, California

Coast Guard cadets run along Salmon Creek Beach in Bodega Bay, California, along the Sonoma County coastline where human remains were discovered years later.

As researchers dug deeper, they uncovered a key link to a separate case from 1999, when partial human remains washed ashore just a few miles away in Bodega Bay. Those remains were identified in 2003 as Kinney using X-ray records after his daughter came forward.

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Kinney, who was born in 1940, had been living in Santa Rosa at the time of his disappearance. His daughter previously described him as “smart, sensitive, almost to a fault,” adding that “this world was just too harsh a place for him.”

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Authorities have not released a cause or manner of death, and it remains unclear how Kinney’s remains became separated and discovered decades apart.

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Officials also have not said whether the case remains open or if the investigation has been formally closed.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office for comment. 

Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.



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Telnyx package latest hit in PyPI supply-chain compromise • The Register

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infosec in brief The cybercrime crew linked to the Trivy supply-chain attack has struck again, this time pushing malicious Telnyx package versions to PyPI in an effort to plant credential-stealing malware on developers’ systems.

Ox Security warned on Friday that TeamPCP – the group researchers link to the recent compromise of open-source vulnerability scanner Trivy, which led to malicious LiteLLM packages appearing on PyPI – is back, this time with another compromise of a legitimate software package.

In this case, the crew hit Telnyx, which offers VoIP services and AI voice agents. TeamPCP appears to have compromised the PyPI distribution of Telnyx’s Python SDK, replacing current package versions with malicious releases loaded with a multi-stage infostealer and persistence mechanisms. According to Ox, the malware added to the package is similar to the malicious code added to LiteLLM. 

According to Ox, the Telnyx malware’s main difference from the LiteLLM package is how it’s installed: Instead of embedding malicious code directly in the file, the Telnyx package downloads its malware in the form of a .wav file that’s decoded and executed on the target machine. 

Telnyx told Ox in a post on X that it had found and resolved the issue, while noting that the only affected component was its Python package. None of Telnyx’s infrastructure, networking, or other services or APIs were affected, according to the company, though anyone who installed the Python package while the malicious versions were live should treat that environment as compromised.

Those worried they might be affected should check their installed Telnyx version — if you’re running 4.87.1 or 4.87.2, Telnyx recommends treating the host as compromised and rotating any exposed credentials.

Telnyx sees more than 34,000 downloads a week on PyPI, Ox noted, so it’s possible quite a few developers and services pulled one of the malicious releases before they were removed.

Alleged RedLine operator extradited to US

The mastermind may still be at large, but one of the men alleged to be behind the development and administration of prolific infostealer RedLine is behind bars in the US after being extradited to face charges. 

Hambardzum Minasyan, an Armenian national, last week made his initial appearance in federal court in Austin, Texas, on charges of conspiracy to commit access device fraud, conspiracy to violate the CFAA, and conspiracy to commit money laundering.

According to the indictment, Minasyan’s part of RedLine’s operations involved registering virtual private servers and domains to host RedLine infrastructure, as well as the creation of repositories used to host RedLine for distribution to affiliates. Minasyan also allegedly registered a cryptocurrency account used to receive RedLine affiliate payments. 

If convicted on all three charges, Minasyan faces up to 30 years in prison. 

Law enforcement first publicly identified alleged RedLine developer and administrator Maxim Rudometov in 2024, accusing the Russian national of helping build and run the infostealer operation. Last year, the US government offered a $10 million bounty for information on Rudometov and his co-conspirators. It’s not clear whether any money was paid out in relation to the arrest of Minasyan. 

Snapchat, porn platforms, put on notice for DSA violations

What does Snapchat have in common with Pornhub, Stripchat, and other porn platforms? All came under EU scrutiny last week under the Digital Services Act over alleged failures to protect minors online.

In Snapchat’s case, the matter is a bit earlier in proceedings, as Pornhub, Stripchat, XNXX, and XVideos were all preliminarily found last week to be in breach of the DSA for failing to implement effective age-verification measures that would keep minors off their services.

According to the European Commission, all four platforms have a simple self-verification system in place requiring visitors to confirm they’re over 18 without any formal checks in place. As this is a preliminary finding, the Commission is now giving the porno-pushers an opportunity to respond.

The Commission suspects that Snapchat has a similar weakness in relying on self-declaration, noting the platform’s age-assurance measures may be insufficient.

“The Commission suspects that Snapchat is not adequately protecting minors from being contacted by users with harmful intent, such as sexual exploitation or recruitment for criminal activities,” the EC explained.

The Commission will now carry out an in-depth investigation into Snapchat before deciding whether to take further enforcement steps.

LAPSUS$ spills alleged AstraZeneca data

The cybercriminals behind the LAPSUS$ threat group have released 2.66 GB of data allegedly stolen from drug maker AstraZeneca, and threat watchers say it could become one of the more serious healthcare cyber incidents of 2026 so far if the claims hold up.

According to SOCRadar, LAPSUS$ claimed to have hit AstraZeneca recently, making off with what they claim are internal code repositories, access-related data, cloud and infrastructure references, and employee records – data which could be devastating to the company in the hands of the right – or wrong – person. 

Per SOCRadar, the data they reviewed “points to a potentially meaningful internal code and operations exposure rather than a small credential-only leak.” They warn that the purportedly stolen data could be used for follow-on intrusions, to target phishing attacks, and to compromise AstraZeneca partners in supply chain attacks.

LAPSUS$ released the full dataset over the weekend, SOCRadar reported.

US National Lab creates exascale AI model vulnerability detector

Researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory have created what they say is an efficient, effective AI vulnerability detection machine that can operate at the exascale level, and all it took was turning a friendly neural network optimization bot into an exploitative one. 

“It might sound devious, but it’s worked very well,” said ORNL Center for Artificial Intelligence Security Research director Edmon Begoli.

Photon, as the ORNL team dubbed it, is designed to explore, discover, and exploit AI vulnerabilities at scale. According to the team, it starts by applying publicly known attacks against a target model and refining them based on the results. Simultaneously, the team said, it continues exploring the model for new weaknesses, which it can then exploit as part of an ongoing cycle to refine the most effective attacks it finds.

Photon is also able to significantly reduce bottlenecks and auxiliary tasks associated with red team AI campaigns – per the team, it scaled without loss of computational efficiency, and maintained 95 percent resource utilization across 1,920 GPUs on the lab’s Frontier supercomputer.  

And there’s the rub: This thing can find and exploit anything it can find in an AI model, but such capabilities are limited to supercomputing labs for now. 

“Photon represents a paradigm shift in how we approach AI security,” Begoli said. Thankfully it won’t be something bad actors will have the resources to utilize for some time. ®



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What is the ‘Greater Israel’ project? | News

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A vision long embedded in Israeli politics is coming into clearer view. We look at the “Greater Israel” project – where it comes from, how it has shaped Israeli policy and territorial ambitions over time, and what it helps explain about Israel’s actions across the region.

In this episode:

Episode credits:

This episode was produced by Tamara Khandaker and Chloe K. Li, with Tuleen Barakat, Catherine Nouhan, and our guest host, Kevin Hirten. It was edited by Alexandra Locke.

Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhemm. Rick Rush mixed this episode. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer. 

The Take production team is Marcos Bartolomé, Sonia Bhagat, Spencer Cline, Sarí el-Khalili, Tamara Khandaker, Chloe K. Li, Alexandra Locke, Catherine Nouhan, Alex Roldan, and Noor Wazwaz. Our host is Malika Bilal. 

Our editorial intern is Tuleen Barakat. Our engagement producers are Adam Abou-Gad and Vienna Maglio. Andrew Greiner is lead of audience engagement. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhem. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer.

Connect with us:

@AJEPodcasts on XInstagramFacebook, and YouTube



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White House daily press briefing

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The White House is calling on Congress to return from Easter recess to pass funding to end the Department of Homeland Security shutdown, arguing the standoff has disrupted TSA operations and airport travel nationwide.

“Nothing will be truly normal again until Democrats do the right thing to fund this agency fully again,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said at Monday’s press briefing. “The president has stepped in – in the meantime to do what’s right to end this crisis that we’ve had at air travel, at airports across the country in the meantime. 

“But again, Congress needs to come back. Democrats need to fund the Department of Homeland Security so we can formally and fully get these great employees paid long into the future,” Leavitt added.

The funding impasse has stretched beyond six weeks, with reports of major TSA staffing shortages, long security lines, and the deployment of ICE personnel to assist at some airports.

Congress left Washington without a final deal after negotiations over DHS funding and immigration provisions stalled. Both parties have traded blame as travel disruptions and pressure from unions and aviation officials continue to grow.

This is a breaking news update. Check back for more.



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Laura Dern to star in Epstein investigation limited series from Adam McKay | Television & radio

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Laura Dern is taking on the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, in a new limited series executive produced by Adam McKay based on journalist Julie K Brown’s work busting open the story.

Dern will play Brown, the Miami Herald investigative reporter on the late, disgraced financier’s tail when no one else was, for the first scripted take on the Epstein case. The screenplay will be based on Brown’s 2021 book Perversion of Injustice: The Jeffrey Epstein Story. Sharon Hoffman, a writer on the 2020 limited series Mrs America, will write the project and serve as co-showrunner with Eileen Myers (The Night Agent, Masters of Sex). McKay, the writer-director of Don’t Look Up and executive producer on the HBO juggernaut Succession, among other credits, will serve as executive producer alongside Dern and Brown.

The as-yet untitled series from Sony Pictures TV will provide “an explosive account of an investigative reporter exposing the secret plea deal between Epstein and federal prosecutors”, according to a logline from Sony. “Drawing from Brown’s experience as a groundbreaking reporter for the Miami Herald, the book and the limited series follow her relentless, years-long investigation that identified 80 victims, persuaded key survivors to go on the record, and led to Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell’s arrests.”

Brown’s reporting was crucial to bringing public attention on Epstein, who was convicted of sex trafficking in Florida in 2008. In November 2018, the Miami Herald published her three-part series detailing the cozy relationship between prosecutors and Epstein’s lawyers, and the many rich and powerful people who allegedly turned a blind eye turned to Epstein’s abuses of women and girls. The series, based on interviews with 60 women who claimed to be victims of abuse, brought Epstein’s crimes back into the public consciousness, leading to sex-trafficking charges.

The series also led to the resignation of Trump’s then labor secretary Alex Acosta. In the mid-2000s, as the US attorney for Florida’s southern district, Acosta signed off on a non-prosecution agreement that blocked any federal charges from Epstein’s first criminal case. Instead, Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges.

Fallout from Brown’s work continues to play out spectacularly in the US, where the justice department still faces calls to release all its documents on Epstein – including his formerly close friendship with Trump – and abroad. In February, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, whose close association with Epstein led to the stripping of the title Prince Andrew, was arrested in England for possible misconduct as trade envoy for the UK. The arrest followed the disclosure of emails exchanged with Epstein.

Epstein died in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal charges of sex-trafficking minors. He remains a disgraced figure haunting the Trump presidency, though no allegations against Trump have been substantiated.

The series is still seeking a buyer, and is yet to go into production.



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Supreme Court hears arguments on birthright citizenship this week

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This week, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in what could be one of the most significant cases of the 21st century: birthright citizenship.

Before the Court is whether the Trump executive order that ends birthright citizenship complies with the citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment, after multiple judges blocked the order from taking effect as it was litigated. 

In plain speak, the Court will look at whether someone born on U.S. soil automatically becomes a citizen irrespective of their parents’ status. 

ALITO BLASTS LAWYER’S WORD-SALAD BLURRING ASYLUM LAW

Protesters hold up birthright citizenship banner outside Supreme Court

Demonstrators holds up an anti-Trump sign outside the Supreme Court in Washington, DC, on June 27, 2025.  (ALEX WROBLEWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)

Given that courts have routinely upheld birthright citizenship for over a century now, the Trump administration faces an uphill battle. 

However, the current Court has not shied away from overturning high-profile decisions: think Dobbs overturning Roe (abortion), and Loper overturning Chevron (the administrative state). The mere fact the Court decided to take up this issue at all is very interesting. As always, the devil will be in the details in terms of how broadly, or narrowly, they decide the case – or if they find some way to punt it altogether.

How did we get here? 

The Fourteenth Amendment, Section 1 of the Constitution states: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”  

SUPREME COURT PREPARES TO REVIEW TRUMP EXECUTIVE ORDER ON BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP

President Donald Trump

President Donald Trump walks to speak to reporters before boarding Air Force One at Palm Beach International Airport in West Palm Beach, Florida, on March 23, 2026. (SAUL LOEB / AFP via Getty Images)

Its history: The Fourteenth Amendment was ratified in 1868 in response to 1) the end of the Civil War and 2) the 1857 Dred Scott decision, which concluded that enslaved people (and their children) were not American citizens and thus had no rights and couldn’t sue in federal court, among other things. Notably, Michigan Senator Jacob Howard wrote the “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” clause and said in speeches at the time that the clause did not include “persons born in the United States who are foreigners, aliens, who belong to families of ambassadors or foreign ministers.” 

Why this matters: In the upcoming arguments, expect a lot of discussion about what “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” means, especially because the subsequent Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 mirrors the language of the 14th Amendment  – that a citizen is someone who is born in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof. 

DC COURT RULINGS STALL TRUMP AGENDA ACROSS IMMIGRATION, POLICING, FED — RAISING STAKES ON EXECUTIVE POWER 

protesters of birthright citizenship

People demonstrate outside the Supreme Court of the United States on May 15, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (Matt McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Wong Kim Ark: The 1898 U.S. Supreme Court decision that gave us birthright citizenship as we know it today. The case involved the U.S.-born adult child of Chinese nationals – who had been permanently domiciled in the U.S. –  who was denied reentry into the U.S. after returning from a trip to China. At the time, it was generally difficult for Chinese nationals to become citizens.

In its decision, the Supreme Court held that children born on U.S. soil are automatically granted citizenship with very few exceptions, such as children of diplomats. It interpreted the “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” to mean subject to the laws of the U.S. 

The Court reasoned that citizens and non-citizens alike are subject to the laws of the nation they are in. The Court emphasized that Ark’s parents were “permanently domiciled” in the U.S. This decision was controversial at the time because it ignored previous Supreme Court language that had found children born to alien parents were not citizens. However, in Wong Kim Ark, the Court dismissed that argument in its opinion, finding that previous language was mere “dicta,” i.e., language that was not necessary to those decisions, and thus, did not create binding precedent

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The bottom line: This is the blockbuster case of this Supreme Court term. A decision is expected late June. 



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