The Volokh Conspiracy

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent | Est. 2002

The Volokh Conspiracy

Parental Rights

Texas Juries Decide Child Custody Cases

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In most states, child custody matters are decided by judges; but in Texas, they are in large part decided by juries. Here's a Texas Supreme Court decision from yesterday, Gopalan v. Marsh (written by Justice John Devine), that illustrates this and reaffirms the primacy of the jury as to some such matters:

In this divorce proceeding, the jury found that the father should have the exclusive right to designate the children's primary residence. But the trial court awarded the mother more time with the children under the divorce decree's possession order.

The central issue is whether the court's possession order contravened the jury verdict. We hold that it did. The ordinary meaning of "primary residence" does not encompass a home where the child lives less time than elsewhere, and the statutory context supports that understanding….

Section 105.002(c) of the Family Code provides that "[i]n a jury trial":

(1) a party is entitled to a verdict by the jury and the court may not contravene a jury verdict on the issues of: …

(D) the determination of which joint managing conservator [generally a parent] has the exclusive right to designate the primary residence of the child; … [but]

(2) the court may not submit to the jury questions on the issues of: …

(B) a specific term or condition of possession of or access to the child; or

(C) any right or duty of a conservator, other than a determination under Subdivision (1)(D), (E), or (F).

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The Art of the Deal

The Trump/DOJ Settlement Agreement:—"Utterly stupid, morally wrong."

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Just when you think there is no further outrage that the President of the United States can perpetrate to top all of the preceding outrages, along comes the Great Settlement Agreement of 2026.

Read it for yourself. It's only three pages long. It's titled "Settlement Agreement." It is, however, not a "Settlement Agreement" within the usual and ordinary meaning of that term. You can call a duck a goose, but it's still a duck.

Let's review how we got here. Trump, on January 26, 2026 (while serving as President) filed suit in federal court (SD FL) against the IRS, alleging negligent conduct by an IRS contractor which led to the release of the confidential tax records of millions of people (including Trump), and seeking $10 billion in damages.

This claim is nonsensical and worthless; a reasonable valuation of this claim—i.e., the amount a reasonable person in the claim valuation business would have offered to buy this claim were he allowed to do so—is $0.00. You can't sue yourself; the President runs the IRS; he can fire any or all of the IRS employees, and he can determine IRS policies (including its litigation policies); the President and an Executive Agency wholly within the scope of Presidential control cannot be legal "adversaries." So there is no Article III "case or controversy" where the President is on one side of the case, and the IRS is on the other, and without a case or controversy the court has to dismiss the case for want of jurisdiction.

It would be a good question for a Con Law I exam. The short answer portion; it's too easy for a longer essay.

Trump's lawsuit was going to be dismissed. Everyone—you, me, Pam Bondi, Todd Blanche, Donald Trump—knew that. Read More

Free Speech

FBI Director Kash Patel's Girlfriend's Defamation Suit Over Allegations She Was Israeli Spy Can Go Forward

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From Judge David Alan Ezra (W.D. Tex.) today in Wilkins v. Seraphin:

This case arises from allegedly defamatory statements made by Defendant Kyle M. Seraphin on his podcast show, the Kyle Seraphin Show, about Plaintiff Alexis Wilkins ….

Plaintiff Alexis Wilkins [alleges she] "is a patriotic, conservative, Christian, country music artist and published writer, who also works for a conservative advocacy and educational company, PragerU." Since January 2023, Plaintiff has been in a long-term relationship with Kashyap "Kash" Patel, the Director of the … FBI ….

Defendant Kyle M. Seraphin is a U.S. Air Force veteran and former FBI special agent in the FBI's Counterterrorism Division. A self-proclaimed "Podcaster," "Whistleblower," and "Recovering FBI agent," Defendant hosts the Kyle Seraphin Show, during which he "trades on his insider knowledge of the FBI and his experience in law enforcement" to tell his audience the "uncomfortable truth."

The show, which is livestreamed on YouTube, "Rumble," and Defendant's website, garners wide reach. According to Plaintiff's Complaint, Defendant has over 271,800 followers on X, and his posts frequently reach tens of thousands of views and numerous re-posts. Plaintiff also alleges that Defendant receives income through his video sponsorships, paid membership through YouTube, and donations through YouTube.

On August 22, 2025, Defendant stated the following on the Kyle Seraphin Show:

[FBI Director Kash Patel] has had his own little 'honeypot' issue that's been going on of late, so we're just going to acknowledge it real publicly. He's got a girlfriend that is half his age, who is apparently is both a country music singer, a political commentator on Rumble, a friend of John Rich through Bongino, who also now owns a big chunk of Rumble, and she's also a former Mossad agent in what is like the equivalent of their NSA. But I'm sure that's totally because, like, she's really looking for like a cross-eyed, you know, kind of thickish built, super cool bro who's almost 50 years old who's Indian in America.

Like it has nothing to do with the fact that uh we're really close to the Trump administration. Anyway, I'm sure that's totally just like love.

That's what real love looks like.

Plaintiff alleges that, in making this statement, Defendant falsely and maliciously characterized her as a "honeypot"—which she defines as an agent of a foreign government who began a relationship with another for purposes of manipulating and compromising them—and accused her of "conduct[ing] espionage to undermine [] national security" and "committing treason." …

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Free Speech

Professor's #TheyLied Defamation Case Against National Academy of Sciences (Related to Sexual Harassment Allegations) Can Go Forward

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From today's D.C. Circuit decision in Butters v. Nat'l Acad. of Sciences, by Judge Douglas Ginsburg, joined by Judges Karen LeCraft Henderson and Florence Pan:

This consolidated appeal involves claims of defamation, defamation by implication, and false light invasion of privacy relating to the rescission of Luis Jaime Castillo Butters's membership in the National Academy of Sciences. Castillo brought these claims against the NAS and its president, Marcia McNutt, after they made statements concerning Castillo's ouster….

Castillo is a professor of archaeology at the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru. The NAS, a "private, nonprofit organization of the United States' leading researchers," elected Castillo to be an international member in 2012. In the Spring of 2021, a former student of Castillo's filed a complaint with the NAS. She publicly accused Castillo of sexual harassment in Peru and asked the NAS to expel him.

The NAS rescinded Castillo's membership on October 9, 2021. On the 13th, President McNutt informed NAS members by email that Castillo's membership had been rescinded for a Code of Conduct violation. That email mentioned a password-protected website with further information for NAS members. On October 15, the NAS made the news of Castillo's ouster publicly available on the organization's website: "Luis Jaime Castillo Butters; NAS Code of Conduct violation, Section 4; membership rescinded." Section 4 not only requires members to treat others with respect and collegiality but also broadly prohibits all forms of discrimination, harassment, and bullying.

The court concluded that Castillo had adequately alleged that these statements were false and had a defamatory meaning:

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War Powers

President Trump Doesn't Need Congressional Approval for His Actions as to Iran

Congress can only stop Trump’s actions in Iran by passing a concurrent resolution of both Houses over Trump’s veto, or by declining to fund the war in next year’s budget.

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President Donald Trump is taking a lot of heat for the military operations he launched unilaterally as Commander in Chief of the U.S. armed forces against the Iranian pirates/terrorists: (1) striking Iran militarily, (2) closing the Strait of Hormuz to Iranian oil exports, and (3) aiming (I expect successfully) to force Iran into capitulation. In fact, what President Trump is doing today with Iran is nothing more than a long overdue exercise of U.S. military power, of the sort that Presidents Thomas Jefferson and James Madison engaged in, without congressional approval, against the Barbary Pirates from 1801 to 1815.

The Barbary pirates were an early 19th century analog of the modern-day Iranian terrorist regime. They preyed on American and European trading ships and enslaved their crews. It is estimated that over 1 million American and European sailors were sold into slavery by the Barbary pirates during the centuries in which they preyed on American and European shipping. Robert Davis, British Slaves on the Barbary Coast, BBC (February 17, 2011). The Barbary pirates sailed out of Libya and North Africa generally until France conquered Algeria in 1830.

Congress never declared war against the Barbary pirates, but Presidents Jefferson and Madison rightly used their executive Commander-in-Chief powers unilaterally to cause American ships and marines to subdue them with the use of U.S. armed force. This defeated the Barbary pirates, and the Framing generation, which was still mostly alive from 1801 to 1815, acquiesced in the constitutionality of this unilateral presidential use of military force. The United States has fought only five declared wars in our history since 1789—the War of 1812, the Mexican American War, the Spanish-American War, World War I, and World War II. But U.S. Presidents, acting as Commanders in Chief, have unilaterally deployed our armed forces many other times.

Presidents have deployed the U.S. military without congressional permission on at least 125 occasions like the one that subdued the Barbary Pirates (1801-1815). Some of those engagements have been quite bloody such as the Korean War (33,700 deaths in battle), the Vietnam War, for which congressional authorization was withdrawn from 1971 to 1975 (3,246 deaths in battle), and the overthrowing of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi by President Obama, in 2011 (4 deaths including of a U.S. Ambassador). These engagements were not authorized but were paid for by Congress. John C. Yoo & Robert J. Delahunty, The President's Constitutional Authority to Conduct Military Operations Against Terrorist Organizations and the Nations that Harbor or Support Them. In addition, the U.S. has fought four undeclared wars with congressional authorization in my lifetime: the Vietnam War (1964-1971), the Gulf War (1991), the Afghan War (2001-2021), and the Iraq War (2003-2011). The gloss of history on the constitutional text supports everything that President Trump is now doing.

It is settled constitutional law after 237 years of practice that presidents have the power to use the U.S. military without Congress's permission to subdue pirates, and terrorists, like the now dead Ayatollah Ali Khamenei who was quite simply a modern-day pirate. Iran has been a huge problem for the U.S. since its Islamic Revolution in 1979.

Iran captured and held hostage the U.S. Ambassador to Tehran and more than 50 American embassy personnel from November 1979 to January 20, 1981. It killed 241 U.S. Marines with a terrorist attack on a U.S. military base in Lebanon on October 23, 1983. And for the last half-century, Iran has funded a host of Islamic terrorist organizations throughout the Middle East including Hezbollah (in Lebanon), Hamas (in the Gaza Strip), and the Houthis (in Yemen), all of which have attacked Israel and Saudi Arabia, who are American allies, as well as attacking U.S. military personnel in the Middle East.

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Politics

Short Circuit: An inexhaustive weekly compendium of rulings from the federal courts of appeal

SWAT damage, sloppy briefs, and forced confessions.

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Please enjoy the latest edition of Short Circuit, a weekly feature written by a bunch of people at the Institute for Justice.

New case! Pennsylvania requires real estate brokers to maintain a physical office space even if they don't need one and never use it. Indeed, IJ client Kevin Gaughen's office has been visited more often by state inspectors—who ensure there is a conference table, a landline phone, a filing cabinet, and an outdoor sign—than by actual clients. The rule chiefly serves to impose unnecessary costs that are harder for small brokers to absorb than big firms. So this week Kevin teamed up with IJ to challenge the rule under the Pennsylvania Constitution, which protects the right to earn an honest living free of unreasonable regulations. Click here to learn more.

New on the Short Circuit podcast: We take a long drink from the Fifth Circuit's waters. Including those of the Panama Canal.

  1. In 2022, New York passes the Concealed Carry Improvement Act, banning the possession of firearms (1) on private property where the owner has not given express consent to the carrying of firearms, and (2) in public parks. Gun-rights advocates sue. Second Circuit: The private property restriction violates the Second Amendment, but there's enough of a historical basis to uphold the restriction in public parks. Dissent: No there isn't.
  2. Maryland prohibits renewable energy suppliers from advertising "green power" unless the electricity is at least 51% renewable or backed by renewable energy credits from within a specific geographic region. As a result, an energy company whose electricity is fully backed by renewable energy credits from outside that region cannot advertise its electricity as "green." Energy companies seek a preliminary injunction. Fourth Circuit: Granted. None of the regulated terms are inherently misleading, nor has the state shown the law will clear up consumer confusion. Read More

Free Speech

Law School Recommended Against Student's Bar Admission, Partly for Alleged "Celebration" of Charlie Kirk Assassination in Law School Clinic

The student sued seeking to undo the reprimand and report to the bar, but a federal court concluded that this particular remedy is barred by state sovereign immunity under the Eleventh Amendment/

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From Judge Brantley Starr (N.D. Tex.) May 12 in Fisher v. Campbell:

This case stems from a Texas Tech University law student allegedly making a celebratory statement {in the clinic program offices} after Charlie Kirk's assassination while she was working at a legal clinic at the school. The school … reprimanded her and reported her to the state bar for acting unprofessionally, in violation of the school's honor code [on the grounds that she had] {"fail[ed] to uphold professional or fiduciary obligations including, but not limited to, performance related to clinical programs"}.

The alleged celebratory statements were said to be:

"I'm in such a good mood."

"That mother fucker got shot."

"I'm in the best mood ever."

"They got him."

"This is great."

The student, Fisher, denied making those statements, and the Honor Council report that initially considered the matter appeared ambivalent. But the Dean concluded that Fisher had made such statements; here's an excerpt from his letter to the bar:

The Dean's Office recommends against Ms. Ellen Fisher's admission to the Bar.

We do so for three related reasons. First, Ms. Fisher, as a clinical student with a supervised practice card, disrupted our clinical spaces with a celebration of a political assassination. Second, she has refused to take responsibility or show any remorse for her unprofessional actions. And, third, she has displayed dishonesty when discussing this incident in our Honor Code proceedings.

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Did Justice Alito Lose The Majority Opinion In Hamm v. Smith?

It seems possible that the Chief Justice assigned the majority to Justice Alito, but something happened along the way, and Justices Kavanaugh and Barrett decided to DIG.

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On Thursday, the Court DIG'd Hamm v. Smith, a messy death penalty case that has been going on for three decades. Several things are unusual about this ham-handed DIG. Indeed, it is possible that Justice Alito lost the majority opinion.

First, more than five months elapsed between oral argument in December and the DIG in May. This is an exceptionally long time for a DIG. Usually when a case presents vehicle problems, there are questions at oral argument about it. But I didn't see any clear signs at OA that a DIG might be in the cards. Moreover, these sorts of long-term DIGs usually are unanimous, or close to it, in which case there are no separate writings. But here, there was a lengthy concurrence from Justice Sotomayor, a dissent by Justice Thomas, and a dissent by Justice Alito, joined by three others.  My guess is that there was a majority to reverse at conference, but that majority fell apart.

Second, Justice Alito's dissent from the DIG was joined by Justice Thomas in whole, but Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Gorsuch did not join Part II. The Chief is almost never in dissent--especially in a case of this magnitude. It seems more likely to me that the Chief would have assigned this majority opinion to Justice Alito after the conference, and then when the majority fell apart, the Chief didn't jump ship. Perhaps Alito had already made changes to his opinion to assuage the Chief.

Third, in the December sitting, there were eight argued cases. So far, opinions have been authored in four of them by Justices Thomas, Kagan, Gorsuch, Jackson. The DIG in Hamm is, as per custom, unsigned. But someone would have had a the majority after conference. There are three remaining cases. I am fairly confident that Chief Justice Roberts will write the majority opinion in Slaughter. The other two cases are NRSC v. FEC and FS Credit Opportunities Corp. v. Saba Capital Master Fund (involves the Investment Company Act). If Justice Alito authors either of these cases, my theory falls apart. But if Justice Kavanaugh, for example, writes the campaign finance case, and Justice Sotomayor gets the (boring) investment case, that keeps my theory viable.

Fourth, parts of Justice Alito's dissent reads like a majority opinion. It is more than twenty pages long, and spend some time walking through the doctrine. There is also a really detailed study of statistics--a topic that usually does not come easily to lawyers. If this was just a dissent from a DIG, I don't think this level of detail was need for what is basically a one-off case.

Fifth, there is some language in Justice Alito's dissent that casts aspersion on the majority--in particular Justices Kagan, Kavanaugh, and Barrett who chose not to write. Alito charge:

The Court nonetheless dismisses this opportunity to provide much-needed guidance to lower courts, even though six Justices stake out a position on whether the decision below is correct. See ante, at 13 (SOTOMAYOR, J., joined by JACKSON, J., concurring).

In other words, if six members of the Court opine on the issue, that ought to be enough to settle the case on the merits. Certainly the other three Justices could have picked a camp. But they didn't. They remained silent.

Justice Alito takes things a step further. In the introductory section, he suggests the majority lacks (trigger warning) courage by shying away from its duties:

I respectfully dissent from the Court's decision to leave this important question unanswered. At the very least, we should reverse the lower courts' erroneous analysis of Smith's scores and remand for a fresh consideration of his Atkins claim using any sound method. Even if our decision went no further, we would provide clarity and coherence to one aspect of our Atkins doctrine. Instead, the Court shies away from its obligation to provide workable rules for capital cases. In doing so, the Court disserves its own death-penalty jurisprudence, States' criminal-justice systems, lower courts, and victims of horrific murders.

Alito repeats this charge in the concluding section:

By instead remaining silent, the Court exacerbates the confusion that plagues our jurisprudence in this area. If this Court continues to shy away from opportunities to provide workable doctrine, we should not be surprised if petitions asking us to overrule Atkins, Hall, and Moore arrive at our doorsteps soon.

Alito often makes this charge of "shying away" from difficult issues. This attack has to be directed at Justices Kavanaugh and Barrett in particular. You might think that the Chief Justice joined this barb, but I don't think he did. Roberts only joined Parts I, III, and IV. The "shies away" line appears in the prefatory material before Part I and the concluding material after the three asterisks. We cannot ascribe these claims to the Chief. Still, Roberts did not need to signal his vote here at all, given the DIG, but chose to.

Sixth, it isn't clear what happened here. What spooked out Justices Kavanaugh and Barrett? Perhaps Justice Kagan (who was awfully quiet) found some reason to avoid deciding the case? Maybe they realized this dispute was so unusual--given the multiple IQ tests--and was unlikely to repeat, that they just let it go without setting another precedent? Maybe they just didn't want to decide this case this term? Of the three Trump appointees, Justice Barrett has been the most willing to find for capital defendants. In 2021, Barrett joined the liberals in blocking the execution in Dunn v. Smith. Both Barrett and Kavanaugh ruled for Richard Glossip (who is actually now on bail).

After all of these years of litigation, two trips to the Supreme Court, extended briefing, and oral argument, a DIG is so unsatisfying. Justice Alito stated this point well:

The crux of JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR's stance appears to be that the Court erred by granting certiorari on the question as formulated by the United States. Ante, at 7. But this petition-stage gripe is no reason to dismiss the case a year later. The parties and amici—not to mention Members of this Court—devoted substantial resources to this case and thoroughly addressed the question presented, and that question is dispositive to the judgment below.

Here, the Court really needed to tinker with the machinery of death, but instead, the DIG hands an undeserved victory to the abolitionists.

This year, Greg v. Georgia celebrates its fiftieth anniversary. What a mistake the entire line of cases has become. Let me commend Craig Lerner's excellent essay in Civitas and urge the Court to get out of the micromanagement of the death penalty, a doctrine that has no bearing in the original meaning of the Constitution. The Court has already extricated the judiciary from other terrible Burger Court precedents: RoeLemon, Abood, Bakke, GinglesUnited States v. Nixon, TWA v. HardisonChevronApodacaNevada v. HallWilliamson County, Davis v. Bandemer, and more. Add the "evolving standards of decency" test to that ash heap.  And while they're at it, the Court should overrule Nixon v. GSA, get rid of the bad parts of Buckley v. Valeo, and eliminate the awful Penn Central test, as Richard Epstein reminds us. There is so much work to be done.

Free Trade

Video of my Bruno Leoni Institute (Milan) Talk on the Supreme Court Tariff Decision and its Implications

I gave the talk earlier this week.

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During my recent trip to Italy, I did a talk on "The Legal Battle Against Trump's Tariffs" at the Bruno Leoni Institute in Milan. BLI is a leading Italian libertarian/classical liberal think tank. I covered the legal issues in the case, currently ongoing litigation over Trump's new Section 122 tariffs, and also some broader implications for emergency powers, the rule of law, executive power, and other issues - including some points specifically relevant to European.

The video of the event is available below. The first 3-4 minutes (in which Italian political scientist Alberto Mingardi, Director General of the Bruno Leoni Institute, introduces me), are in Italian. But my talk and the Q&A session are in English.

For a compendium of links to my writings about the tariff case and related issues, see here.

Free Speech

No Pseudonymity for Parent Suing Over School Vaccination Mandate

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From today's Ninth Circuit 2-1 panel decision in Doe v. Ventura Unified School Dist., by Judge Richard Paez and Consuelo Callahan:

[1.] To proceed pseudonymously, a "plaintiff must show both (1) a fear of severe harm, and (2) that the fear of severe harm is reasonable." These are the "two most important factors," id., because a plaintiff must establish "a need for the cloak of anonymity."

The district court's determination that Doe failed to show she reasonably feared severe harm was not an abuse of discretion. Doe's interactions with public officials do not establish that the media or community members would retaliate against her in a severe manner, and Doe failed to identify other probative evidence rendering her fears reasonable. Rather, she expresses concern about what "could" or "probably would" happen. But bare assertions are insufficient to establish a reasonable fear of severe harm. Likewise, the district court did not abuse its discretion in determining that Doe's fear of "social stigma" does not amount to severe harm. The prospect of being publicly linked to an unpopular viewpoint alone does not warrant anonymity absent evidence linking disclosure to a severe injury.

[2.] The district court did not abuse its discretion in evaluating Doe's vulnerability. The district court properly considered the factors suggesting Doe was particularly vulnerable and those suggesting she was not particularly vulnerable, and reasonably concluded that it was appropriate to give "little weight" to her vulnerability.

{The dissent argues that the district court erred by failing to analyze Child 1's vulnerability as a factor supporting her own pseudonymity and Doe's privacy interests…. "[F]ear of severe harm is irrelevant if the plaintiffs do not reasonably fear severe harm." As described, Doe failed to identify probative evidence supporting the reasonableness of her fear of severe retaliation.

Moreover, after oral argument, Plaintiff's counsel informed the court that Plaintiff and her child do not share the same last name, further attenuating Doe's fear that disclosure of her name would yield severe retaliation against Child 1.} {The district court properly acknowledged that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 5.2(a)(3) presumptively requires pseudonymizing the names of children, like Child 1, with only initials "[u]nless the court orders otherwise." This appeal only pertains to Doe's pseudonymization.}

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Free Speech

$485K Settlement in Government Employee Speech Case Stemming from Comments About Charlie Kirk's Death

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The case, Brown v. Young, just settled; the government employer (the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission) agreed to pay plaintiff $275K ($40K in back wages + $235K in compensatory damages) + $210K in attorneys' fees and costs. The Commission also agreed to give plaintiff a neutral reference in any future employment inquiries, and (to quote the ACLU press release), "to permit her to interact with FWC staff and resources on the same basis as any other external partner or volunteer, preserving her ability to continue her conservation work through partner organizations."

In exchange plaintiff resigned, dropped the case, and released her claims, including those related to sanctions that were awarded last week; here's an excerpt from the sanctions (read the whole sanctions decision for more):

This Court concludes that Plaintiff is entitled to attorneys' fees based on Ms. Tucker's and defense counsel's1 objectively unreasonable multiplication of proceedings in continuing to defend the Tucker declaration once it became clear that Ms. Tucker lacked personal knowledge to make the false statements identified above. Fees shall be split between Ms. Tucker and defense counsel and will be assessed at the conclusion of this case. To be clear, there must be a sanction for Ms. Tucker and her prior counsel's continued efforts to ignore the obvious—that Ms. Tucker lacked the personal knowledge necessary to make certain statements in her declaration and that such statements were, in fact, false—and defend the indefensible once that lack of personal knowledge and falsity became clear following Ms. Tucker's deposition.

Here are the details on the First Amendment issue in the case, from my Nov. 2015 post on the court's decision to deny a preliminary injunction to plaintiff:

[* * *]

Brown, who worked at the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission reposted this item from an Instagram account that "posts satirical social commentary from the perspective of a whale":

This was apparently a reference to Kirk's comments that part of the price of the Second Amendment is that there would be "some gun deaths":

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Sex Discrimination

Lawsuit Against Virginia Tech Alleging Anti-Male Bias in Title IX Proceedings Can Go Forward in Part

“Johnny has alleged abundant facts that, if true, raise grave concerns about the way VT, through these administrators, conducted the investigations of Pauline’s and Jane’s sexual-assault claims, as well as the ultimate outcomes of those inquiries. Simply put, Johnny has alleged facts that, if true, raise a plausible inference that VT discriminated against him in these investigations because he is male and, in so doing, violated Title IX.”

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An excerpt from today's long decision by Judge Thomas Cullen (W.D. Va.) in Doe v. Va. Polytechnic Inst. & State Univ.:

In the fall of 2024, Plaintiff John Doe ("Johnny"), then a student at Virginia Tech ("VT" or "the university") and member of its Corps of Cadets, was accused by two female students of sexual assault.

Johnny's first accuser, Pauline Poe, with whom he previously had at least two consensual sexual encounters, claimed that Johnny had continued to engage in sexual intercourse with her after she withdrew consent. A couple weeks later, Jane Roe, a fellow member of the Corps of Cadets, complained that Johnny, with whom she had previously been intimate, had sex with her after a night of heavy (underage) drinking. Jane, who claimed to have no memory of this encounter, later alleged that it amounted to sexual assault on Johnny's part because she was incapacitated.

After receiving these two complaints, VT officials sprang into action. The same day that Jane reported Johnny to VT's Title IX office—over five weeks after their allegedly non-consensual encounter—the university issued a campus-wide alert about the purported sexual assault. VT's email did not identify Johnny or Jane by name, but it provided the specific location of the alleged incident and noted that the parties involved knew each other. Although no one from the Title IX office had yet to investigate Jane's claims—let alone get Johnny's side of the story—the campus-wide email characterized him as "the offender" and Jane as "the survivor." The following day, a VT official placed Johnny on interim suspension, which resulted in his being evicted from his dorm room, pending the outcome of separate Title IX and student-conduct investigations.

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Free Speech

Racial Slurs as Actionable Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress

UPDATE: Link to transcript in the earlier criminal case, and quotes from the transcript, added

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From Allen v. Noble, decided last week by Judge Latonia Williams (Conn. Super. Ct. New Haven), plaintiff's factual allegations (for Noble's side of the story, as to the now-dropped criminal charges against her apparently based on the same incident, see this N.Y. Post op-ed—she denies that she used slurs, and claims that surveillance video footage shows "[n]o confrontation, not even any interaction, with the accuser" [UPDATE: see below for the transcript of the hearing where the prosecutors dropped the charges]):

[P]laintiff alleges the following facts. The plaintiff is an American citizen of African descent, who, during the times alleged in the complaint, was employed as a parking lot attendant for Pro-Park Mobility. The defendant Noble, during the times alleged in the complaint, was the executive director, employee, and agent for service of process of the defendant Buckley Institute. On or about a date prior to July 6, 2023, one or both of the defendants entered into an agreement with the plaintiff's employer to rent parking spaces for one or more of Buckley Institute's employees, including Noble, in the parking lot where the plaintiff works as an attendant (parking lot).

The complaint alleges that on or about July 6, 2023, while the plaintiff was at the parking lot, he informed Noble that the lot was full and he could not provide for her parking needs. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff overheard Noble state, "fucking niggers," and that the plaintiff did not respond to her.

The complaint further alleges that on July 13, 2023, while the plaintiff was on duty within the parking lot, Noble told him she could not find a parking place in the parking lot and the plaintiff said the parking lot was full and could not accommodate her. The complaint alleges that Noble replied: "You's niggers get jobs and don't know how to act!," and that the plaintiff did not respond to her.

The complaint further alleges that on or about July 27, 2023, the plaintiff observed Noble arrive at the parking lot and found that, due to the lot being full, there was no space within the parking lot to park her car. The complaint alleges that at that time, in the presence of, and within the earshot of two individuals and the plaintiff, Noble orally referred to the plaintiff as a "nigger" three times over a parking lot issue.

The complaint states that "[t]he plaintiff, by dint of … Noble's racially odious, racially demeaning, cruel, abhorrent, and racist epithets towards … [the plaintiff] had the capacity to hold him up to public ridicule, public humiliation, and has caused him great annoyance, embarrassment, shame, degradation, and moreover, he has suffered in his reputation and has lost the good will of many persons with which he otherwise would have enjoyed by dint of … Noble's heinous and foul misconduct she directed towards him." …

The court allowed plaintiff's intentional infliction of emotional distress claim to go forward:

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