Author Topic: Legal issues; the Federal Judiciary  (Read 116606 times)


Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #202 on: May 04, 2020, 09:32:00 AM »
I need to look these up:

"Just so the barracks lawyers have the appropriate lead time: 18 U.S. Code § 242 and 18 U.S. Code § 371"

Crafty_Dog

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Showdown in the Southern District
« Reply #203 on: June 20, 2020, 12:39:27 PM »
Manhattan Prosecutor Refuses to Leave Post, Setting Up Showdown With Attorney General
‘I have not resigned, and have no intention of resigning,’ Berman says; Trump plans to nominate SEC Chairman Jay Clayton to succeed Berman

Mr. Berman was appointed to the Manhattan post in January 2018 by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions, after President Trump personally interviewed him for the job.
PHOTO: MARY ALTAFFER/ASSOCIATED PRESS
By Rebecca Davis O’Brien, Dave Michaels and Sadie Gurman
Updated June 20, 2020 12:35 am ET
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A high-stakes fight over control of the nation’s most prominent federal prosecutor’s office broke out Friday night, as Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman rejected Attorney General William Barr’s assertion that Mr. Berman had resigned from his post.

Mr. Barr said in an email shortly after 9 p.m. Friday that Mr. Berman, whose office has overseen investigations into President Trump’s closest allies, was stepping down. Two hours later, Mr. Berman responded that he only learned he was “‘stepping down’ as United States Attorney” from the press release issued by Mr. Barr’s office.

“I have not resigned, and have no intention of resigning, my position, to which I was appointed by the Judges of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York,” Mr. Berman said in a statement released by the office spokesman. “I will step down when a presidentially appointed nominee is confirmed by the Senate. Until then, our investigations will move forward without delay or interruption.”

The exchange—in which a U.S. attorney refused to be fired by his boss, the most powerful figure in American law enforcement—sets up a showdown in the Justice Department several months before a presidential election.

Mr. Trump plans to nominate Jay Clayton, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, as Mr. Berman’s replacement as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, according to a statement issued Friday by the White House. Craig Carpenito, currently the U.S. Attorney in New Jersey, was positioned to serve as acting U.S. Attorney in Manhattan starting July 3, while the Senate considers Mr. Clayton’s nomination, Mr. Barr said.

A 1979 opinion by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel concluded that the president can remove court-appointed U.S. attorneys like Mr. Berman, but the attorney general lacks that power.

Mr. Berman was initially appointed as a temporary U.S. attorney. His appointment was later made permanent by the Southern District’s chief judge, not through the traditional nomination and confirmation process.

In his email Friday, Mr. Barr praised Mr. Berman, saying “Geoff has done an excellent job leading one of our nation’s most significant U.S. Attorney’s Offices, achieving many successes on consequential civil and criminal matters. I appreciate his service to the Department of Justice and our nation, and I wish him well in the future.”

A Justice Department official said that Mr. Clayton told administration officials he was considering leaving government but was interested in serving as top federal prosecutor in Manhattan and that Mr. Barr agreed it was a good idea.

The official said Mr. Barr also offered Mr. Berman a job leading the Justice Department’s civil division in Washington, after Jody Hunt announced this week he planned to resign, but Mr. Berman declined. Mr. Berman couldn’t be reached for comment on this matter.

Reached late Friday, Mr. Clayton declined to answer detailed questions but said he was “pending confirmation, fully committed to my job at the commission.”

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, (D., N.Y.), said in a tweet Friday night that he would invite Mr. Berman to testify during a Wednesday oversight hearing that had been previously scheduled to examine what Democrats describe as Mr. Barr’s politicization of the Justice Department and interference in criminal cases.

In a statement Friday night, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) wrote that the dismissal “reeks of potential corruption,” adding: “What is angering President Trump? A previous action by this U.S. Attorney or one that is ongoing?”

Mr. Berman was appointed to the Manhattan post in January 2018 by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions, after Mr. Trump personally interviewed him for the job. At the time, Mr. Berman was a partner at Greenberg Traurig LLP, which was also Rudy Giuliani’s law firm.

That background gave some Democrats reservations about Mr. Berman’s appointment. But those reservations faded, as the U.S. attorney’s office—considered one of the most ambitious, independent and powerful prosecutor’s offices in the country—led investigations into some of Mr. Trump’s closest allies. Those investigations led to the 2018 conviction of Mr. Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen, and included a probe of Mr. Trump’s inaugural committee and an ongoing investigation into Mr. Giuliani himself.

Mr. Barr’s announcement of Mr. Berman’s departure was met with shock within the Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office, and prompted wide speculation about whether Mr. Berman had been fired.

Reports of tensions between Mr. Barr and Mr. Berman began circulating almost immediately after Mr. Barr was sworn in as attorney general in early 2019. Mr. Barr at the time sought information from the Manhattan federal prosecutor’s office about two cases involving the Trump administration, according to people familiar with the matter. One was an investigation into hush-money payments made to two women who alleged affairs with Mr. Trump, which had led to Mr. Cohen’s guilty plea the year before. The other was an investigation into alleged campaign-finance violations involving associates of Mr. Giuliani.

Mr. Barr expressed skepticism at the time about the prosecutors’ theories about those cases, which created tensions between the offices. Mr. Barr also intervened in other cases involving parties close to the administration. The two offices also clashed over the Southern District’s prosecution of a Turkish bank that allegedly helped Iran evade U.S. sanctions, people familiar with the matter said.

The Manhattan federal prosecutor’s office has also been caught in the middle of a dispute between the Manhattan district attorney’s office and Mr. Trump over the production of the president’s tax returns.

Mr. Barr has also recently shaken up the leadership of the U.S. attorney’s office in the District of Columbia, which is also handling a number of politically sensitive cases involving Mr. Trump’s associates. He installed a close aide to lead the office before installing an acting U.S. attorney there.

Mr. Clayton, a political independent and former Wall Street deals lawyer, took over the SEC in May 2017, following an appointment by Mr. Trump. His priorities have included easing some public-company reporting regulations, reining in fees charged by stock exchanges and passing a sweeping new regulation that restricts stockbrokers’ conflicts of interest, including those tied to sales commissions.

The idea of moving Mr. Clayton to the top federal prosecutor role in Manhattan came together in the past couple of weeks, a person familiar with the matter said. Administration officials asked Mr. Clayton what role he would want during Mr. Trump’s second term, and the SEC chairman responded that he would like to be U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, the person said.

Mr. Clayton doesn’t have experience as a federal prosecutor.

While SEC chairman, Mr. Clayton has mostly enjoyed support on Capitol Hill. Many Democrats were initially skeptical of his Wall Street background, but Mr. Clayton has largely avoided the partisan fights over regulations that some preceding SEC chairmen were drawn into.

Mr. Clayton was expected to return to New York by the end of Mr. Trump’s first term. He is widely regarded as a strong manager best known for advising high-profile clients, such as investment banks Lehman Brothers and Barclays PLC during the financial crisis, before he moved into government.

His career before joining the SEC was spent at law firm Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, which has represented Goldman Sachs Group Inc. among other Wall street clients.

During Mr. Clayton’s tenure as SEC chairman, the SEC’s enforcement division has focused on what Mr. Clayton calls “Main Street” investor protection. The agency has produced relatively few cases against Wall Street banks, while cracking down on murky fees charged by investment advisers and brokers that reduce returns for investors and going hard after sellers of cryptocurrency whose deals were considered unregistered securities offerings.

—Aruna Viswanatha contributed to this article.

Crafty_Dog

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Sen. Mike Lee: One Agency for Antitrust
« Reply #204 on: November 18, 2020, 07:21:03 AM »

One Agency for Antitrust
Encourage competition, but regulatory turf wars are the wrong kind.
By Mike Lee
Nov. 17, 2020 5:56 pm ET



Enforcement of U.S. antitrust laws has been divided for more than a century between the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission. We’ve had more than enough time to see that this arrangement doesn’t work. I will soon introduce the One Agency Act to put all federal antitrust enforcement under one roof.

No one would intentionally design the system we have today. Even Justice and the FTC, when helping other nations set up their own competition authorities, don’t advocate separate enforcers. Effective and efficient antitrust enforcement is essential to maintaining free markets and protecting consumers. But the status quo of divided law enforcement undermines these objectives.

Currently, Justice and the FTC work under an arrangement in which each agency must get “clearance” from the other before opening an investigation. This regularly leads to turf battles as lawyers from each agency fight over who gets the case. Jurisdiction over one merger, of body-camera companies, was literally decided by a coin toss.


Every year government lawyers spend hundreds of hours managing these fights, wasting taxpayer money and delaying enforcement of the antitrust laws that protect American consumers. This is no way to run a government. When they aren’t fighting, Justice and the FTC engage in their own form of market allocation, assigning certain industries to each agency. Most health-care cases go to the FTC, while energy cases go to Justice. This avoids waste, but it also creates the risk of different industries receiving different antitrust enforcement. The strength of antitrust enforcement shouldn’t hinge on a coin toss or a backroom deal.

The recent case against Qualcomm is the clearest example of the potential for conflicting enforcement policy. After the FTC won at trial, Justice supported Qualcomm in its successful appeal. Two federal agencies, tasked with enforcing the same laws on behalf of the federal government, argued against each other in court. That is the definition of a broken system.

The One Agency Act would solve these problems by moving all antitrust enforcement to the Justice Department, which is more politically accountable to voters and the only agency that can oversee criminal cases. This will make our antitrust enforcers stronger and more effective, eliminate waste and delays, and ensure the federal government speaks with a single voice on antitrust. This is an obvious good-government solution—a win for consumers and the economy.

Mr. Lee, a Republican, is a U.S. senator from Utah.




Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Eliminate the bar exam
« Reply #212 on: March 16, 2021, 08:47:50 AM »
The legal profession regulates itself—which explains how lawyers get away with practices that pad their own earnings and block nonlawyers from selling competing services at lower prices.

Congress may soon strengthen the antitrust enforcement powers of the Biden administration’s Justice Department. The department should use those powers to eliminate the American Bar Association’s monopoly in determining what constitutes an acceptable legal education and state licensing requirements, which restrict the supply of lawyers.

Prospective lawyers generally graduate from an ABA-accredited three-year law school before taking a state bar examination to obtain a license to practice law. However, many people who are interested in and capable of providing legal services cannot afford the high tuition and opportunity cost of not working for three years and paying to obtain a law degree.

Limits on the supply of lawyers are reflected in prices. A simple contract can run $1,500, which most people cannot afford. One study by the National Center for State Courts found that 75% of civil matters in major urban areas had at least one self-represented party, and these parties are less likely to prevail in court without proper legal help. Others who can’t afford legal assistance end up stuck in horrific circumstances that ought to be criminal matters, such as domestic violence.


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Eliminating both the ABA’s monopoly control of legal education and states’ licensing requirement would allow alternative legal education programs to flourish, including vocational and online courses that could be completed in less than a year and college programs that offer a bachelor’s degree in law. Graduates of those programs could expand the availability of effective, low-cost civil legal services. Three-year law schools would be forced by the new competition to reduce tuition and the time to graduate. More J.D.s would be free to pursue a career in public-interest law if they were less encumbered by law school debt.

My new Brookings book with David Burk and Jia Yan takes an economics look at the legal profession and argues that educational requirements and state bar exams do little in practice to assure a minimum quality of legal services. Market forces have created institutions that accurately inform consumers about the quality, reputation and performance of a plethora of services.

Astute members of the profession are aware that the most advantaged members of society, such as Donald J. Trump and his 3,500-plus lawsuits, are the primary beneficiaries of the system. By eliminating ABA’s monopoly on legal education and licensing requirements, antitrust authorities could help the most disadvantaged members of society benefit from access to justice.

Mr. Winston is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a coauthor of “Trouble at the Bar: An Economics Perspective on the Legal Profession and the Case for Fundamental Reform.”

DougMacG

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Re: WSJ: Eliminate the bar exam
« Reply #213 on: March 16, 2021, 09:31:00 AM »
Milton Friedman used to rail against the over-licensing cartel requirements in way too many professions like barbers for example.  Law and medicine need to innovate too. I would not eliminate private organization credentials like ABA and AMA but I would remove the laws that make competently helping people with any issue a crime.

 It is easier for a consumer to know the proficiency of an eBay seller than it is of a doctor or lawyer.


ccp

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first Judge on list related to Paul Ryan
« Reply #215 on: March 30, 2021, 07:36:12 AM »
Ketanji Brown Jackson

From wikipedia :

" in 1996, Jackson married Patrick G. Jackson, a surgeon.[65] They have two daughters. Jackson is related by marriage to the former U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan.[65][66] Her husband is the twin brother of Ryan's brother-in-law"

 :-o

just another example of the everyone is connected to everyone else in DC



ccp

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #216 on: March 30, 2021, 08:09:42 AM »
come to think of it
this reminds of the Kings and Queens of Europe
who intermarry themselves or their children with kings and queens of other country to solidify alliances and influence and wealth


Crafty_Dog

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Packing the SCOTUS
« Reply #217 on: April 12, 2021, 10:18:19 AM »
"Liberty can have nothing to fear from the judiciary alone, but would have everything to fear from its union with either of the other departments." —Alexander Hamilton (1788)

====================

https://patriotpost.us/articles/79070-joe-biden-moves-to-pack-the-supreme-court-2021-04-12?mailing_id=5761&utm_medium=email&utm_source=pp.email.5761&utm_campaign=digest&utm_content=body

===============================

I am quite surprised that this piece seems to bypass the issue of our Constitution creating a federal district so that the federal government not be subject to the whims and vagaries of the politics of a State government.
Nonetheless some excellent points made herein-- among them noting the presumably deliberate overlook of the idea of rolling DV into Maryland.
===================================
Targeting the U.S. Senate
The progressive goal is a House-like body run by big-state majorities.
By The WSJ Editorial Board
April 11, 2021 5:14 pm ET

Between the drive to eliminate the legislative filibuster and the campaign to add new states for partisan advantage, the U.S. Senate hasn’t been under this much political pressure since the passage of the 17th Amendment (on the direct election of Senators) in 1913. The enduring influence and legitimacy of America’s legislative upper house has long distinguished the U.S. from many less stable democracies. But a new majoritarian ideology threatens to upend that achievement.

As early as this week a House committee will advance a partisan and constitutionally suspect bill to add Senators by making Washington, D.C., the 51st state. The Senate’s traditional 60-vote requirement to pass legislation hangs by a thread. A great deal has been written about the merits of both issues, but it’s wrong to see them in isolation. They are political manifestations of a fundamental challenge to the Senate as an institution that is worth understanding—and repudiating—in its own right.
***
Debate over the Senate’s structure—two Senators for each state, regardless of population—is as old as the nation. At the 1787 Philadelphia Convention, delegates from the larger states, especially in the South, wanted Senate seats apportioned according to population. They were outvoted, as smaller states like New Jersey didn’t want to forfeit their influence in the new federal government the Constitution created. The large states’ size would be reflected in the House of Representatives. This Great Compromise was essential to the Constitution’s ratification.

The design became a part of America’s civil religion. As James Madison (a large-stater at the convention) wrote in the Federalist, equal state representation in the Senate would guard “against an improper consolidation of the States into one simple republic.” The ability of states like Florida and New York, or Wyoming and Delaware, to pursue different policies remains a vital outlet for America’s national partisan divisions.

Yet today, like so many other features of the Constitution, the Senate’s equal weighting of states finds itself under siege in the press and academy. “Minority rule” has become a buzzword among pundits calling for smashing the filibuster and expanding the Senate.

A New York Magazine article last year declared that “the Senate’s pro-white bias is a problem the political system is only beginning to absorb.” The Harvard Law Review led a recent issue with an treatise on “the degradation of American democracy,” suggesting that Democrats address the Senate’s “malapportionment problem” through D.C. and Puerto Rican statehood—or else “ignore the constitutional provision mandating two senators for every state.”

You wouldn’t know from such rhetoric that the Senate’s relationship to population has been remarkably stable throughout U.S. history. The 10 smallest states in 2019 represented the same population share (under 3%) as in 1970. The 10 largest ticked to about 54% of the population from 55%.

Nor is there strong evidence of partisan imbalance. The writer Robert Showah has shown that the party breakdown in the House and Senate has become more, not less, aligned in recent years. Democrats now control 50.5% of the Senate, including the Vice President’s tie-breaking vote, and about 51% of seats in the population-weighted House.

The legitimacy of America’s version of bicameralism has rarely been called into question, even as upper houses in Europe have faded. U.S. states were seen as political entities with Madison’s “residuary sovereignty”—to raise their own taxes, establish legal systems, and, recently, chart courses for pandemic response. Their representation in Congress balances the more polarized House.

But nationalization of politics and media has helped open the door to attacks on the Senate’s structure. These attacks encourage a view of the U.S. as “one simple republic,” in Madison’s words, where temporary majorities can dominate at all levels.

Other trends are also at work. The Framers gave the Senate power to confirm executive officials and judges but expected Congress to drive domestic policy. When 20th-century progressives backed an increasingly powerful administrative state and imperial judiciary, the significance of presidential appointments grew, increasing the salience of the Senate in national policy making.

Instead of recommitting to constitutional principles, the progressive remedy is to undermine the Senate as a pretext for enlarging it in what they foresee will be their political interest. Hence the appetite for statehood for D.C. (rather than Maryland retrocession) and admittance of Puerto Rico (though opinion on the island remains sharply divided), and perhaps “East and West Massachusetts,” as an Atlantic article suggested last year.
***
One mystery is why more Senate Democrats don’t fear a filibuster-free Senate under Republican control, given their complaints about the Senate’s structure. A 2013 Yale Law Journal article noted that “whenever one of the major parties holds a consistent advantage in low-population states, the filibuster serves as an underappreciated check on that party’s power to enact its agenda.” Nuking the filibuster in the name of a shallow version of democracy would pave the way for a bare GOP Senate majority to pass far-reaching legislation.

The left today thinks it has a winning argument in denouncing certain institutions as anti-democratic and racist, as part of a larger project to overturn core American principles. The ideological assault on the Senate is ultimately a challenge to the state-federal balance that is a core feature of America’s Constitution.
Federalism, and the political diversity and competition it makes possible, is a source of America’s stability and success. The Senate was designed to protect liberty by checking precisely the kind of opportunistic majoritarianism that now seeks to undo it. The country denatures its upper chamber at its peril.


ccp

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political activist judge Amy Berman Jackson again
« Reply #219 on: May 04, 2021, 03:54:56 PM »
https://www.yahoo.com/news/federal-judge-ordered-doj-release-173202128.html

I did search

every single judge that has held this seat going back t 1939 as far as I can tell has been a graduate of Harvard Law School
is that not remarkable? is this a good thing?


G M

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Re: Choose carefully what you ask for
« Reply #221 on: September 11, 2021, 10:37:06 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #222 on: September 11, 2021, 11:45:31 AM »
i get your point, but may I suggest it is non-responsive to the merits and/or validity of the Texas law's enforcement mechanism?

G M

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #223 on: September 11, 2021, 11:49:44 AM »
i get your point, but may I suggest it is non-responsive to the merits and/or validity of the Texas law's enforcement mechanism?

Kind of irrelevant as we are rapidly moving towards kinetic resolutions to these issues.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #224 on: September 11, 2021, 11:52:44 AM »
All the more reason for us to stay anchored in reason.

G M

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #225 on: September 11, 2021, 11:58:59 AM »
All the more reason for us to stay anchored in reason.

The whole American legal system is rotted through with corruption. Judges for the most part are black robed dictators looking for justification to push their political agendas under a figleaf of legality. See abortion as a perfect example.

Anchor to that ugly truth.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #226 on: September 11, 2021, 12:25:11 PM »
And now we have a 5.5 to 3.5 advantage in SCOTUS.  Good chance Roe will be overruled.

Yes there is a fight coming, but we will inspire our side and the undecided more the better we stay anchored in reason and by so doing will be more worthy of victory and handle victory better if/when we win.

G M

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #227 on: September 11, 2021, 12:50:15 PM »
And now we have a 5.5 to 3.5 advantage in SCOTUS.  Good chance Roe will be overruled.

Yes there is a fight coming, but we will inspire our side and the undecided more the better we stay anchored in reason and by so doing will be more worthy of victory and handle victory better if/when we win.

This the same SCOTUS that rubberstamped the 2020 coup?

I can't wait until Roberts decides that the clotshot is a tax.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #228 on: September 11, 2021, 04:46:55 PM »
Agreed they flinched-- heavy, heavy pressure with the threats to pack the court, which we will see again in spades with the upcoming re-examination of Roe.

G M

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #229 on: September 11, 2021, 05:29:24 PM »
Agreed they flinched-- heavy, heavy pressure with the threats to pack the court, which we will see again in spades with the upcoming re-examination of Roe.

It’s all a sad, sick joke at this point. The American Republic is dead. The rule of law is over and done.

DougMacG

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #230 on: September 11, 2021, 06:52:38 PM »
I don't understand the Texas law's enforcement mechanism.  Someone can sue someone for $10,000.  Couldn't they do that anyway and not prevail, lack of standing, lack of personal damage.  If the aborted fetus sued I might see it, or the father was wronged if the mother aborted without his consent or input.  Strange law.

The gun analogy fails with me but I admit Alan Dershowitz is smarter than me on this.  The gun caused damage if it hurt someone, not for existing.  If you hurt someone with your gun discharge it is already pretty well known you might be sued.

Your take Crafty?

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #231 on: September 11, 2021, 11:46:18 PM »
Doug:

The Texas law is clearly contrary to the law under Roe.  Its' cleverness is in how it both discourages abortionists from aborting yet apparently makes it impossible to challenge in court.

So the question presented is, for example, what happens if a state passes a law making gun sellers legally responsible for crimes committed by their customers with an enforcement structure similar to that of Texas?














DougMacG

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #232 on: September 12, 2021, 05:23:22 AM »
Doug:

The Texas law is clearly contrary to the law under Roe.  Its' cleverness is in how it both discourages abortionists from aborting yet apparently makes it impossible to challenge in court.

So the question presented is, for example, what happens if a state passes a law making gun sellers legally responsible for crimes committed by their customers with an enforcement structure similar to that of Texas?


Same for automobiles?

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #233 on: September 12, 2021, 08:26:07 AM »
Of course the logic is Kafkaesque both in the case of autos or guns, but that is not the point here.  The point here is the meme of this legal strategem to deny practical legal recourse.

G M

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #234 on: September 12, 2021, 08:31:38 AM »
Of course the logic is Kafkaesque both in the case of autos or guns, but that is not the point here.  The point here is the meme of this legal strategem to deny practical legal recourse.

Try legally buying a gun in NYC. Nothing new here.

DougMacG

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #235 on: September 12, 2021, 11:38:51 AM »
I still need it explained to me.  Here is a Texas law professor trying to do that but seems he doesn't get it either.  Who sues whom and why would they prevail?  I suppose potential defendant fears 12 pro-life jurors that don't care about standing or injury.

https://www.kxan.com/news/texas/how-texas-new-abortion-law-works-explained-by-legal-experts/

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #236 on: September 12, 2021, 01:18:25 PM »
Don't know that I could do a better job than that article, so I will simply repeat the notion that the concept can be used to make challenging unconstitutional laws (which the Texas law is per Roe) super difficult.

ccp

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something wrong with the way this lawyer handled all this
« Reply #237 on: October 22, 2021, 06:38:58 PM »
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/steven-bertolino-brian-laundrie-gabby-petito-b1943732.html

investigation by Florida  Bar warranted?

something very wrong with this guy

« Last Edit: October 22, 2021, 07:40:57 PM by ccp »

Crafty_Dog

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Biden appointing lots of judges
« Reply #238 on: November 03, 2021, 05:48:51 AM »
WT

Biden flips 2nd Circuit to Democratic majority

Robinson is first openly lesbian judge confirmed to federal judiciary

BY ALEX SWOYER THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The Senate confirmed the first openly lesbian judge to a federal circuit court on Monday, flipping the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit to a majority of Democrat-appointed judges.

Judge Beth Robinson, who previously served on the Vermont Supreme Court, was confi rmed by a 51-45 vote. Republican Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska broke with their party and supported her confirmation.

The makeup of the 2nd Circuit now has seven Democratappointed and six Republicanappointed judges following Judge Robinson’s confirmation. She is President Biden’s third judicial appointment to the 2nd Circuit.

LGBTQ groups cheered the confirmation but said their community continues to be underrepresented in the federal judiciary, calling for a transgender appointment.

“LGBT representation in the courts is critical because judges that more accurately reflect the diversity of our nation give legitimacy to these important institutions, which have such a profound impact on the lives of so many,” said Sharon McGowan, chief strategy officer at Lambda Legal. “Judge Robinson’s lived and professional experiences will be assets in her work to fulfill our nation’s promise of justice.”

Of the 870 federal judgeships, 13 are held by openly LGBTQ jurists, according to Ms. McGowan.

“We are still awaiting our first openly bisexual or transgender judicial nominee,” she said.

Toby Heytens, who served as the solicitor general of Virginia, was confirmed Monday to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit by a vote of 53-43.

Mr. Biden has had nine circuit court judges and 19 district court judges confirmed since taking office in January.

By comparison, former President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans, which made the federal judiciary a focus in the his administration, had confirmed eight circuit court judges and four district court judges during the same time frame. He also had Justice Neil M. Gorsuch appointed to the Supreme Court less than three months after taking office.

Progressive groups said Mr. Biden’s pace for confirmations will put him ahead of his five predecessors.

“While more work must be done to undo the conservative takeover of our courts, Robinson and Heytens are emblematic of the exceptionally well-qualified judges that President Biden and Senate Democrats continue to confirm to the federal bench,” said Rakim Brooks, president of Alliance for Justice. “They are exactly the kinds of jurists we need.”

But Carrie Severino, president of the Judicial Crisis Network, said comparing the judicial confi rmations between Mr. Trump and Mr. Biden at the start of their administrations is not a fair comparison.

“The pace at which Trump and Biden judges were confirmed at the beginning of the respective administrations is not an applesto- apples comparison, because of the Gorsuch confirmation and the Senate rule in effect until 2019 requiring 30 hours of post-cloture debate for all judicial nominees. That said, Biden has been able to achieve the pace he has thanks to the willingness of moderate Democrats to toe the party line, even on the most radical nominees,” Ms. Severino said.


The Senate confirmed Judge Beth Robinson to a the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit by a 51-45 vote. She is the first openly lesbian judge appointed to a federal circ

Crafty_Dog

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Biden filling bench faster than Trump
« Reply #239 on: December 28, 2021, 02:13:07 AM »
One suspects Lindsay Graham could have done more about this , , ,

=============================

WT

JUDICIARY

Biden filling federal bench faster than Trump

Senate confirmed 40 nominees this year

BY DAVE BOYER THE WASHINGTON TIMES

President Biden is stocking the federal judiciary with liberal judges at a faster pace than former President Donald Trump filled the bench with conservatives, as he tries to appease a progressive base unhappy that he abandoned a plan to pack the Supreme Court.

The Senate has confirmed 40 of his judicial nominees this year, including 11 judges on the powerful federal courts of appeals. In 2017, the Senate confirmed 19 of Mr. Trump’s judicial nominees, including 12 on the courts of appeals.

Mr. Biden has nominated 73 judges, one more than Mr. Trump in 2017. Among them are 21 former public defenders and 16 former civil rights lawyers.

A major difference is that Mr. Trump appointed Supreme Court Justice Neil M. Gorsuch in his first year, while Mr. Biden has not had a vacancy to fill on the high court. Justice Stephen G. Breyer, 83, has resisted a campaign by progressives urging him to retire, and Mr. Biden’s commission to study changes to the Supreme Court didn’t take a position on adding seats, disappointing liberals.

“He’s disappointed the progressive wing of the party, and he’s not been enthusiastic about adding

seats to the [Supreme] Court,” said Russell Wheeler, a Brookings Institution specialist on the judiciary. “It’s possible that one way he’s thought to placate that wing of the party is to make a lot of nominations of highly diverse nominees. Finding White males among his nominees is not an easy task.”

Mr. Biden’s judicial nominees include 53 women (73% of the total), 20 Black Americans (27%), 15 Hispanics (20%), and 13 Asian American Pacific Islanders (18%).

Women accounted for 24% of Mr. Trump’s judicial nominees over four years, and 16% of his appointees were Black, Hispanic, Asian American or another race or ethnicity, according to the Pew Research Center.

On Thursday, Mr. Biden announced two more nominees for circuit courts. Judge J. Michelle Childs of South Carolina was nominated for the influential Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and is considered a candidate to become Mr. Biden’s first Supreme Court nominee, if and when a vacancy occurs.

Nancy Gbana Abudu, deputy legal director at the Southern Poverty Law Center, would become the first person of color on the Atlanta-based 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond Law School, said Mr. Biden and the razor-thin Democratic Senate majority “have been exceptionally successful in accomplishing what they promised to do: countering Trump’s effects, especially on the appeals courts, of confirming so many extremely conservative judges.”

He called the judges “well qualified, mainstream nominees who are diverse in terms of ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, ideology and most critically experience.”

“Biden and the Dems have carefully limited the traditional substantial numbers of Big Law and prosecutor nominees, especially by tapping federal public defenders, civil rights attorneys, legal aid lawyers, etc.,” he said.

Part of Mr. Biden’s success in getting his judges confirmed has been to focus on appointments in states with no Republican senators, Mr. Wheeler said.

“He’s sort of picking the low-hanging fruit because he’s going after vacancies where he doesn’t have to wrestle with Republican senators over their progress,” he said. “I think it’s pretty clear, partly because he chaired the [Senate] Judiciary Committee, he’s at home with this stuff.”

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said recently that Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer, New York Democrat, is respecting the Senate’s tradition of “blue slips,” in which district court nominees don’t get a hearing unless both senators from the particular state agree.

“I think that’s the right thing to do,” the Kentucky Republican told radio host Hugh Hewitt. “That’s been a strong Senate tradition over the years, and so, and we [Republicans] honored the blue slip … at the district court level during the Obama years, and I did during the Trump years.”

Conservatives have raised objections to Biden nominees such as Dale Ho, who was appointed as a district judge for the Southern District of New York, and Myrna Pérez, who was tapped for the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals.

Mr. Ho, director of the Voting Rights Project at the ACLU, “is best known for fighting the Trump administration on its reinstatement of a question about citizenship on the census,” according to Carrie Severino, president of the conservative Judicial Crisis Network. The administration dropped the proposal in 2019 after encountering a hurdle at the Supreme Court.

In a blog post, Ms. Severino said Mr. Ho “has opposed basic measures to ensure integrity in voting, from voter ID measures to efforts to keep voter rolls up to date.” She also said the liberal advocacy group Demand Justice has Mr. Ho “on its own Supreme Court shortlist.” She noted that White House press secretary Jen Psaki and the president’s point person on judicial nominees, Paige Herwig, both formerly worked for Demand Justice, a liberal group advocating changes to the Supreme Court.

Demand Justice did not respond to a request for comment.

Judge Pérez spent 15 years working at the liberal Brennan Center for Justice, where she was director of voting rights. The Senate confirmed her on Oct. 25 by a vote of 48-43, making her the first Latina on the 2nd Circuit since Justice Sonia Sotomayor joined the Supreme Court in 2009.

During her confirmation hearing, Sen. Ted Cruz, Texas Republican, told her, “As I look at your record, year after year after year of being an extreme partisan advocate, I’m left with the very likely conclusion that if you were confirmed to the bench, you would likewise be a radical activist on the bench.”

The nominee said she would set aside her past advocacy on the bench.

“I am pledging to no longer participate in policy disputes, and instead I will impartially and objectively review the law, apply it to the record before me, and be faithful to the precedent both of the Supreme Court and the 2nd Circuit,” she said.

The Senate on Dec. 13 also voted 50-45 to confirm District Judge Lucy Koh of California for the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, making her the first Korean American woman to serve as a federal appellate judge. Judge Koh overcame GOP criticism of her ruling in February in Tandon v. Newsom, which denied relief to plaintiffs who challenged California’s COVID-19 restrictions on indoor gatherings by arguing that it prevented Bible studies and prayer meetings at their homes.

Judge Koh ruled that the state’s restrictions were “neutral and generally applicable,” and a 9th Circuit panel upheld her decision. But the Supreme Court on April 9 granted the plaintiffs’ application for a preliminary injunction, pending the 9th Circuit’s disposition of the appeal on the merits. The high court said in part that California was treating secular activities such as hair salons and movie theaters more favorably than at-home religious exercise.

The Senate this month also confi rmed, 50-49, Judge Jennifer Sung, another veteran of the Brennan Center, for the 9th Circuit. During Brett M. Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court, she signed a letter to the Yale Law School administration calling him “an intellectually and morally bankrupt ideologue” and claiming that “people will die if he is confirmed.”

During her confirmation, under questioning by Sen. Tom Cotton, Arkansas Republican, Judge Sung said the letter’s statements were “overheated rhetoric, but they were “rhetorical advocacy.”

“If by signing that letter I created the impression that I would prejudge any case or fail to respect the authority of any Supreme Court justice or any of the court’s precedents, then I sincerely apologize,” she said.

Mr. Cotton asked her, “Has anyone died as a direct result of Brett Kavanaugh being confirmed to the Supreme Court?” She repeated her answer that the letter was “rhetorical advocacy only.”

Despite Mr. Biden’s early success on judges, Mr. Trump’s influence on the courts will be felt for decades. He appointed 54 federal appellate judges in four years, one short of the 55 appointed by President Obama in eight years. Further, Mr. Trump “flipped” the balance of several appeals courts to Republicanappointee majorities.

Mr. Trump also swung the Supreme Court to a strong 6-3 conservative majority, appointing Justices Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett. All of them were age 55 or younger when confirmed to the lifetime terms.

At the start of 2021, Mr. Trump had appointed 28% of the 816 active judges serving in the three main levels of the federal court system.

ccp

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Not more but less "diversity"
« Reply #240 on: December 28, 2021, 08:04:58 AM »
“It’s possible that one way he’s thought to placate that wing of the party is to make a lot of nominations of highly diverse nominees. Finding White males among his nominees is not an easy task.”

Mr. Biden’s judicial nominees include 53 women (73% of the total), 20 Black Americans (27%), 15 Hispanics (20%), and 13 Asian American Pacific Islanders (18%).

Women accounted for 24% of Mr. Trump’s judicial nominees over four years, and 16% of his appointees were Black, Hispanic, Asian American or another race or ethnicity, according to the Pew Research Center.

All are a bunch of partisan demo crats

Crafty_Dog

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Andrew McCarthy: Biden's judicial picks are dangerous
« Reply #241 on: January 10, 2022, 01:37:45 AM »
Biden Pushes for a Progressive Transformation of the Courts
By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
January 8, 2022 6:30 AM


President Biden has been co-opted by his party’s progressive ideologues, the same woke Left from which he distanced himself in order to get elected. Nevertheless, the razor-thin Democratic majorities in Congress always made it unrealistic that Biden could deliver on many progressive priorities. I’ve maintained that, to stave off potential mutiny, the administration would load the judiciary and the administrative state with hard leftists.

This is clearly playing out on the federal bench.

With no margin for defections in a 50–50 Senate, Democrats exercise rigorous partisan discipline. Vice President Kamala Harris is the tie-breaker, so for the moment they can approve Biden’s judicial nominees with no Republican support (though they typically pick off a handful of votes from GOP moderates, some of whom continue to regard judicial confirmations as if it were still 1950, with nominees expected to shield the law from their political preferences).

The likes of Senators Joe Manchin (D., W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D., Ariz.) may occasionally stray from the woke reservation, but when it comes to judicial nominations, even (relatively) centrist Democrats reliably vote to approve progressive ideologues. Doing so works for them, for the same reason that nominating them works for Biden: The woke Left is the locus of the party’s passion, energy, and much of its funding.

Democratic senators need progressive support. They live in constant fear of being primaried. (See, e.g., last weekend’s rumblings that New York’s supposedly moderate Senator Kirsten Gillibrand may be vulnerable to a challenge by congresswoman and progressive darling Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.) The moderate pose may dupe voters who do not follow politics closely, but nothing says “I’m on the team” to the party’s movers and shakers quite like a Democratic senator’s votes to enrobe the lawyer Left — even though the radical stances of these nominees on such matters as “systemic racism,” nonenforcement of immigration laws, criminal-justice “reform,” defunding police, and voting rights for felons and illegal aliens would be shocking to constituents back home . . . if the media covered them.

The Heritage Foundation’s Judicial Appointment Tracker provides two data points worth noting as this midterm-election year gets under way. First, Biden and Senate Democrats are steamrolling through the confirmation process. Second, the nominees in question are extremists who draw record-low support from the opposition party.

In less than a year, Biden has already filled 40 judicial vacancies, more than twice as many as Trump had by this point in his presidency. This includes eleven nominees Biden has placed on the all-important circuit courts of appeal, the rung just below the Supreme Court, which decides many more cases than The Nine do. Trump, who had more appellate vacancies to fill, had appointed a dozen circuit judges by the end of his first year; Biden and Democrats are moving at a faster clip. The administration has already put 75 nominations in the pipeline. To this point, Biden has not gotten a Supreme Court vacancy to fill, but he is rapidly getting district judges appointed. That, too, is momentous because district judges decide many more issues than appellate judges do.

Tellingly, nearly all of Biden’s appointees — 37 out of the 40 — have drawn more than 25 percent opposition in the Senate. No other president’s nominees have been comparably controversial. About two-thirds of Trump appointees drew such opposition, which was nearly unheard of in prior decades.

Why such opposition to Biden’s judges? Consider a case in point: the nomination of Nancy Gbana Abudu to serve on the Eleventh Circuit, which hears appeals from federal district courts in Alabama, Florida, and Georgia.

Abudu is a progressive ideologue who currently serves as deputy legal director of the left-leaning Southern Poverty Law Center. For 15 years, she was with the ACLU, which has effectively become an adjunct of the Democratic Party. There, as the Daily Wire reports, she specialized in “voting rights.” That’s a euphemism for legal challenges to election-integrity safeguards — e.g., laws that require voters to prove their identities and that prevent ballots from being cast by non-Americans, convicted felons, and other legally disqualified voters.

Abudu’s nomination is thus par for the Democratic course: She echoes party demagoguery holding that any effort to promote the rule of law or secure elections against fraud is tantamount to vote “suppression” and a revival of Jim Crow — or even slavery. This, even though voter participation has trended upward following such efforts: After last year’s passage of Georgia’s much-maligned election-reform law, for example, turnout for municipal elections in Atlanta, a majority African-American city, was up 17 percent over 2017, the above-linked Daily Wire report notes.

Naturally, Abudu also spouts the dogma that restrictions on voting by felons constitute “practically the same system as during slavery,” because blacks (particularly young black males) are convicted at higher rates than other demographic groups. That is, you are to airbrush away the stubborn fact that the disproportionately high rate of convictions is driven by disproportionately high rates of offense behavior — the lion’s share of which preys on African-American communities. Instead, you must adopt disparate-impact theory, the progressive voodoo that presumes America is systemically racist and thus rationalizes that more black men are convicted because the criminal-justice system is rigged against them.

That a nominee subscribes to irrational political theories (sadly, it is no longer accurate to describe them as “fringe”) would not be much of a problem if the expectation were that the judicial task is nonideological — i.e., that the law is objectively knowable, and that the jurist simply applies it to the facts of the case without fear or favor. But that is no longer our norm. It is understood — indeed, for all intents and purposes, it is required by the Democrats’ base supporters — that progressive jurists will use litigation as a vehicle to impose progressive policy. The desired result of a case is determined first, and then judges “reason” their way to it, distorting facts and legal principles as necessary.

Though cosmetically appealing, claims that both ideological camps do this are false. What makes a conservative judge conservative is the conviction that the limited role of courts is to decide cases in accordance with what the relevant laws were understood to mean when enacted. Conservative judging is more about who decides than what is decided. The point is not to prevent progressive policy outcomes or implement conservative ones. It is to ensure that judges are staying in their lane — following the law, not making it. If the society wants progressive prescriptions, it is free to have them (subject to any constitutional restrictions), but it must enact those prescriptions democratically. They may not be imposed by the politically unaccountable judiciary.

Progressives, by contrast, expect judges to impose from the bench progressive prescriptions too unpopular to be enacted by legislation. Since the judge is expected to act politically rather than jurisprudentially, a progressive nominee’s political views cannot be seen as beside the point. They are the point. They are why the likes of Abudu are nominated in the first place.

That is why Biden’s nominees are facing Republican opposition, though not as much as they should be. Indeed, we should be evaluating Senate Republicans with the dolorous new normal in mind. It is no longer credible for a Republican senator to defer to Democrats on a judicial nominee as long as she has impressive academic credentials, pertinent experience, and good character. Biden’s nominees are expected to advance the Left’s policy objectives. To be sure, many of them are very bright and highly accomplished, but their legal acumen is of secondary importance. A Republican who approves such a nominee is thus voting for the Left’s policy objectives just as surely as if those objectives were spelled out in Democrat-proposed legislation.

To the extent moderate Republicans and commentators stress the value of a diverse judiciary, that is progressive claptrap. Pace Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the self-described “wise Latina” elevated to the Supreme Court by President Obama because of her “empathy,” the interpretation of law is a discipline, not a gorgeous mosaic. The right answer to a legal question does not hinge on the race, ethnicity, culture, or life experience of the jurist — no more than the answer to a mathematical problem should vary depending on the background of the mathematician. In the political domain of legislation and elections, diversity and empathy may properly factor into policy choices. They should have no bearing on how court cases are decided. Litigation is the province of the law, not “how I feel about” the law.

For now, Biden is outpacing Trump’s appointment rate. As a practical matter, though, it is not possible for a president to transform the judiciary without being reelected.

A federal judgeship is a lifetime appointment, but judges have the option of taking “senior status” — i.e., of vacating their slots (of which there is a finite number, fixed by statute), though they may remain “senior” judges and handle reduced caseloads (think of it as semi-retirement). Consequently, when the presidency changes parties, pressure is brought to bear on veteran judges to take senior status, particularly those who were appointed by the new president’s party. That way, the new president can fill the vacated slots with the party’s rising young legal talent — lawyers can be expected to continue serving as judges long after the appointing president’s term has expired. In the current president’s case, this entails the nudging of Clinton-appointed and older Obama-appointed judges to make way for Biden’s picks.

Inevitably, this means the first rounds of judicial appointments by a new president, even if numerous, tend merely to involve replacing the incumbent party’s old guard with its younger lawyers. Substituting young Democrats for more mature Democrats solidifies the party’s grip on those judicial slots, but it does not transform the judiciary. To do that, a president must replace appointees of the opposition party with nominees of his own — i.e., Biden would need to supplant predominantly conservative judges appointed by Reagan, the Bushes, and Trump with his own progressive appointees. To have a chance of doing that, a president needs to have more longevity than a single four-year term. It really takes eight years (or more, if the party can continue winning the presidency) to outlast a material percentage of life-tenured judges from the opposition party.

Biden and Senate Democrats are off to a fast start. Republicans should be slowing them down by opposing progressive ideologues — not just without apology, but as a strategy to make a big election issue out of radical Democratic appointees who are out of step with mainstream America. In any event, though, the midterms and the 2024 presidential election will determine what the federal courts become in history’s next phase.



Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #243 on: January 10, 2022, 05:34:06 PM »
The level of ignorance is staggering.

DougMacG

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #244 on: January 10, 2022, 06:29:56 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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AMcC
« Reply #245 on: January 11, 2022, 11:17:47 AM »

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Re: AMcC
« Reply #246 on: January 11, 2022, 11:29:28 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Legal issues
« Reply #247 on: January 11, 2022, 12:12:44 PM »
Thanks for the heads up on the paywall.  I will work on being more alert to this:
==================

A Second Look at Justice Sotomayor’s ‘Police Power’ Comments
By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
January 10, 2022 2:31 PM


Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor speaks to attendees during commemorations for International Women’s Day at the 9/11 Memorial and Museum in New York City, March 8, 2019. (Eduardo Munoz/Reuters)
I happen to believe Sotomayor is wrong on the merits. Nevertheless, her argument is not frivolous.


Idon’t agree with Justice Sonia Sotomayor on much, but I cut her lots of slack on the “police powers” debate she had with Ohio solicitor general Ben Flowers. As our Isaac Schorr reported, this came up during Friday’s oral argument on President Biden’s vaccine mandates. Specifically, it arose in the first of the two cases argued, which centered on the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) mandate, though it is equally relevant to the second, consolidated case, involving the Health and Human Services (HHS) mandate. (The audio and transcript of the OSHA argument are here and here, and for the HHS argument here and here.)

Critics contending that Justice Sotomayor, the Court’s most extreme progressive, is either conceptually confused or constitutionally illiterate, are relying on this exchange with SG Flowers (here, p. 54-56):

Sotomayor: So, if it’s within the police power to protect the health and safety of workers, you seem to be saying the states can do it, but you’re saying the federal government can’t even though it’s facing the same crisis in interstate commerce that states are facing within their own borders. I’m not sure I understand the distinction why the states would have the power but the federal government wouldn’t.

Flowers: The federal government has no police power if we’re asking about that.

Sotomayor: Oh, it does have power with respect to protecting the health and safety of workers. We have — we have accept [sic] the constitutionality of OSHA. [ACM: I believe she meant, and may even have said, “accepted”.]


Flowers: Yes. I took you to be asking if they had a police power to protect public health. They — they absolutely have the —

Sotomayor: No, they have a police power to protect workers.

Flowers: I would not call it a police power. I think the Commerce Clause power allows them to address health . . . in the context of the workplace.

Sotomayor: Exactly.

It is not that Sotomayor is confused about what “police powers” are, or about the fact that, as originally understood, they are state powers — i.e., the federal government did not have any general regulatory authority over public health, safety, and morals. Sotomayor is saying that in modern times, given how the federal government, including the Court, has expanded federal power via the Commerce Clause, it is anachronistic to refer to “police powers” as if only the states had them, and thus to complain as if the federal issuance of a medical mandate to promote workplace safety or public health is a radical notion.


As Isaac elaborates, the Tenth Amendment illustrates the Framers’ conception, which reserved to the states those powers the Constitution does not explicitly delegate to the federal government. Nothing in the enumeration of Congress’s law-making powers in Section 8 of Article I endows the federal government with authority to regulate public health and safety — at least not directly. (I won’t divert us with a discussion of how Section 8’s Necessary and Proper Clause potentially inflates the enumerated powers.)

Another way of looking at this involves the Framers’ distinction of continued state sovereignty over matters of “internal order” from control by the newly formed central government over interstate and international matters. As Madison explained in Federalist No. 45:

The powers reserved to the several States will extend to all the objects which, in the ordinary course of affairs, concern the lives, liberties, and properties of the people, and the internal order, improvement, and prosperity of the State. The operations of the federal government will be most extensive and important in times of war and danger; those of the State governments, in times of peace and security.

Justice Sotomayor, to the contrary, was making the “Hasn’t that ship sailed?” point I tried to flesh out in my Friday evening post analyzing the oral argument:

One of the main complaints of the Court’s three progressives (Justices Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Stephen Breyer) was that we have long been living in a world in which Congress grants administrative agencies capacious powers, and the agencies routinely use them to regulate commerce in an extensive (I would say intrusive) manner. Moreover, the federal government is a huge player in the economy, and therefore a great deal of commerce that may once have been the realm of private action is now subject to government regulation because it involves taking public money and benefits. So, the progressives ask, why do we suddenly have to justify the way things have been done for decades? Why are we suddenly fretting over federalism, separation of powers, delegation of legislative authority, and so on?

To illustrate, here is Sotomayor during the argument over the HHS mandate (pp. 29–30):

I dare say that I looked at some of the regulations at issue here, not the ones [the Biden administration] passed with respect to Covid but other regulations. Is it fair to say that the vast majority of the regulations across all facilities [that have some involvement with Medicare and Medicaid] relate to health and safety? [A question to which the Justice Department lawyer answered, “I think that’s fair, yes.]

And later, grilling an opponent of the HHS mandate (pp. 65–67):

In terms of clear rules, I’m having a hard time understanding how you can say, yes, they could pass a rule that requires people to wear gloves or they can pass a rule that requires them to isolate individuals who are . . . infected by something, but they can’t pass this rule. . . . If it’s clear enough that they can consider safety and health regulations, why is this particular rule subject to us saying no?

And (pp. 83–84):

I’m having a hard time understanding how and why a rule like this is so substantially different than the volumes of rules that CMS [i.e., the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services] has with respect to so many issues involving health and welfare. They tell you how high the bed has to be. They tell you how close the hand sanitizers have to be. This is before Covid. They have so many different rules that one could arguably say belonged within the state’s rights[. . . .]

The essence of Justice Sotomayor’s argument is that, whatever “police powers” may have meant in 1787, it would be laughable to suggest that the federal government does not both have and routinely exercise regulatory authority over public-health and safety matters. So laughable that no one challenging the Biden mandates dares say otherwise. Ergo, she observes, those who object to the mandates are left to argue that requiring vaccination during a pandemic is somehow a bridge too far — even though it seems demonstrably more essential than the hundreds of health and safety mandates the government has issued over the last five decades or so, seemingly without controversy.

Now, I happen to believe Sotomayor is wrong on the merits. Nevertheless, her argument is not frivolous, especially if one accepts the reality that the Supreme Court has to grapple with its jurisprudence (particularly on the Commerce Clause and administrative law), as opposed to simply and suddenly announcing, “This is how things must henceforth be done, for the greater good of fidelity to the Framers’ vision of state sovereignty and limited federal power.”

To be clear, I am not speaking here about Sotomayor’s disturbing, thinly veiled political demagoguery about the number of children supposedly suffering serious illness due to Covid, or about the other progressive justices’ similar (though less crude) exaggerations about the degree of danger we currently face and the degree to which the Biden mandates could meaningfully ameliorate it.

What I am saying is that Justice Sotomayor’s theory has force and must be confronted on its own terms. She is contending that, at this stage of our history, after nearly a century of precedent supporting progressive governance, it is constitutionally legitimate for the federal government to exercise what were originally known as police powers. That claim can’t be smirked away with eyes rolling as if the justice has no idea what she’s talking about.

ccp

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poll most side with Smith
« Reply #248 on: March 29, 2022, 03:07:20 PM »
https://nypost.com/2022/03/29/most-americans-blame-chris-rock-over-viral-will-smith-slap/

Houston - "we have a problem"

when people think it ok to go up and assault and curse out another

like this was a justifiable move..........


Can anyone imagine if a white guy went up there and slapped a black?

they absolutely should have had him arrested and escorted out
and not awarded him an oscar

but alas ..........

G M

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Re: poll most side with Smith
« Reply #249 on: March 29, 2022, 03:30:41 PM »
The downward spiral continues.


https://nypost.com/2022/03/29/most-americans-blame-chris-rock-over-viral-will-smith-slap/

Houston - "we have a problem"

when people think it ok to go up and assault and curse out another

like this was a justifiable move..........


Can anyone imagine if a white guy went up there and slapped a black?

they absolutely should have had him arrested and escorted out
and not awarded him an oscar

but alas ..........