Mattox was not in the 400-seat courtroom but instead was listening to the arguments as they were piped into a separate overflow room known as the lawyers' lounge. The room is reserved for any of the 230,000 lawyers who are active members of the Supreme Court Bar.
At intervals, Mattox would leave the room and, from a hallway, send e-mails to an Alliance Defense Fund staff member who was on the social network Twitter, Blechacz said.
"Justice Sotomayor asks for explanation on the three seemingly different arguments from Solicitor General. #ObamaCare #SCOTUS," read one typical tweet by @AllianceDefense at 10:29 a.m. EDT (1429 GMT).
The group initially defended the tweets, telling its followers that it was "posting twitter updates remotely" from its headquarters in Arizona, not from the court. By late Tuesday, it had 4,800 followers.
Its final update quoting the arguments came at 11:14 a.m., or about 46 minutes before the arguments ended.
Supreme Court spokeswoman Kathy Arberg said there are two signs in the lawyers' lounge noting that cellular phones and other electronic devices are prohibited in the room. Lawyers can check personal belongings in a separate room.
Still, Blechacz said there was confusion and that Mattox was unaware of any written rules ahead of time. Mattox was not available for an interview, she said.
A news release from the organization dated March 26 promoted the idea ahead of time, saying that Mattox "will be providing live Twitter updates from the ObamaCare oral arguments."
The Alliance Defense Fund opposes the healthcare law and its requirement that most people have health insurance. It submitted a legal brief on the side of the challengers.
Lawyers who dabble in the media have found the audio in the lawyers' lounge tempting before.
"I live blogged from there once and the court banned it," said Thomas Goldstein, a lawyer who founded the popular website SCOTUSblog. "Now I leave the building."
(Reporting by David Ingram; Editing by Howard Goller; Desking by Lisa Shumaker)
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