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

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Stevens Solo Dissent Exits With a Whimper, Hands the Torch to Breyer

June 28th, 2010

In McDonald v. Chicago, Justice Stevens wrote an epic, 57 page dissent. The only problem is, no one joined it. Justice Breyer dissented separately, joined by Justice Ginsburg and Justice Sotomayor.

This is notable for several reasons.

First, Stevens has a strong reputation of building coalitions, both in dissent and in the majority. In many detainee cases, and 8th amendment cases, Stevens was able to sway Justice Kennedy in a number of 5-4 splits, by assigning him the opinion. Another example, Stevens kept together the 4 votes in the Heller dissent, even though Breyer’s dissent arguable is in conflict with Stevens dissent. Yet today, he wrote all by his lonesome self. Surely he could have written a dissent all the justices wanted to join. But this was his swan song. He wanted to do it his way, and was not concerned with keeping the other liberals on board.

Second, I see it as the passing of the progressive torch. Although Justice Ginsburg is the most senior liberal Justice, Justice Breyer is now the new leader of the Court. He is responsible for producing new theories of the Constitution and ideas about the law. Breyer, whose pragmatism knows no principled approach to the law, has no qualms about modifying his position in order to built a coalition of votes. While Justice Sotomayor may have some big ideas, she hasn’t told us about them yet. Assuming Kagan is confirmed, in light of her scarce publication record, I can’t imagine her serving as an ideas leader. Plus, as the junior justice, she likely won’t have too much sway.

Third, and perhaps most importantly, this opinion is largely useless. Sure, it gives a lot of refutation to the majority’s approach, and pokes fun at Justice Scalia. Sure, it provides an erudite exegesis of history on gun control laws. Sure, it makes many poignant criticisms of originalism. But so what? No one joined it. Stevens is now a retired justice. This is an opinion for the record books, that will have no more impact than Justice Souter’s recent speech at the Harvard Commencement–in other words, not much.

In Barber v. Thomas, Justice Breyer Upgraded from Balancing Tests to “Elementary Algebra”

June 7th, 2010

Take a look at the Appendix to Barber v. Thomas (p. 18). Justice Breyer, in an attempt to explain the intricacies of calculating Good Time Credits for federal sentences, relies on a page and a half of algebra. “Elementary algebra” he calls it. This much math in a SCOTUS opinion makes me cringe.

As I’ve said before, I became a lawyer because I hate math.

The defendant is sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment.As a prisoner he exhibits exemplary behavior and isawarded the maximum credit of 54 days at the end of eachyear served in prison. At the end of Year 8, the prisoner has 2 years remaining in his sentence and has accumu-lated 432 days of good time credit.
Because the difference between the time remaining in his sentence and theamount of accumulated credit (i.e., 730 – 432) is less than ayear (298 days), Year 9 is the last year he will spend in prison. (Year 10 has been completely offset by 365 of the432 days of accumulated credit.) Further, Year 9 will be a partial year of 298 days (the other 67 days of the yearbeing offset by the remainder of the accumulated credit).
Here is where the elementary algebra comes in. We know that x, the good time, plus y, the remaining time served, must add up to 298. This gives us our first equa-tion: x + y = 298.
We also know that the ratio of good time earned in the portion of the final year to the amount of time served inthat year must equal the ratio of a full year’s good time credit to the amount of time served in a full year. The latter ratio is 54/365 or .148. Thus, we know that x/y = .148, or to put it another way, x = .148y. Because we know the value of x in terms of y, we can make a substitu-tion in our first equation to get .148y + y = 298. We then add the two y terms together (1.148y = 298), and we solve for y, which gives us y = 260. Now we can plug that value into our first equation to solve for x (the good time credit). If we subtract 260 from 298, we find that x = 38.
The offender will have to serve 260 days in prison inYear 9, and he will receive 38 days additional good time credit for that time served. The prisoner’s total good time is 470 days (432 + 38 = 470). His total time served is 3180 days.
Say what?
Justice Kennedy, who dissented in an odd alignment with Justice Ginsburg and Stevens, wrote a pithy conclusion:
The straightforward interpretation urged here accordswith the purpose of the statute, which is to give prisoners incentive for good behavior and dignity from its promised reward. Prisoners can add 54 days to each year. And when they do so, they have something tangible. In placeof that simple calculation, of clear meaning, of a calendarthat can be marked, the Court insists on something differ-ent. It advocates an interpretation that uses differentdefinitions for the same phrase in the same sentence; denies prisoners the benefit of the rule of lenity; and caps off its decision with an appendix that contains an algebraic formula to hang on a cell wall.
If only Justice Kennedy would stop using fuzzy math in his national consensus 8th amendment opinions.

“De Minimis Non Curat Lex” at One First Street

November 5th, 2013

The maxim, “de minimis not curat lex,” roughly translates to the “law does not concern itself with trifles.” In other words, the law doesn’t care about stupid stuff. But after the Breyer page, and questions about giving horses poisoned potatoes and pouring vinegar in goldfish bowls, Solicitor General dismissed the frivolity, calling it “serious business.”

Unfortunately, the guys in the robes get to say that, not him.

JUSTICE BREYER: Okay. Now, we’re outside the annex. And I guess once we get outside the annex, we either have to draw lines or we have to say, well, this encompasses the poison potato, the poisoned goldfish, the small boy with the candle, the — for performance-enhancing drugs. I would say judges are here to draw lines, and between throwing all those things into it or drawing lines, it’s better to draw a few lines.

GENERAL VERRILLI: We can — we can talk about hypotheticals, but the key point about them is that they’re hypothetical.

JUSTICE BREYER: No, no. These are real cases, by the way. The poison potato was in fact -­

I can see Verrilli rolling his eyes here.

 

GENERAL VERRILLI: The vinegar and the goldfish is not a real case, and I would submit that de minimis non curat lex.

JUSTICE ALITO: They’re not real — they’re not real cases because you haven’t prosecuted them yet. (Laughter.)

JUSTICE ALITO: If you told ordinary people  that you were going to prosecute Ms. Bond for using a  chemical weapon, they would be flabbergasted. It’s -­  it — it’s so far outside of the ordinary meaning of the  word.

Alito poured it on.

JUSTICE ALITO: This statute has an enormous — an enormous breadth, anything that can cause death or injury to a person or an animal. Would it shock you if I told you that a few days ago my wife and I distributed toxic chemicals to a great number of children? (Laughter.)

GENERAL VERRILLI: Your Honor, I understand the point.

JUSTICE ALITO: On Halloween we gave them chocolate bars. Chocolate is poison to dogs, so it’s a toxic chemical under the chemical weapons -­

I see that Justice Alito does not hand out fruit. Or Constitutions!?

Then, Scalia just had to get in on the fun. And this seemed to piss of Verrilli:

JUSTICE SCALIA: Do horses eat potatoes? I didn’t know horses ate potatoes.

GENERAL VERRILLI: This is serious business. With all due respect, the line that the Petitioner is asking -­

And Breyer had to bring in Syria:

And we can tell joke after joke, but it’s not a joke that it’s so easy to make up examples that seem to have nothing to do with the problem of chemical weapons like the Syrian problem, nothing to do with that.

Sometimes the Court needs a grownup to chaperone.

The Scope of the Supreme Court’s Decision in IRAP v. Trump

June 27th, 2017

On Saturday, I sketched out six possible outcomes of the Supreme Court’s review of the travel ban cases. The Justices chose door number seven. In an unsigned, per curiam opinion, the Court granted certiorari in both IRAP v. Trump (4th Cir.) and Hawaii v. Trump (9th Cir.), with arguments scheduled for October. More importantly, the Court stayed the district court’s injunction of the travel ban “with respect to foreign nationals who lack any bona fide relationship with a person or entity in the United States.” Likewise, the refugee ban could go into effect for refugees who “lack any such connection to the United States.” The Court provided examples of what constitutes a “bona fide” relationship to make clear it includes aliens with pre-existing familiar, employment, or scholastic relationships with persons or institutions in the United States. Justices Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch noted in a separate opinion that they would have allowed the executive order to go into effect in its entirety.

This decision is not a ruling on the merits, but the Court’s decision to exempt certain aliens from the travel bans mirrors, almost to a tee, the system of waivers included in the revised executive order. The primary difference is that under the executive order, such aliens would have to demonstrate an undue hardship; under the Court’s order, such hardships are presumed. The net result, however is the same: a fairly small number of aliens, with no bona fide connection to the United States, would actually be subject to the ban. In short, the Court agreed to a balance of hardships that is more-or-less what the Trump administration envisioned.

President Trump’s March 6, 2017 executive order, would have implemented a travel ban for foreign nationals from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen. This ban, however, was riddled with exceptions. Section 3(b) specifies six categories of people who were not subject to the travel ban, including lawful permanent residents, dual nations, and refugees who had already been admitted. Furthermore, Section 3(c) vests consular officers with the “discretion” to grant waivers beyond those aliens categorically exempted “on a case-by-case basis” if, among other things, “the foreign national has demonstrated to the officer’s satisfaction that denying entry during the suspension period would cause undue hardship.”

While the phrase “undue hardship” is not defined, Section 3(c) provides nine examples where “case-by-case waivers could be appropriate.” In light of the Supreme Court’s order, three are especially relevant. Section 3(c)(i) provides potential relief for “the foreign national [who] has previously been admitted to the United States for a continuous period of work, study, or other long-term activity.” Section 3(c)(ii) concerns a “foreign national [who] has previously established significant contacts with . . . for work, study, or other lawful activity. Section 3(c)(iv) involves a “foreign national seeks to enter the United States to visit or reside with a close family member (e.g., a spouse, child, or parent).”

These specified discretionary variances track the per curiam Court’s definition of what constitutes a “bona fide” relationship.

First, according to the Executive Order, those aliens with relation to a “close family member” are allowed to enter. The Court explained:

The facts of these cases illustrate the sort of relationship that qualifies. For individuals, a close familial relationship is required. A foreign national who wishes to enter the United States to live with or visit a family member, like Doe’s wife or Dr. Elshikh’s mother-in-law, clearly has such a relationship.

This discussion of “bona fide” potentially represents a slight expansion from the executive order, which was restricted to close family members like “a spouse, child, or parent.” The closeness of the familiar ties will be resolved by the lower courts, in light of the fact that, for example, second cousins cannot generally petition for visas in the first place.

Second, under the executive order, those with pre-existing “significant contacts” with respect to “study” would be likely allowed to enter. The Court noted: “The students from the designated countries who have been admitted to the University of Hawaii have such a relationship with an American entity.”

Third, under the executive order, those with pre-existing “significant contacts” with respect to “work” would likely be allowed to enter. Likewise, the per curiam decision explained: “So too would a worker who accepted an offer of employment from an American company or a lecturer invited to address an American audience.”

Like the executive order, the Court’s decision specifically excluded those who lack a pre-existing relationship:

Not so someone who enters into a relationship simply to avoid §2(c): For example, a nonprofit group devoted to immigration issues may not contact foreign nationals from the designated countries, add them to client lists, and then secure their entry by claiming injury from their exclusion.

In sum, the per curiam decision limits itself to an equitable analysis, but the effect of the decision is to adopt, with some tweaking, the Trump administration’s balancing of the hardships: those without bona fide relations would be denied entry, those with such relations can enter. In effect, the Justices have codified these discretionary waivers. (I long expected those waivers would be issued mechanically, so the number of foreign nationals denied entry would in fact be very, very small.) Aliens subject to these categories no longer need to demonstrate to the government’s satisfaction that there is an “undue hardship.” But now the sorts of people the government sought to exclude will be excluded, and the sorts of people the government sought to waive in will be waived in. This outcome roughly parallels how the second executive order was contemplated.

***

I see the Court’s decision as something of a compromise that leaves Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Kennedy, Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan happy, or if not happy, not sad. Without recorded dissent, the sextet blessed a solution that would allow President Trump to deny entry to roughly the same group of people the executive order sought to ban. Moreover, by the time the case is argued in October, the 90-day review period will have run, and the case will likely become moot. At that point, under the Munsingwear doctrine, the decisions of the Fourth and Ninth Circuits will be vacated. This approach would thus have the effect of (1) giving President Trump more or less what he wanted; (2) eliminating the flawed decisions from the lower courts; and (3) prevent the Justices from having to engage in the thorny constitutional questions. This 16-page per curiam decision may be the Court’s last discussion of the second executive order. That is, unless President Trump issues a third, permanent executive order in three months, in which case the same core legal questions will return to the fore.

A SCOTUS Justice for FBI Director?

May 10th, 2017

Eric Posner called Trump’s firing of Comey “an ingenious bit of Machiavellian jujitsu.” To level up, Trump should think big league about Comey’s replacement. On the excellent Lawfare Podcast, Ben Wittes suggested that Merrick Garland would be a perfect selection for FBI Director to. That selection would also have the effect of freeing up a seat on the all important D.C. Circuit (though not compelled by the Incompatibility Clause). By why stop with the second highest court in the land?

To take a page from LBJ’s playbook, Trump could offer the Directorship to a sitting Supreme Court justice. Recall that Johnson asked Justice Goldberg to resign to serve as ambassador to the United Nations, in order to open up a vacancy for his crony Abe Fortas. Likewise, Johnson appointed Ramsey Clark as Attorney General to force Tom C. Clark to resign, in order to appoint Thurgood Marshall to the Court.

What if Trump opted to select a sitting Supreme Court Justice to serve as FBI Director? The idea is not unprecedented. After J. Edgar Hoover’s death, there was some buzz (as Tony Mauro recounts) that Byron White would be appointed to replace him. Appointing a Justice would assuage concerns about judicial independence, and, in the process, open up another vacancy.

The prospect of FBI Director Ginsburg–who would have the power to go after Trump–will make the resistance swoon, but that is likely a non-starter. Perhaps Justice Breyer’s unwavering commitment to Democracy could nudge him to step down from the Court and step up for the Country. This is also unlikely, as he knows his seat would be replaced by a far more conservative jurist. As for Justices Kagan and Sotomayor, they are only getting started, so they are staying put.

That brings us to the conservative members. Justice Thomas, who has been rumored to want to step down, would under no circumstance subject himself to another Senate confirmation. So that’s out. I think the same could be said for Justice Alito, who, after his State-of-the-Union nod, wants nothing to do with Congress.

That leaves Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kennedy. Both selections would, in Posner’s terms, be Machiavellian in different ways.

Rumors swirl that Justice Kennedy wants to step down. A huge inducement would be to give him the unilateral authority he alway sought to pursue Justice.  Perhaps that could nudge him to step aside at a time when the nation needs him the most. Having single-handedly protected abortion, same-sex marriage, and affirmative action, now he can save the rule of law. After nearly three decades on the Court, he could pursue this new mission during the twilight of his august career. Further, his confirmation hearing would be a walk in the park. Democrats are forever indebted to him for creating a host of constitutional rights out of whole cloth, and Republicans would be thrilled to open up the seat for Bill Pryor.

Or, Trump could swing for the fences. If the President is looking for someone with a truly independent streak, who can restore the FBI’s prestige as an “institution,” and who avoids divisive partisanship, even to his own detriment, look no further than Chief Justice John Roberts. Over the last decade, at one point or another, Roberts has infuriated the right and the left. Yet, throughout it all, he has maintained poise and stayed out of the limelight. Plus, he has already demonstrated his ability to waltz through confirmation hearings, and skate circles around befuddled Senators. Most importantly, Trump would clear up one seat, and with Kennedy and Trump on the wings, allow him to appoint a total of four new Justices. That would be the art of the deal.

(This post was written in jest, though in this moment, reality is often stranger than fiction).