06/12/2026
This Week in SCOTUS History: “Miranda v. Arizona was actually four consolidated cases in which the defendants confessed to crimes after being interrogated by police officers without first being informed of their Constitutional rights.” Excerpt from “Case Law and Legal Procedures for Arizona Process Servers” © 2020. (Photo by: Niu Niu on Unsplash)
06/11/2026
This Week in SCOTUS History: Miranda v. Arizona. “One Arizona case addressed both the Fifth and Sixth Amendments and changed how criminal defendants are prosecuted in America.” Excerpt from “Case Law and Legal Procedures for Arizona Process Servers” © 2020. (Photo by: Dulcey Lima on Unsplash)
06/10/2026
This Week in SCOTUS History: Loving v. Virginia. “In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court overturned the criminal convictions of Richard and Mildred Loving, putting an end to legal discrimination against in*******al marriage.” Excerpt from “Case Law and Legal Procedures for Arizona Process Servers” © 2020. (Photo by: Alesia Kaz on Unsplash)
06/09/2026
This Week in SCOTUS History: Loving v. Virginia. “The Virginia Racial Integrity Act criminalized marriage between white and non-white individuals. The Supreme Court decision in Loving v. Virginia changed that.” Excerpt from “Case Law and Legal Procedures for Arizona Process Servers” © 2020. (Photo by: Désirée Faw on Unsplash)
06/08/2026
This Week in SCOTUS History: Loving v. Virginia. “In June 1958, the Lovings got married in Washington, D.C. then returned to their home in Virginia, where they were arrested and jailed for unlawful cohabitation.” Excerpt from “Case Law and Legal Procedures for Arizona Process Servers: © 2020. (Photo by: Jose Escobar on Unsplash)
06/07/2026
Today in SCOTUS History: Griswold v. Connecticut. Estelle Griswold disputed the government’s right to intrude on something as intimate as marital relations. Justice William O. Douglas agreed, writing that: ‘The very idea is repulsive to the notions of privacy surrounding the marriage relationship.’” (Photo by: Jamar Crable on Unsplash)
06/06/2026
EZ Legal ED® “A party who is denied parenting time cannot stop making child support payments without facing a penalty. Failure to pay child support is a class 6 felony with a sentence of one year in jail.” Excerpt from “Rules of Service: Family Law” © 2015. (Photo by: MChe Lee on Unsplash)
06/05/2026
EZ Legal ED® “In Levy v. Louisiana, the Supreme Court ruled that it is illegal to discriminate against children born out of wedlock.” Excerpt from “Rules of Service: Family Law” © 2015. (Photo by: "Jogonesoft" at morguefile)
06/04/2026
EZ Legal ED® “Many documents that process servers serve on a recurring basis concern child custody and support, legal decision-making and parenting time.” Excerpt from “Rules of Service: Family Law” © 2015. (Photo by: "tangle_eye" at morguefile)
06/03/2026
EZ Legal ED® “Why do marital laws matter to process servers? Where there is marriage, there is divorce. Where there is divorce, there are papers to serve.” Excerpt from “Rules of Service: Family Law” © 2015. (Photo by: Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash)