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Supreme Court to Post Filings Online — But Still Prohibit Cameras

Business Litigation & Governance, Virginia & Metro D.C.

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The U.S. Supreme Court, long a technological laggard in providing public access to its records and proceedings, will begin posting all court filings online as soon as 2016, Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday in his year-end report on the federal judiciary.  The U.S. Supreme Court, long a technological laggard in providing public access to its records and proceedings, will begin posting all court filings online as soon as 2016, Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday in his year-end report on the federal judiciary.

The U.S. Supreme Court, long a technological laggard in providing public access to its records and proceedings, will begin posting all court filings online as soon as 2016, Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday in his year-end report on the federal judiciary.

The U.S. Supreme Court, long a technological laggard in providing public access to its records and proceedings, will begin posting all court filings online as soon as 2016, Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday in his year-end report on the federal judiciary. The U.S. Supreme Court, long a technological laggard in providing public access to its records and proceedings, will begin posting all court filings online as soon as 2016, Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday in his year-end report on the federal judiciary. The U.S. Supreme Court, long a technological laggard in providing public access to its records and proceedings, will begin posting all court filings online as soon as 2016, Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday in his year-end report on the federal judiciary.

The U.S. Supreme Court, long a technological laggard in providing public access to its records and proceedings, will begin posting all court filings online as soon as 2016, Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday in his year-end report on the federal judiciary. The U.S. Supreme Court, long a technological laggard in providing public access to its records and proceedings, will begin posting all court filings online as soon as 2016, Chief Justice John Roberts said Wednesday in his year-end report on the federal judiciary.

Timothy McEvoy

Tim McEvoy has tried hundreds of cases in state and federal courts. A former state and federal prosecutor, Mr. McEvoy has been involved with matters as diverse as whether a sitting state Attorney General had to obey a sitting Governor to lawsuits involving shareholders upset with the terms of a merger and acquisition. Read Full Bio