Blog

Between 2009 and 2020, Josh published more than 10,000 blog posts. Here, you can access his blog archives.

2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009

“I have never been ghost hunting before. I have also never been to Staten Island. Now a silent battle rages within me as to which of these firsts is more exciting.”

July 28th, 2011

Apparently Staten Island is haunted. And I’m not talking about Cropsey.

AEDPA as Black Swan Legislation Rushed Into Law Within Weeks of the Oklahoma City bombing

July 28th, 2011

Linda Greenhouse recounts the rushed enactment of AEDPA shortly after the Oklahoma City Bombing.

But within weeks of the Oklahoma City bombing, the Senate voted 91 to 8 to pass the Comprehensive Terrorism Protection Act of 1995, which cut back sharply on state death-row inmates’ access to federal court. This bill eventually morphed into the broader Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, which President Clinton signed shortly after the first anniversary of the bombing. Standing on the south lawn of the White House, in the presence of family members of the victims of Oklahoma City and other recent terrorist incidents, the president declared that the new law “strikes a mighty blow” against terrorism.

While I can’t think of any particular impact the law (abbreviated as AEDPA and pronounced “edpa,”) has had on terrorism, it has transformed habeas corpus practice for garden-variety crimes. Its restrictions on the jurisdiction of the federal courts were sufficiently severe that the Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and his most conservative allies felt the need to act with remarkable speed to affirm the law’s constitutionality.

We might add this to the list of Black Swan Legislation. Unsurprisingly, this massive law, rushed into existence shortly after a largely unavoidable tragedy with popular support failed to solve the problem it aimed to solve (stopping terrorism; see 9/11), yet resulted in a number of other unintended consequences (totally turning federal habeas law into a mess).

Greenhouse recounts Felker v. Turpin, where the Court on very short notice had to consider whether AEDPA resulted in a suspension of Habeas (4 Justices wrote that the Court intervened with”unseemly haste”).

In May 1996, just nine days after AEDPA was signed into law, and after the court’s regular argument sessions for the term had concluded, the justices scheduled a special sitting to hear a case on whether the law’s all-but-total elimination of an inmate’s right to file more than one habeas corpus petition amounted to an unconstitutional “suspension” of habeas corpus.

Four dissenting justices (John Paul Stevens, David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer) objected that the court was intervening with “unseemly haste.” But less than a month after the June 3 argument in the case, Felker v. Turpin the court ruled unanimously that the new restrictions were permissible because, despite the obstacles placed on access to the lower federal courts, the Supreme Court itself retained the right to exercise its own authority to grant an “original” habeas corpus petition.

Greenhouse notes other unintended consequences of AEDPA, including the “contrary to  . . . clearly established law cases” and stringent immigration penalties that had little to do with Oklahoma City, and would do little to prevent the next big terrorist attack (again, see 9/11).

AEDPA also had a drastic effect on the rights of legal immigrants, making non-citizens who had lived legally in the United States for years suddenly subject to automatic deportation for minor offenses. Given that Timothy McVeigh and his co-defendant, Terry Nichols, were American-born, the connection between this provision and Oklahoma City – or terrorism in general – remains obscure.

Precisely. A massive piece of legislation, enacted in a popular groundswell of support following a tragedy, that will do absolutely nothing to prevent the original tragedy.

I recount a story from my Habeas class about AEDPA:

Once in class, I commented that some case construed the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) improperly. I noted that the Court’s interpretation made it really really tough to impose the death penalty, so the case went against the congressional purpose of making the death penalty effective. I don’t think I really bought the argument, but it was the best I could come up with. I recall the Professor told me that it is a poor cannon of construction to look at the title of a statute to find purpose. Huzzah! Vindicated by SCOTUS!

About to violate an obscure federal statute? There should be an app for that!

July 28th, 2011

Afraid of violating some obscure federal law that lacks any intent requirement? Worried that you might misstep into the pages of Title 18 and the embrace of a U.S. Attorney? Well there should be an app for that–an augmented reality app equipped with a GPS to locate you, a facial recognition program to see who you are with, a voice recognition program to understand what you are saying, and a deep understanding of the depths of Title 18.

Imagine. Whenever you are about to break the law, it alerts you!

Rather than committing three crimes a day, maybe you would only commit one or two.
Now is ignorance or willful blindness of your crime app a valid excuse? Would ignoring the app imply some mens rea or intent?
Though, a more accurate three crimes a day app would just alert you to let you know you probably broke a law.
H/T Corey Carpenter

“Toilet paper. This case is about toilet paper. Are there many other things most people use every day but think very little about? We doubt it.”

July 28th, 2011

Quilted language that rolls of Judge Evans’ tongue, in a 7th Circuit Opinion considering a Lanham Act dispute over toilet paper.

We’ll start by introducing the combatants. In the far corner, from an old cotton-producing state (Dixie: “I wish I was in the land of cotton, old times there are not forgotten.”) and headquartered in the area (Atlanta) where Scarlett O’Hara roamed Tara in Margaret Mitchell’s epic Gone With the Wind, we have the Georgia-Pacific Company. Important to this case, and more than a bit ironic, is that the name of Georgia-Pacific’s flagship toilet paper is Quilted Northern. In the near corner, headquartered in the north, in Neenah, Wisconsin (just minutes away from Green Bay), and a long way from the land of cotton, we have the Kimberly-Clark Corporation. Ironically, its signature toilet paper brand is called Cottonelle.

The claim in this case is that a few of Kimberly-Clark’s brands of toilet paper are infringing on Georgia-Pacific’s trademark design. But again, this case is about toilet paper, and who really pays attention to the design on a roll of toilet paper? The parties, however, are quick to inform us that in a $4 billion dollar industry, designs are very important. Market share and significant profits are at stake. So with that, we forge on.

H/T How Appealing

Tennessee Supreme Court Approves “Do-It-Yourself” Forms for Simple “Agreed” Divorces

July 28th, 2011

Amazingly, the Tennessee Bar permitted this. Imagine lawyers elsewhere allowed people to use pre-existing forms and similar services, such as LegalZoom, to avoid having to hire lawyers (see here, here, and here).