The Judicial Hellholes List
18 January 2019
Sherman ("Tiger") Joyce, President of American Tort Reform Association, discusses the 2018-2019 Judicial Hellholes Report, including the nation's "most unfair" states in their handling of civil litigation.
0:00 0:00

Related Podcasts

What Makes a Jurisdiction a Judicial Hellhole?
14 February 2025
Tiger Joyce, President of the American Tort Reform Association, discusses the latest Judicial Hellholes report, the economic impact of lawsuit abuse, the ramifications of third-party litigation funding, and the looming legal battle over plastics.
The Judicial Nomination and Confirmation Process
13 July 2018
Gayle Trotter, Attorney and Spokeswoman for Judicial Crisis Network (JCN), discusses the judicial nomination and confirmation process for a Supreme Court Justice and JCN's #AnotherGreatJustice ad campaign.
Judge Kavanaugh and the Other Judges on President Trump's SCOTUS Short List
13 July 2018
John Malcolm, Vice President, Institute for Constitutional Government at The Heritage Foundation, discusses the judges who made Trump's Supreme Court short list and the factors that may have tipped the scale in the direction of Judge Brett Kavanaugh.
Judicial Nominees and Schneiderman's Fall from Grace
17 May 2018
Fred Lucas, White House Correspondent for The Daily Signal at The Heritage Foundation, discusses the tactics being used by Senate Democrats to delay confirmation of nearly half of President Trump's judicial nominees, and what New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's resignation means for New York and elsewhere.
America's Tort Lawyers and Judicial Hellholes
21 July 2017
Sherman "Tiger" Joyce, President of the American Tort Reform Association, discusses concerns regarding the takeover by tort lawyers of the American Law Institute, publisher of the Restatements of Law, how the once highly-respected group known for its objectivity is becoming another interest group, and ATRA's annual "Judicial Hellholes Report."
Time to Tear Up "Blue-Slips" Blocking Judicial Nominees?
21 July 2017
Carrie Severino, Chief Counsel and Policy Director of the Judicial Crisis Network, discusses the "blue-slip" process and why it might be time to tear up the obscure Senate rule that allows individual senators to block judicial nominees from their respective states.