| 24-5607 |
Brandon Williams v. North Carolina, et al. |
North Carolina |
2024-09-23 |
Denied |
constitutional-violation due-process false-arrest probable-cause speedy-trial subject-matter-jurisdiction |
Did the Supreme Court of North Carolina err in not addressing issues surrounding false arrest, due process violations, and potential constitutional in… |
| 22-6540 |
Brandon Williams v. United States |
Fifth Circuit |
2023-01-13 |
Denied |
actual-case-requirement categorical-approach circuit-split criminal-law criminal-sentencing gonzales-v-duenas-alvarez precedent sentencing-enhancement statutory-interpretation taylor-v-united-states |
When the underlying state statute is plainly broader than the generic definition of a criminal sentencing enhancement provision, must the defendant al… |
| 19-8785 |
Brandon Williams v. Roy Cooper, Governor of North Carolina, et al. |
Fourth Circuit |
2020-06-23 |
Denied |
bill-of-rights civil-procedure civil-rights constitutional-violations due-process federal-jurisdiction judicial-ethics qualified-immunity standing |
Did the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit exceed its enumerated powers and violate basic principles of federalism |
| 19-8595 |
Brandon Williams v. Lawrence J. Hogan, Jr., Governor of Maryland, et al. |
Fourth Circuit |
2020-06-04 |
Denied |
bill-of-rights civil-rights constitutional-supremacy due-process federalism judicial-review negligence standing state-statute takings |
Does state statutes supersede the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights? |
| 19-7803 |
Brandon Williams v. Brian B. Kemp, Governor of Georgia, et al. |
Eleventh Circuit |
2020-02-27 |
Denied |
42-usc-1986 appellate-review civil-procedure civil-rights constitutional-rights due-process federalism negligence section-1986 standing |
Did the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit exceed its enumerated powers and violate basic principles of federalism |