
The World and Everything In It 10.27.25 Supreme Court cases covering police power, double jeopardy, and attorney-client limits, Moneybeat on the tariff drama with Canada, and an Iraqi church massacre
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Oct 27, 2025 David Bonson, a wealth management advisor and founder of The Bonson Group, joins to delve into the current tariff tensions between the U.S. and Canada, revealing market impacts that investors seem to be overlooking. He also tackles the implications of inflation and expected Fed rate cuts, while analyzing the effects of a potential government shutdown on the economy. On a darker note, the podcast recounts the tragic 2010 Baghdad church massacre, highlighting the community's resilience and ongoing struggles.
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Welfare-Check Entries Use A Different Fourth Amendment Lens
- Warrantless entries for welfare checks use a different standard than criminal investigations and may focus on an objectively reasonable basis for emergency aid.
- Justices debated whether probable cause is required or whether flexible emergency judgment suffices in life-or-death welfare checks.
Double Jeopardy Hinges On Congressional Intent
- Double jeopardy protects against multiple punishments and prosecutions for the same conduct but yields to clear congressional intent for cumulative penalties.
- The Court will resolve whether Congress meant to authorize multiple punishments under a firearm statute in Barrett v. United States.
Overnight Recesses Test Limits Of Counsel Access
- The Sixth Amendment allows lawyer-client strategy talks but restricts coaching on testimony; the big question is whether overnight recesses count as off-limits coaching time.
- Justices probed where to draw lines between permissible strategy and impermissible shaping of testimony during longer breaks.
