Cert Grant Roundup: Constitutional Citizenship, Prosecutorial Power, and Court Jurisdiction
Cert Grant Roundup: Constitutional Citizenship, Prosecutorial Power, and Court Jurisdiction  
Podcast: SCOTUS Oral Arguments and Opinions
Published On: Mon Dec 08 2025
Description: OverviewThis episode updates on four major cases granted certiorari by the Supreme Court on December 5th, 2025, following Friday's episode. The cases span constitutional citizenship rights, federal court jurisdiction, criminal procedure, and arbitration law, representing some of the most significant legal questions facing the Court this term.RoadmapOpening: December 5th Cert Grants• Four cases granted certiorari in one day• Focus on birthright citizenship case that drew most attention• Brief coverage of three additional jurisdictional casesTrump v. Barbara: The Birthright Citizenship Case• Background from Trump v. CASA oral arguments• Chief Justice Roberts' comments about expedited review• Executive Order 14,160 targeting children of unauthorized immigrants and temporary visitors• Multiple district court injunctions blocking the orderThree Additional Cases• T.M. v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation (Rooker-Feldman doctrine)• Abouammo v. United States (venue and statute of limitations)• Jules v. Balazs Properties (post-arbitration federal jurisdiction)Episode Highlights• Constitutional urgency: Chief Justice Roberts' prior comments about moving "expeditiously" now seem prophetic given the Court's cert-before-judgment grant in the birthright citizenship case• Universal injunction aftermath: The CASA decision's limits on universal injunctions created complications that led directly to the Barbara case• Circuit splits galore: All four cases involve significant circuit splits requiring Supreme Court resolution• Jurisdictional themes: Three of the four cases involve fundamental questions about federal court authority and jurisdictionReferenced CasesTrump v. Barbara | Case No. 25-365 | Docket LinkQuestion Presented: Whether the phrase "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" in the Citizenship Clause requires that a person's parents have lawful domicile in the United States at the time of birth.Arguments: Government argues "subject to the jurisdiction" requires political allegiance through lawful domicile and that Wong Kim Ark only applied to permanently domiciled aliens. Respondents defend broad birthright citizenship based on Wong Kim Ark precedent and argue executive order violates federal statute and 130 years of settled law.T.M. v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation | Case No. 25-197 | Docket LinkQuestion Presented: Whether the Rooker-Feldman doctrine can be triggered by a state-court decision that remains subject to further review in state court.Arguments: T.M. argues doctrine should only apply to final state court judgments based on Section 1257's text and Exxon Mobil precedent. Hospital argues no meaningful circuit split exists and federalism concerns support broader application of doctrine.Abouammo v. United States | Case No. 25-5146 | Docket LinkQuestion Presented: (1) Whether venue is proper in a district where no offense conduct took place, so long as the statute's intent element "contemplates" effects that could occur there. (2) Whether a criminal information unaccompanied by a waiver of indictment is an "information charging a felony" under 18 U.S.C. §...