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NEW: Justices Thomas And Alito Take Opposing Sides In Surprise SCOTUS Ruling

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The Supreme Court handed down a technical but significant ruling in a federal sentencing dispute, tightening how courts can apply certain penalties and, in the process, exposing a rare divide between Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito.

The case, No. 24-924, centered on whether a lower court properly applied federal law when extending a criminal sentence under a specific statutory provision. The justices ultimately rejected the lower court’s reasoning, siding with a narrower interpretation of how that law can be used.

The majority found that the sentencing framework at issue does not stretch as far as the lower court allowed, reining in how judges can impose enhanced penalties in similar cases going forward.

Thomas joined the majority opinion, backing that more limited reading of the statute.

Alito did not.

In a dissent, Alito argued that the lower court was right and that the sentencing judge acted within the law as written. He pushed back on the majority’s approach, signaling concern that the ruling unnecessarily restricts judicial discretion in criminal cases.

RELATED: SCOTUS Issues Unanimous Ruling

The disagreement stands out.

Thomas and Alito are typically aligned, especially in criminal law and statutory interpretation cases. Their split here, while not the focus of the ruling, underscores a difference in how they read the limits of federal sentencing authority.

At its core, the decision turns on how far Congress intended the law to reach — and how much flexibility judges should have when applying it.

The majority’s answer narrows that reach, while Alito’s dissent would have left more room for courts to act.

The ruling is likely to shape how lower courts handle similar sentencing questions, particularly in cases where prosecutors seek enhanced penalties under the same provision. And while the legal question may be technical, the lineup on the bench is not something seen every day.

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