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Supreme Court grants cert on 13 new matters, with a few of possible interest for sentencing fans

The US Supreme Court’s new season, known as October Term 2024, officially gets started on Monday with oral arguments in two cases raising technical procedural issues.  But, for SCOTUS watchers, today feels like openning day because the Justices this morning released this big new order list detailing all the cases for which it granted cert following its “long conference” earlier this week. 

By my quick count, the Court appears to have granted cert on 15 cases to deal with 13 issues.  (In two instances, the Justices formally granted cert in two cases but consolidated the pair for oral argument.)  And from my too-quick review, it seems that there are four cases involving criminal law issues (or criminal-law adjacent), though is seems technical procedural issues may be at the heart of a couple of them. 

The only pure criminal case appears to be Thompson v. US dealing with what constitutes a “false statement” to sustain a federal bank fraud conviction.  But Fourth Amedment fans will certainly be excited because Barnes v. Felix takes on, in the context of a civil rights suit, the so-called “moment of the threat” doctrine in assessing excessive force claims under the Fourth Amendment. 

Technicalities come to the fore in Perttu v. Richards, another civil rights case, this one involving a state prisoner dealing with when the Prison Litigation Reform Act requires a prisoner to exhaust administrative remedies prior to securing a jury trial.  And in Gutierrez v. Sanz, a capital case, deals with standing issues in conjunction with efforts by a defendant to secure post-conviction DNA testing.

This AP piece previewing cases on the SCOTUS docket before today suggested the Term looks like it could be “relatively sleepy.” None of these new grants, either in the criminal cases or any of the others, seems to be much of a wake-up call. But with a major election and a presidential tradition transpiriting in the next few months, I doubt there will be much dozing off among Justice or advocates in the Term to come