Jurist
DONATE NOW
  • News ▾
    • All Legal News
    • US Legal News
    • World Legal News
    • This Day @ Law
  • Dispatches ▾
    • All Dispatches
    • Afghanistan
    • Canada
    • EU
    • Ghana
    • India
    • Iran
    • Israel
    • Kazakhstan
    • Kenya
    • Myanmar
    • Pakistan
    • Peru
    • Sri Lanka
    • UK
    • Ukraine
    • US
  • Commentary ▾
    • All Commentary
    • Faculty Commentary
    • Professional Commentary
    • Student Commentary
  • Features ▾
    • All Features
    • Explainers
    • Long Reads
    • Multimedia
    • Interviews
  • Topics
  • Rule of Law ▾
    • Materials
    • Podcasts
  • About ▾
    • FAQ
    • Staff
    • Awards
    • Apply
    • Journalist in Residence
    • Board of Directors
    • Contact Us
  • Donate ▾
    • Why Support JURIST?
    • Donate
    • Honor Roll
Ross competency ruling [CT SC] News
Ross competency ruling [CT SC]
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
May 10, 2005 03:23:00 pm

State v. Ross, Supreme Court of Connecticut, May 9, 2005 [ruling that convicted serial killer Michael Ross is competent to end his death-row appeals, leaving the way open for him to be executed by lethal injection]. Read the court's opinion [PDF], a concurrence [PDF], and the dissent [PDF]. Reported in JURIST's Paper Chase here.

Law students to join jurist
GET OUR DAILY DIGEST
LinkedIn YouTube Instagram Facebook RSS Twitter
Latest DISPATCHES
SCOTUS dispatch: Justices consider Trump’s power to fire fed governor

SCOTUS dispatch: Justices consider Trump’s power to fire fed governor

Pakistan dispatch: High Court removes justice over invalid law degree in unprecedented ruling

Pakistan dispatch: High Court removes justice over invalid law degree in unprecedented ruling

Latest COMMENTARY
Soldiers in Robes: The Case Against Military Immigration Judges

Soldiers in Robes: The Case Against Military Immigration Judges

by David M. Crane | Founding Chief Prosecutor of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone
Kenya’s Health Data Deal With the US: What the Agreement Gets Right—and What It Misses in the Age of AI

Kenya’s Health Data Deal With the US: What the Agreement Gets Right—and What It Misses in the Age of AI

by Shirley A. Genga | Free State Centre for Human Rights
Latest FEATURES
Can War Ever Be Just? An Interview with Oxford Theologian Nigel Biggar

Can War Ever Be Just? An Interview with Oxford Theologian Nigel Biggar

Supreme Court Takes Up Hawaii Law That Presumes ‘No Guns’ on Private Property

Supreme Court Takes Up Hawaii Law That Presumes ‘No Guns’ on Private Property

THIS DAY @ LAW

Seventeen tried in Stalin purge

On January 23, 1937, seventeen of Joseph Stalin's political enemies went on trial in Moscow during the Soviet leader's Great Purge. This trial of seventeen represented the second of the three "Moscow Trials" in which prominent Soviet leaders were accused and convicted of conspiring to overthrow the Soviet state under Article 58 of the RSFSR Penal Code. The defendants were sentenced to execution or deportation to work camps.

24th Amendment to US Constitution ratified

On January 23, 1964, the 24th Amendment to the US Constitution, eliminating the poll tax in federal elections, was ratified. Learn more about the 24th Amendment and poll taxes from the National Constitution Center.

Jurist
Home Attributions Disclaimer Privacy Policy Contact Us
Copyright © 2026, JURIST Legal News & Research Services, Inc.
JURISTnews is a collaboration with the University of Pittsburgh