Supreme Court could loosen law barring marijuana users from owning guns

WASHINGTON (AP) — TheSupreme Courtseemed likely Monday to loosen a federal law that bars marijuana users from owning guns in a case that crossed typical political lines.

Associated Press

A majority of justices appeared to lean toward a narrow ruling in favor of a Texas man who argued he shouldn't have been charged with a crime just because he owned a gun and smoked marijuana a few times a week.

The Trump administration asked the high court torevive a criminal caseagainst Ali Danial Hemani under a law that bans all illegal drug users from owning guns. But both liberal and conservative justices seemed skeptical.

"What is the government's evidence that using marijuana a couple of times a week makes someone dangerous?" said conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

The Trump administration has asked the court to strike down other gun control laws in the past, but Principal Deputy Solicitor General Sarah Harris defended the illegal drug user law as a reasonable measure to keep firearms from potentially dangerous people. The law was also used in the case ofHunter Biden, who was convicted of buying a gun when he was addicted to cocaine. He was later pardoned by his father, then-President Joe Biden.

Cannabis, though, is now broadly legal in about half the country, though it remains illegal on a federal level. "What do we do with the fact that marijuana is sort of illegal and sort of isn't, and that the federal government itself is conflicted on this?" Justice Neil Gorsuch said.

He was part of the conservative majority that expanded gun rights with a landmark case in 2022 known as New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen. The court said that any gun laws must have a strong grounding in the nation's historical traditions.

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Liberal-leaning Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said a ban on firearms for cannabis users didn't seem to have the required historical roots. "I think your argument sort of falls apart under the Bruen test," she said.

The government pointed to historical laws that barred "habitual drunkards" from having guns, calling that clear historical evidence in favor of the law. But Gorsuch said that alcohol was more common in the nation's early days, including hard cider with breakfast for John Adams and a daily pint of whiskey for James Madison. "Are they all habitual drunkards who would be properly disarmed for life under your theory?" he said.

An attorney for Hemani, Erin Murphy, said those laws were for extreme cases and modern cannabis users aren't necessarily comparable. They regularly take gummies as sleep aids, for example, can also be quite capable of handling firearms safely, she argued.

The case made for some unusual political alliances. The American Civil Liberties Union and the National Rifle Association both supported Hemani's case, as did cannabis legalization groups like NORML. On the other side were gun-safety groups like Everytown that usually oppose the Trump administration on Second Amendment issues.

Some justices, however, appeared concerned that a ruling for Hemani could allow more weapon possession by people who use more dangerous drugs, like methamphetamine or heroin. Moving away from the current ban could require courts to frequently make in-depth considerations about the level of dangerousness presented by a given substance.

"It just seems to me that this takes a fairly cavalier approach to the necessary consideration of expertise and the judgments we leave to Congress and the executive branch," Chief Justice John Roberts said.

It's the second gun case the court is hearing this term in the wake of its 2022 decision. In the other, the justices appeared likely to strike down aHawaii law restricting gunsin stores and hotels.

The court is expected to decide the case by the end of June.

Supreme Court could loosen law barring marijuana users from owning guns

WASHINGTON (AP) — TheSupreme Courtseemed likely Monday to loosen a federal law that bars marijuana users from owning guns...
S&P may cut Berkshire-owned PacifiCorp utility to junk because of wildfires

By Jonathan Stempel

Reuters

March 2 (Reuters) - S&P Global said on Monday it may downgrade PacifiCorp, a utility owned by Berkshire Hathaway, to junk status as ‌liabilities mount from class action litigation over a series of Oregon wildfires ‌in 2020.

The warning came after an Oregon jury on February 25 awarded $305 million to 16 plaintiffs, or ​about $19 million per plaintiff, who blamed PacifiCorp for failing to turn off power lines during a Labor Day weekend windstorm. Plaintiffs in earlier trials had been awarded about $5 million on average.

S&P said it may cut PacifiCorp's "BBB-minus" credit rating, the lowest investment grade, by at ‌least two notches if future ⁠awards are around $19 million per plaintiff, and by one notch if awards are "significant" but smaller. It said it will closely monitor verdicts ⁠in the coming weeks.

Trials in the so-called James class action are scheduled through early 2028, and PacifiCorp's immediate parent Berkshire Hathaway Energy said the utility faces $48 billion of potential ​payouts on ​top of $1 billion already awarded. PacifiCorp faces ​about $50 billion of wildfire exposure overall.

In ‌response to S&P's action, PacifiCorp said it plans to appeal the $305 million verdict, and is focused on "providing certainty" to employees, customers and communities.

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PacifiCorp is awaiting a decision from the Oregon Court of Appeals on whether the class action was properly certified and whether claimants can recover damages for emotional distress.

Berkshire Hathaway Energy said a loss of ‌investment-grade status could leave PacifiCorp unable to raise ​money to support ongoing operations, including paying suppliers ​and providing power to customers.

"PacifiCorp believes ​it will have sufficient liquidity to cover its operations and obligations ‌beyond a year," the parent added.

Berkshire ​Hathaway has high investment-grade ​credit ratings.

In his first annual letter to shareholders, Berkshire Chief Executive Greg Abel said on Saturday that the Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate accepts responsibility when it causes ​wildfires, but will fight ‌unjustified claims in court.

"PacifiCorp is not an insurer of last resort and should ​not be treated as a deep pocket," he wrote.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel ​in New York; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

S&P may cut Berkshire-owned PacifiCorp utility to junk because of wildfires

By Jonathan Stempel March 2 (Reuters) - S&P Global said on Monday it may downgrade PacifiCorp, a utility o...
Dispatch from Tehran: Nowhere feels safe from attack

TEHRAN — Nowhere in Tehran feels safe anymore.

NBC Universal Birds fly as smoke rises between buildings. (Majid Asgaripour / West Asia News Agency via Reuters)

The city is now covered in smoke. The days feel ordinary but the nights are terrifying. No one knows what might be targeted next.

Military bases and police stations are being struck, but police stations are often located close to residential neighborhoods. One I passed today looked like something out of doomsday.

A friend of mine was near the police station in Niloofar Square when it was attacked.

The building was reduced to powder and the residential buildings surrounding it were damaged as well.

People are scared.

People with luggage wait near vans. (Dilara Senkaya / Reuters)

A relative of mine was stuck in traffic for eight hours trying to reach an area just over 10 miles outside Tehran to see her 97-year-old mother, who is ill.

Another friend lives near Sepah Square in central Tehran. Her house was shaking yesterday, so she left for her daughter's home in the neighborhood of Gisha last night.

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Then the police station in Gisha was hit. Her family cried nonstop and eventually decided to leave for the north near the Caspian Sea.

A close friend lives near Saadabad Palace, built by the Pahlavi dynasty, and Tajrish on the edge of Tehran.

A bomb blast shattered her windows. She could barely speak on the phone and was in a panic, saying "I don't want to talk now." It is a wealthy neighborhood and perhaps a high ranking official lives nearby -- we don't know.

Not everyone has somewhere to go.

Another friend had just adopted a puppy. The dog is only six weeks old and has just been vaccinated, so now she cannot leave her home. She cannot safely move with the puppy.

And then there are the wounded. A hospital in northwest Tehran was filled with injured people, ordinary civilians and members of the Basij, a voluntary militia that is a branch of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

During the 12-day war last year, people slowly became used to the tension.

But this feels different. Older generations say they do not deserve this from the Iran-Iraq war to 25 years of negotiations that led nowhere.

Men watch from a hillside as a plume of smoke rises after an explosion on March 2, 2026 in Tehran, Iran.  (Majid Saeedi / Getty Images)

Dispatch from Tehran: Nowhere feels safe from attack

TEHRAN — Nowhere in Tehran feels safe anymore. The city is now covered in smoke. The days feel ordinary but th...
Men's college basketball rankings after Week 17: Updated Coaches Poll, AP Top 25

It's time for the penultimateUSA TODAY Sports Coaches Pollof the 2025-2026 college basketball season.

USA TODAY Sports

All the major conferences have one week left before their respective postseason tournaments. Arizona (Big 12),Duke(ACC), Michigan (Big Ten) and Florida (SEC) ― all ranked inside the top 7 of the Feb. 23 poll ―have claimed at least a share of their conference championship.

REQUIRED READING:March Madness bracket projection: Which teams could fight for No. 1 seed?

On Friday, Feb. 27, No. 3 Michigan earned a dominant 84-70 road victory over Illinois toclinch at least a share of the Big Ten, just two years after finishing dead last in the conference. Meanwhile, on Saturday, Feb. 28, Florida dismantled No. 17 Arkansas by a tune of 111-77 to clinch its first SEC regular season title since 2015.

No. 4 Iowa State, No. 8 Purdue, 9 Gonzaga, 11 Virginia and No. 14 Kansas all stumbled over the weekend, which could have an impact on this week's rankings. Just how much?

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Here's a look at the latest Coaches Poll and AP Top 25 for March. 2:

College basketball rankings

First-place votes in parentheses.

USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll

  1. Duke (28)

  2. Arizona (3)

  3. Michigan

  4. Connecticut

  5. Florida

  6. Houston

  7. Iowa State

  8. Michigan State

  9. Nebraska

  10. Texas Tech

  11. Illinois

  12. Gonzaga

  13. Virginia

  14. Purdue

  15. Kansas

  16. Alabama

  17. St. John's

  18. North Carolina

  19. Arkansas

  20. Miami (Ohio)

  21. Saint Mary's

  22. Vanderbilt

  23. Miami

  24. Saint Louis

  25. Tennessee

Other's receiving votes: BYU 35; Louisville 31; Wisconsin 23; Villanova 17; Missouri 10; Utah State 9; Clemson 8; Kentucky 5; UCF 3; Georgia 1.

AP Top 25

  1. Duke (55)

  2. Arizona (4)

  3. Michigan

  4. UConn

  5. Florida

  6. Iowa State

  7. Houston

  8. Michigan State

  9. Nebraska

  10. Texas Tech

  11. Illinois

  12. Gonzaga

  13. Virginia

  14. Kansas

  15. Purdue

  16. Alabama

  17. UNC

  18. St. John's

  19. Miami (Ohio)

  20. Arkansas

  21. Saint Mary's

  22. Miami

  23. Tennessee

  24. Vanderbilt

  25. Saint Louis

Others receiving votes: BYU 74, Kentucky 47, Louisville 47, Missouri 40, Wisconsin 27, Clemson 16, Utah St. 10, UCF 7, High Point 7, Dayton 5, Villanova 4, Navy 3, NC State 2, TCU 2, Ohio St. 1, Santa Clara 1.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Men's college basketball rankings: Updated Coaches Poll, AP Top 25

Men's college basketball rankings after Week 17: Updated Coaches Poll, AP Top 25

It's time for the penultimateUSA TODAY Sports Coaches Pollof the 2025-2026 college basketball season. All ...
New York City's tab for police misconduct settlements: Nearly $800 million since 2019

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City paid more than $117 million last year to settle police misconduct lawsuits in cases ranging from the violent arrests of protesters in 2020 to bad police work that led to wrongful convictions in the 1980s, according to a newly published analysis of city data. Nearly $800 million in payouts were made over the last seven years.

Associated Press

The largest settlements last year, totaling $24.1 million, went to two men who spent more than 20 years in prison after they were wrongly arrested and convicted for a fatal 1986 robbery in midtown Manhattan robbery. Another settlement, for $5.75 million, went to a man who said policeblinded him in his left eyewith a stun gun.

The analysis, released Monday by the nonprofit public defender organization The Legal Aid Society, comes as the nation's largest city faces a $5.4 billion budget shortfall. Along with broader cuts, Mayor Zohran Mamdani has proposed trimming $22 million from the NYPD's $6.4 billion budget as itcontinues to tout lower crime numbers. Settlements are paid out of a separate part of the city's budget. Elsewhere, they're paid directly from a police department's operating budget.

"This analysis is really about transparency around what the NYPD is costing us," said Jennvine Wong, the supervising attorney with the organization's Cop Accountability Project. "And from what we can tell here, I think it means that meaningful accountability has been lacking in the police department. It's a chronic problem that needs to be addressed."

NYPD says it's increasing accountability, helping right wrongs

In all, the city settled 1,044 police misconduct lawsuits in 2025, the most since 2019, when 1,276 were resolved. It was the fourth straight year with settlements exceeding $100 million. Last year's total was nearly double the $62.1 million the city paid in 2020 to settle 929 lawsuits. In 2024, the city paid $206.4 million in 980 lawsuits.

Those amounts are just a part of the city's overall police misconduct toll. The Legal Aid Society's analysis only includes lawsuit settlements, not claims that the city comptroller, the official in charge of financial matters, resolved prior to formal litigation.

Of last year's settlements, about $42 million were for wrongful convictions and $28 million — nearly a quarter of the payout total — involved incidents that occurred more than two decades ago. Such cases have also accounted for a substantial portion of the $796 million the city has paid to resolve police misconduct lawsuits since 2019, the NYPD said.

"While these cases are very important to address, they tell you nothing about the state of policing today," the department said in a statement.

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Under Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, the NYPD "has taken significant steps to increase accountability, compliance, and change outdated policies that might create greater risk," the statement said. The department said it also works closely with the city's district attorneys' offices, providing material to facilitate their review of cases involving wrongful arrest and conviction claims.

Multimillion-dollar payouts for wrongful convictions and brutality

The men wrongly convicted in the fatal 1986 robbery, Eric Smokes and David Warren, received $13 million and $11.1 million, respectively. In a lawsuit filed in 2024 in federal court, they alleged that a corrupt detective relied on the word of an emotionally handicapped and drug-addled 17-year-old who was seeking a way out of his own separate robbery rap. Three of the four witnesses who identified Smokes and Warren as the killers only did so after being threatened with criminal charges, the lawsuits said.

Another settlement, for $3.9 million, went to Steven Lopez,a sixth man arrested with the so-called Central Park Five, now known as the Exonerated Five, after their convictions in the 1989 rape of a female jogger were overturned. The Five went to trial but Lopez, under intense police and public pressure, pleaded guilty to a lesser charge that he mugged a male jogger the same night.

Other settlements included $1.7 million for four protesters who said officers beat them with batons or threw them to the ground during a June 2020 demonstration in Brooklyn over the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police.

The city paid $5.2 million to nine people who said they were framed in cases from 2014 to 2016 by two officers who were later convicted of falsifying testimony or paperwork.

Stop-and-frisk continues to be a concern, police monitor says

Last week, a court-appointed monitor criticized the NYPD for poorly supervising and underreporting officers' use of the tactic known as stop-and-frisk. In 2013, a federal judge ruled that the NYPD's frequent use of the tactic to search for guns and drugs violated the civil rights of Black and Hispanic New Yorkers.

Since then, the department has sharply cut down on stop-and-frisks, but continues to have "unacceptably low compliance rates" with constitutional protections, said the monitor, Mylan L. Denerstein.

The NYPD's staggering settlement costs suggest more needs to be done to drive down misconduct, and a "lack of accountability has continued to contribute to a culture of impunity," Wong said.

"These judgments and settlement costs are costing the city so much money and are costing the victims of police misconduct not just monetary losses and financial losses, but also causing real human trauma that they carry with them," she added.

New York City’s tab for police misconduct settlements: Nearly $800 million since 2019

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City paid more than $117 million last year to settle police misconduct lawsuits in cases ranging...

 

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