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Alicia Stroble sat before the Oklahoma Supreme Court more than a year ago, surrounded by tribal attorneys and backed by the ...
Oklahoma’s new academic standards for social studies are poised to take effect for the coming school year, as the state ...
Parents cannot "veto legislative and regulatory polic[i]es about drugs and surgeries permitted for children" like Oklahoma's ...
A federal appeals court has upheld Oklahoma’s ban on gender-affirming procedures for minors. The Tenth Circuit Court of ...
This week, a three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit cited Skrmetti in its decision to reject a ...
On Monday without additional comment, the court denied a requested stay to prevent the State Department of Education from ...
The United States Supreme Court on Monday granted Oklahoma’s petition for review in its case against the Environmental Protection Agency, which concerns the state’s plan to implement national ...
The Oklahoma Supreme Court has ruled a citizen of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation must pay income tax to the state of Oklahoma.
The Supreme Court ruled in Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta that state governments have the authority to prosecute certain cases on tribal lands, effectively undermining centuries of legal precedent.
Lawmakers put politics before what's best for student outcomes and, again, did not hold State Superintendent Ryan Walters ...
Justice Neil M. Gorsuch had recused himself from the case, which was an appeal from a decision of the court on which he once sat, the United States Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, in Denver.
That is why we have joined the Oklahoma attorney general in urging the United States Supreme Court to send Richard Glossip's case back to state court for a new trial.