US | Supreme Court Supreme Court to Take on Arizona Immigration Law Justices set for controversial year By Matt Cantor Posted Dec 12, 2011 10:13 AM CST Copied In this Monday, May 9, 2011 file photo, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer arrives for a news conference where she announced the state's decision to appeal parts of the immigration law to the Supreme Court. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File) The Supreme Court has added another high-profile case to its slate: Justices will examine the Arizona immigration law that has sparked nationwide controversy, the AP reports. They'll rule on a US appeals court decision that barred portions of the law, including a measure requiring police investigating other matters to check a person's immigration status if they suspect he or she is an illegal immigrant. The Obama administration has attacked the law and others like it, saying immigration is a federal issue. The case marks the third hot-button topic the justices have agreed to rule on next year, alongside health care reform and Texas electoral redistricting. Read These Next He won $1M on first Survivor. Today, he owes $3M in taxes on it. Lawmakers warn VPN use may let NSA spy on you. An unwanted hiking trend for women: the 'Alpine divorce.' 'Sovereign citizen' who ambushed, killed cops is now dead. Report an error