criminal-case criminal-law government-litigation court-watch

Man Pleads Guilty to Doxxing Home Address of U.S. Supreme Court Justice

Active Active litigation Sign in to follow this case
Share mail
Advertisement
description

Case Summary

A man has pleaded guilty to 'doxxing' the home address of a United States Supreme Court Justice. The guilty plea signifies an admission to the charges related to revealing the Justice's private information. This case involves the serious offense of doxxing, which can have significant implications for personal safety and judicial security. The guilty plea marks a critical stage in the legal proceedings.

Latest development

Man Pleads Guilty to “Doxxing” Home Address of United States Supreme Court Justice

Media Coverage · May 6, 2026

A man pleaded guilty to releasing the home address of a United States Supreme Court Justice, a crime known as 'doxxing.' This action is a serious breach of the Justice's privacy and security. The guilty plea is a significant step in holding the perpetrator accountable.

newspaper Read article

Key Issues

  • Doxxing
  • Supreme Court Justice
  • Guilty plea
  • Privacy violation
smart_toy Juryvine case summary generated from primary court records. How we verify our work.
fact_check

Docket Snapshot

account_balance

Court

Court not identified

Awaiting court metadata

tag

Docket

Not captured

Criminal

timeline

Stage

Active litigation

Active

event

Filed

Date unavailable

Not in the available feed

new_releases

Latest Filing

Man Pleads Guilty to “Doxxing” Home Address of United States Supreme Court Justice

Media Coverage · May 06, 2026

newspaper

Coverage

1 article

1 source tracked

groups

Participants

Parties not parsed yet

0 linked entities

gavel

Judge

Not assigned in feed

What the record shows

The court metadata has not been resolved yet, so Juryvine is keeping the page conservative until a reliable court match lands.

The newest docket activity we have is a media coverage dated May 06, 2026.

Party extraction has not produced a reliable plaintiff/defendant graph yet, so no speculative names are shown.

Press monitoring has found 1 related article from 1 distinct source.

chronic

The Story So Far

Updated 2 days, 17 hours ago

Man Pleads Guilty to “Doxxing” Home Address of United States Supreme Court Justice is an active criminal matter.

The case is currently organized around Charge status, plea posture, and court supervision, Criminal charges and procedural posture, Government parties, public agencies, or official-capacity claims, Current docket activity and next procedural step.

The available docket gives enough signal to track the case, but not enough to overstate the merits. This page will become more useful as filings, orders, hearings, and party appearances add detail.

On May 6, 2026, the docket recorded a media coverage: A man pleaded guilty to releasing the home address of a United States Supreme Court Justice, a crime known as 'doxxing.' This action is a serious breach of the Justice's privacy and security. The guilty plea is a significant step in holding the perpetrator.

The next thing to watch is whether the latest media coverage produces a substantive order, a scheduling change, a settlement signal, or a filing that clarifies the parties' positions.

smart_toy Juryvine case narrative generated from the full docket timeline. How we verify our work.

update What Changed This Week

1 event

Juryvine summaries are generated from court records. Expand "Source" on any row to see the underlying filing.

Advertisement

Case Timeline

1 event
newspaper
Media Coverage May 6, 2026

Man Pleads Guilty to “Doxxing” Home Address of United States Supreme Court Justice

A man pleaded guilty to releasing the home address of a United States Supreme Court Justice, a crime known as 'doxxing.' This action is a serious breach of the Justice's privacy and security. The guilty plea is a significant step in holding the perpetrator accountable.

Advertisement
newspaper

Press Coverage

1 article
settings_backup_restore Data provenance expand_more

Sources tracked

1 outlet · 1 article

Timeline events

1 record on file

Last updated

19 hours, 30 minutes ago

Juryvine aggregates docket entries from PACER/CourtListener, press coverage, and GDELT signals. Ingestion timestamps do not appear in the What Changed feed — that reflects real court activity only.