The Volokh Conspiracy

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

The Volokh Conspiracy

Free Speech

Laura Loomer Loses Defamation Suit Against Bill Maher Over "Who's Trump Fucking? … Might Be Laura Loomer" Lines

|

From today's decision by Judge James S. Moody, Jr. (M.D. Fla.) in Loomer v. Maher:

Plaintiff Laura Loomer is a well-known conservative investigative journalist. Loomer is also a "conservative, Republican, Jewish female activist." She has twice mounted unsuccessful bids for a congressional seat…. Specifically, Loomer avers that on a September 13, 2024, episode of Maher's "Real Time" show …, Maher made and published the following false, malicious, and defamatory statement of and concerning Loomer:

I think maybe Laura Loomer's in an arranged relationship to affect the election because she's very close to Trump. She's 31, looks like his type. We did an editorial here a few years ago … it was basically, who's Trump fucking? Because I said, you know, it's not nobody. He's been a dog for too long, and it's not Melania. I think we may have our answer this week. I think it might be Laura Loomer.

According to the allegations: "In this statement, Defendant Maher makes the false statement that Ms. Loomer is in a sexual relationship with Donald Trump, who is a married man." Thus, Defendant Maher "falsely and maliciously accused Ms. Loomer of having committed adultery with Donald Trump." …

Read More

Supreme Court

Stephanie Barclay on "The Emergency Docket's Mistaken Birthday"

Contrary to what some believe, the Clean Power Plan was not the first executive branch action stopped on the "Shadow Docket."

|

Was the Clean Power Plan the first executive branch action halted by Supreme Court order on the "shadow docket"? Was it even the first Obama Administration action stopped in this way? Over at SCOTUSBlog, Stephanie Barclay explains why the answer is "no."

Her piece begins:

Last Saturday, the New York Times published a trove of internal Supreme Court memoranda from February 2016 and declared that the five-day deliberation over President Barack Obama's Clean Power Plan marked the birth of the court's modern "shadow docket." Stephen Vladeck, writing before the leak and again after it, made the same claim: the Feb. 9, 2016 rulings were, he wrote, "the birth of what we might call the modern emergency docket." Jack Goldsmith, pushing back against the broader Times framing, narrowed the point but did not abandon it – the 2016 order, on his account, "fairly marks the beginning of the Court's modern active engagement with presidential initiatives via interim orders."

Each of these accounts locates the emergency docket's initial engagement with presidential initiatives on a single winter evening in 2016. Each is wrong. An earlier interim order blocking an executive branch regulatory program as applied to a large group of challengers was not entered by Chief Justice John Roberts. It was entered by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, acting alone, more than two years before the Clean Power Plan application landed at the court. And her approach was adopted not long after by a unanimous Supreme Court.

The first example Barclay points to was Justice Sotomayor's entry of a preliminary injunction of the so-called "contraception mandate" as applied to the Little Sisters of the Poor:

The district court denied their preliminary injunction motion on December 27. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit denied a request for an emergency injunction pending appeal on December 31. Enforcement was set to begin at midnight.

Sotomayor, as circuit justice for the 10th Circuit, received the Little Sisters' emergency application that evening. She granted it within hours, before she herself led the ball drop in Times Square that New Year's Eve. Her order was only one paragraph long and issued without merits briefing, oral argument, or explanation.

It enjoined the federal government from enforcing a premier presidential regulatory initiative before the 10th Circuit had ruled on whether the district court had correctly denied preliminary injunctive relief. The New York Times editorial board immediately criticized the ruling as "perplexing," arguing that Sotomayor had granted an "audacious" request. The criticisms focused in part on the fact that "[a] federal trial court denied a preliminary injunction . . . and a federal court of appeals declined to issue an injunction pending appeal" because they found interim relief unnecessary. Yet Sotomayor's ruling went the other way.

Three weeks later, without recorded dissent, the Court issued an order broadening the injunction to protect several hundred other religious organizations pending the outcome of Little Sisters' appeal.

By any metric the Times applies to the February 2016 orders, this was a modern emergency docket decision. An unsigned order. No merits briefing. No oral argument. An intervention ahead of the 10th Circuit's full appellate resolution. A major decision limiting enforcement of a signature presidential initiative. And – a feature the 2016 orders notably lack – unanimity across the court's ideological divisions.

Were that not enough, in 2014 the Court granted Wheaton College's request for an injunction pending appeal and in 2015 stayed the mandate in Zubik.

As Barclay notes, one can only understand the evolution of the "shadow docket," and the Court's actions, if one also consider the dynamics to which the Court has been responding (a point I have made repeatedly and at length). Barclay writes:

What has been unprecedented about the last decade is less about the court's engagement on the emergency docket. That engagement has been a response. What has been unprecedented is, among other things, the executive action to which the court has responded – regulatory programs and enforcement actions designed, through their fine structures or compliance timelines, to impose the costs of capitulation before any court could reach the merits, rendering any merits review after the fact a nullity. Roberts voiced this exact concern in his Clean Power Plan memo, noting that the court had learned from recent experience showing that the EPA had found ways to "effectively implement an important program we held to be contrary to law." The continuity in the court's doctrinal response tracks that pattern, not partisan alignment.

The HHS mandate raised that problem in an acute form. The government had structured the regulation and its penalty regime so that compliance costs would accrue daily from the moment of enforcement. For a small religious nonprofit, the effect was to force capitulation or bankruptcy before any appellate court could adjudicate its religious claims. Justice Samuel Alito's private 2016 memo, concerned that voluntary compliance with the Clean Power Plan would render merits review "a mere postscript," voiced a concern that had been addressed – without dissent – in 2014.

The same structural concern has driven the court's engagement with the current Trump administration. When the executive branch attempted to remove alleged Tren de Aragua members under the Alien Enemies Act on a timeline calculated to foreclose any judicial testing of the removals' lawfulness, the court enjoined the removals on an emergency basis. When the administration sought to federalize and deploy the Illinois National Guard on contested statutory grounds, the court denied its stay application. When the administration sought emergency relief to remove a Federal Reserve governor, the court declined to resolve the application on the emergency docket and deferred it for full oral argument. . . .

The story the "shadow papers" tell, read alongside the cases the Times chose not to include, is not one of a court that stumbled into something novel on Feb. 9, 2016. It is one of a court that has been responding, for more than a decade, to a new and recurring problem: executive action, and at times lower-court action, whose design or pace would render ordinary merits review a formality.

Justice Thomas Assigns Himself A Majority Opinion

The preemption case may affect the Roundup argument next week.

|

Today the Supreme Court decided Hencely v. Fluor Corp. The vote was 6-3, though not the split you might be expecting. Justice Thomas wrote the majority opinion, joined by Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, Gorsuch, Barrett, and Jackson. Justice Alito dissented, joined by the Chief Justice and Justice Kavanaugh. This unusual divide is due to the subject matter: preemption.

You might think that the conservative view favors broad federal preemption, but this is not so. Justice Thomas has long been skeptical of federal preemption, as it intrudes on principles of federalism. Wyeth v. Levine (2009) is a prominent case where Justice Thomas voted with the liberals to reject preemption in a pharmaceutical case. I think Justice Gorsuch is in a similar spot as Justice Thomas. I am not entirely sure where Justice Barrett lines up, but in Hencely, she joined Thomas and Gorsuch.

Justices Roberts, Alito, and Kavanaugh, by contrast, are more traditional, and favor broader preemption standards. Thus it was not surprising they dissented here.

It is noteworthy that Justice Thomas assigned himself this majority opinion. Given how rarely the Chief Justice dissents, there are few cases where Thomas is in the majority while Roberts is in the minority. For the senior associate Justice, Thomas assigns very few cases.

This case may not attract headlines, but it could have an impact on a big case to be argued next week: Monsanto Company v. Durnell. This is a preemption case concerning the Roundup pesticide. You might think the conservatives clearly win this case. After all, a ruling for the plaintiff would be devastating for the agricultural market. But things are not so simple. And both sides have lawyered up well. Paul Clement represents Monsanto. Durnell is represented by Ashley Keller, one of the best conservative plaintiff-side attorneys. Keller argued Mallory, and nearly got International Shoe reversed. Keller is joined on the briefs by Jonathan Mitchell, also known as "The Genius." The argument should be entertaining.

If Hencely is any indication, Monsanto may have a hard time getting to five votes. I thought Durnell's briefing was very clever to tie Paul Clement (of all people) to Loper Bright.

Let's see what happens.

Supreme Court

Reading the Clean Power Plan "Shadow Papers" in Context

More of what's been absent from discussions of the recently released Supreme Court memoranda, with commentary by Davis and Re.

|

Last weekend's release of internal Supreme Court memos continues to prompt commentary--too little of which puts the substance of the memos in appropriate context. I have tried to address some of this with my prior posts on the papers and the leak.

As someone who focuses on administrative and environmental law, I think it is important to recall what was occurring when the Court received these applications. Having failed to get climate change legislation enacted, the Obama Administration was working aggressively to retrofit the Clean Air Act to greenhouse gas emission control. Its most significant prior effort in this regard--the so-called "Timing and Tailoring Rules"--were breathtakingly audacious. The EPA not only asserted the authority to rewrite the statute's numerical emission thresholds, it also sought to do so in a way that would be immune from judicial review. This worked in the D.C. Circuit, but not in the Supreme Court, which rejected most of the EPA's handiwork in UARG v. EPA.

The following year the Court rejected the EPA's mercury emission rules in Michigan v. EPA, only to have EPA officials crow that the Court's decision was irrelevant because the mere threat of regulation had induced compliance while the challenge worked its way through the courts. As the Chief Justice notes in one of the released memos, EPA officials were bragging about having imposed billions of dollars in compliance costs through the threat of imposing an unlawful rule. Further, as the Chief noted, EPA officials were suggesting they were prepared to do this again with the Clean Power Plan rule. (And, contrary to what some commentators claim, these points were all made quite explicit in the briefing to the Court (which is available here), and thus did not require the consideration of material outside the record.) So while the stay requests to the Supreme Court were unprecedented, so was the surrounding context--a point I noted at the time.

It is also worth noting that the Administrative Procedure Act and Clean Air Act both contemplate the possibility of stays of newly finalized rules. Under the APA, most major rules cannot go into force for at least 60 days after publication in the Federal Register and Section 705 allows courts to further postpone the effective date of regulations "to preserve status or rights pending conclusion of the review proceedings." The various petitioners here, representing 27 states and a raft of business groups, trade associations, and unions, filed within two weeks of the rule's publication, and thus a stay was sought to preserve the status quo and prevent the need to make precautionary investments in compliance. This posture, involving a final rule that, under the APA, can be challenged before it takes effect, is meaningfully different from many of the other challenges to executive branch action we now see in the courts.

Over at SCOTUSBlog, Taraleigh Davis provides "some additional context about what the memos show and what they don't" based upon her work looking at how the Court has handled requests for emergency relief in the past. She writes:

The New York Times piece frames this as the moment the court took a wrong turn. In their telling, the justices "bypassed time-tested procedures and opted for a new way of doing business." The Times treats nearly everything about the 2016 decision as a break from the court's prior operation: the speed, the secrecy, the lack of a written opinion, the partisan 5-4 split, and the court acting in advance of any appellate court ruling.

The Times is wrong about most of this. . . .

Although Kantor and Liptak are thus correct that the nature of what the court was being asked to do was different, they further describe the memos as "nothing like the court's usual painstaking work." In support of this claim, they refer to the order being justified in the memos by a blog post and a television interview; point to the justices' using their first names to refer to one another; and describe expressions of irritation between the justices.

None of those things were novel. Rather, the justices responded deliberately, over five days, through exactly the kind of collegial back and forth that has characterized the emergency docket deliberations for decades.

To support her claim, Davis points to examples of "shadow docket" memos she has reviewed from Justice John Paul Stevens' papers, and shows how so much of what the Times thought was unusual was actually par for the course. She writes:

Perhaps most significantly, the legal standards invoked in 2016 were no different than in years past. On the emergency docket, the circuit justice always writes the initial memo, lays out the facts, and applies the four-factor framework on granting a stay: whether there is a reasonable probability of cert, a fair prospect of reversal, the prospect an applicant will suffer irreparable harm, and a balancing of the equities. Roberts did exactly that.

Reading Roberts' memos without that context might make the EPA case seem like an outlier. But, in that regard, it most certainly was not.

As Davis notes, the reaction to the Court's action, and the release of these memos, is likely a consequence of the substance of what the Court did, and not these other factors. She concludes:

The New York Times casts the 2016 stay as the origin point of the modern emergency docket, the moment the justices "bypassed time-tested procedures and opted for a new way of doing business." That framing is too simplistic. The procedures were not bypassed: the memos, the back-and-forth, the circuit justice recommendations, the confident predictions, the engagement with colleagues by name – this had long predated February 2016.

What was genuinely new was the question the court was asked to answer: whether to halt a sweeping federal regulatory program before any appellate court had reviewed it. And, admittedly, the court's answer mattered. The justices could have denied the application and waited for the D.C. Circuit to rule. By doing otherwise, they established that this kind of relief was available, and litigants have been asking for it ever since. That is a significant development in the emergency docket's history. But the court did not stumble into it. It deliberated carefully, in exactly the way it always had.

Over at Divided Argument, Richard Re joins those who  think "the breathless reporting does not line up with the content of the memos." From his post:

Different NYT articles maintain that the leaked documents reflected "nothing like the court's usual painstaking work" and that they contain a "blizzard of memos" spanning five days and authored by six justices. These descriptions are in tension with one another, and they also fail to acknowledge that important judicial decisions are frequently made under a wide range of procedures and circumstances.

He adds:

A serious effort at criticizing the Court's decision would consider unexplained interim decisions that cut in favor of different policy preferences. Did injunctions against the second Trump administration always exhibit a superior deliberative process? Stays in capital cases? Orders to block deportations? Consider for example that the justices acted in an even more rapid fashion last year in A.A.R.P v. Trump.

To push that comparison a bit further, critical commentators ought to grapple with perhaps the central point that motivated the Court's action. As the memos relate, Obama administration officials at least arguably stated that, in both this case and a prior case, the executive branch was moving too fast for the justices to stop them. Today, in the era of Trump 2.0, how many people would seriously deny that that consideration is powerful?

The Awful Virginia Redistricting Referendum

The referendum language gave voters no indication of what they were voting for

|

Yesterday, Virginians voted by a narrow margin to allow the state to deviate from its normal redistricting rules. The plan is to redistrict state congressional districts to move the state from 6-5 Democrat/Republican to 10-1.

It's a crude partisan move, in response to similarly crude partisan moves by Republican states. That's not why I call the referendum awful.

Rather, it's because the referendum was written in such a way as to entirely obscure the purpose of the vote. Moreover, instead of using neutral language, the referendum stated that its purpose is to "restore fairness in the upcoming elections." Obviously, whether a grossly partisan gerrymander restores fairness or just adds additional unfairness is a matter of debate.

Here's the question presented to voters:

Should the Constitution of Virginia be amended to allow the General Assembly to temporarily adopt new congressional districts to restore fairness in the upcoming elections, while ensuring Virginia's standard redistricting process resumes for all future redistricting after the 2030 census?

I don't know anything about the relevant Virginia law on referenda, nor any federal rules that might come into play. But I assume that Republican lawyers are preparing a legal challenge if one is potentially viable.

Free Speech

Southern Poverty Law Center Indictment

|

You can read it here; here's the opening paragraph plus another paragraph, though the indictment offers considerably more details as well (note that, as always, an indictment is just the government's allegations):

The Southern Poverty Law Center's ("SPLC") stated mission included the dismantling of white supremacy and confronting hate across the country. However, unbeknownst to donors, some of their donated money was being used to fund the leaders and organizers of racist groups, including the Ku Klux Klan, the Aryan Nation, and the National Alliance. The SPLC's paid informants ("field sources") engaged in the active promotion of racist groups at the same time that the SPLC was denouncing the same groups on its website.

The SPLC also had a field source who was a member of the online leadership chat group that planned the 2017 "Unite the Right" event in Charlottesville, Virginia. That field source made racist postings under the supervision of the SPLC and helped coordinate transportation to the event for several attendees.

In order to covertly pay its field sources, the SPLC opened bank accounts connected to a series of fictitious entities. The covert nature of the accounts allowed the SPLC to disguise the true nature, source, ownership, and control of the fraudulently obtained donated money the SPLC paid the field sources. In order to keep the scheme going, the SPLC made a series of false statements related to the operation of the accounts….

[T]he SPLC explicitly sought donations under the auspices that donor money would be used to help "dismantle" violent extremist groups. In the SPLC's solicitations for donations as outlined herein, donors were not told that some of the donated funds were to be used by the SPLC to pay high-level leaders of violent extremist groups and others, nor were donors ever told that some of the donated funds were used for the benefit of the violent extremist groups or that some of the donated funds would be used in the commission of state and federal crimes.

Read More

Federalism

Sixth Circuit Upholds Federal Law Banning Home Alcohol Distilleries, Creating a Circuit Split

The decision is at odds with a recent ruling by the Fifth Circuit.

|

A whiskey distilling set up in front of the preamble to the United States Constitution
Illustration: Lex Villena; Ioannis Syrigos

Yesterday, in Ream v. Department of the Treasury, the US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit upheld an 1868 federal law banning home alcohol distilleries. The court ruled that the law is authorized by a combination of Congress' tax power and the Necessary and Proper Clause, which gives Congress the power to makes laws "necessary and proper" for carrying into execution other federal powers. The ruling contradicts a recent decision by the Fifth Circuit striking down the same law.

The Sixth Circuit decision -written by prominent conservative Judge Raymond Kethledge -  is badly flawed, because the law in question clearly is not "proper," even if it may be "necessary." Hopefully, the Supreme Court will overrule it.

Like the Fifth Circuit ruling, the Sixth Circuit rightly concludes this law is not authorized by the tax power alone, because it does not impose any tax or collect any tax revenue. Judge Kethledge's opinion holds that the law is "necessary" because, by banning home distilling, it incentivizes more alcoholic beverage production outside the home, where it will be easier to tax, and thus generate more tax revenue. As I explained in my post about the Fifth Circuit ruling, this is probably enough to meet the broad definition of "necessary" embedded in longstanding Supreme Court precedent (though I think that definition is flawed).

But the Sixth Circuit is badly wrong to conclude that the law is "proper." As explained in  my earlier post, the  Supreme Court, in NFIB v. Sebelius (2012), ruled that a "proper" power permissible under the Clause is one that is "ancillary" to the implementation of an enumerated power. It cannot be a "great, substantive and independent" power. The power to ban any home-based activity that might serve a substitute for taxable activity outside the home is clearly a "great and independent power." As Judge Edith Jones explains in the Fifth Circuit ruling, "[u]nder the government's logic, Congress may criminalize nearly any at-home conduct only because it has the possibility of concealing taxable activity."

The Sixth Circuit tries to address this point by claiming alcohol is somehow special:

What limits the application of a factbound judgment to other cases are the relevant facts themselves. Here, those facts include a history of tax evasion as old as the Republic itself; and Congress concluded—based on that history, and after a month of testimony before a select committee of the House—that the home-distilling ban, along with the 1868 Act's other provisions, were in fact necessary to collect federal excise taxes on spirits. That judgment rested on facts, not speculation; and those facts were peculiar to distilling spirits. Indeed, rules concerning alcohol more generally are unique as to the evasion that often accompanies them— from excise taxes, to Prohibition, to the use of fake IDs to obtain alcohol (itself almost a rite of passage for some generations), to moonshiners even today. The judgment required in this case, again, is an empirical one; and empirically, alcohol is sui generis, or very close to it.

This distinction between alcohol and all other commodities is totally arbitrary. The same reasoning could justify banning home production of anything else that is more easily taxed if produced outside the home. And there is a long history of home production of all kinds of other commodities taxed or severely regulated by the government, ranging from cigarettes to illegal drugs, to pornographic videos.

If there is greater "evasion" of laws regarding alcohol than many other goods, it is only because alcohol is more often regulated and taxed than most of the others. But there is nothing inherent in its nature that makes it "sui generis." Far from it. Thus, Judge Kethledge's attempt to treat alcohol as a unique special case fails.

It is also notable that the Sixth Circuit majority opinion does not attempt to explain why the Fifth Circuit ruling is wrong, or even bother to cite it. Usually, when a federal appellate court creates a circuit split, it at least acknowledges the earlier decision and tries to justify taking such an important step.

The dissenting opinion by Judge Mathis does cite the Fifth Circuit case. But he does not address the merits because he concludes (wrongly, in my view) that Ream lacked standing to challenging the home distillery ban.

Interestingly, the rulings here do not break down along traditional ideological lines. Both Judge Kethledge and Judge Edith Jones (author of the Fifth Circuit ruling) are well-known conservative jurists.  The Fifth Circuit decision was also joined by Judge Graves, a liberal Obama appointee, while the Sixth Circuit ruling was joined by Judge Siler (a Republican George H.W. Bush appointee).

Finally, it's worth noting that the Sixth Circuit - like the Fifth Circuit - does not consider the stronger potential constitutional rationale for the home distillery ban: The Supreme Court's misguided Commerce Clause decision in Gonzales v. Raich (2005).  See my post on the Fifth Circuit ruling for more on this point. But, unlike in the Fifth Circuit case, here the government has not forfeited the Commerce Clause argument. So if the Supreme Court were to review this decision, they could consider that issue too.

Free Speech

Second Circuit Upholds Decision Denying Pseudonymity for Law Doctorate Student With Psychiatric Conditions

|

From Monday's decision in Doe v. Yale Univ., by Dennis Jacobs, Richard C. Wesley, and Michael H. Park:

Plaintiff Jane Doe appeals from an order of the district court denying her motion to proceed by pseudonym as well as the district court's order denying reconsideration. Doe, a student in Yale Law School's Doctor of Juridical Science ("J.S.D.") program, sued Yale University, Director of Student Accessibility Services Kimberly McKeown, and Assistant Dean for Graduate Programs Gordon Silverstein (collectively, "Yale"), alleging [disability] discrimination and retaliation … as well as breach of contract. Doe primarily claimed that Yale improperly refused to extend her J.S.D. candidacy for an additional year—which she believes she needs in order to produce a dissertation of sufficient quality—and sought injunctive relief barring Yale from discharging her from the program.

The same day that she filed her complaint, Doe moved for an order permitting her to proceed by pseudonym. She asserted that her identification as plaintiff in this lawsuit would diminish her academic and employment opportunities because the case would necessarily disclose details concerning her diagnosed medical conditions, her medical treatment history, and the impact of her conditions on her academic performance. She also contended that "[p]ublic disclosure of [her] identity would likely exacerbate her existing psychiatric conditions" and subject her to "stigma associated with mental health conditions."

On June 17, 2025, the district court denied the motion in an order that identified and applied several factors articulated by our Court in Sealed Plaintiff v. Sealed Defendant (2d Cir. 2008). In so doing, the court noted that it had taken steps to protect her privacy by sealing Doe's private medical information.

Doe's motion for reconsideration, filed three days later, added an affidavit from Doe and a letter from her psychiatrist of nine years, which substantiated Doe's claim that disclosure would risk serious mental harm. Because the new evidence attached to the motion "could have been raised earlier," the court declined to consider it and denied the motion. The district court's denials of both orders were proper.

Read More

Politics

Indiana Ban on "Instruction" "on Human Sexuality" in Pre-K to Third Grade Upheld by Seventh Circuit

|

From Smiley v. Jenner, decided yesterday by Seventh Circuit Judge Michael Scudder, joined by Judges Candace Jackson-Akiwumi and Doris Pryor:

Indiana law establishes curriculum requirements for certain schools within the state. In 2023, the state General Assembly passed Indiana House Enrolled Act 1608 [codified at Section 20-30-17-2], which added a new curriculum limitation:

A school, an employee or staff member of a school, or a third party vendor used by a school to provide instruction may not provide any instruction to a student in prekindergarten through grade 3 on human sexuality.

By its terms, HEA 1608 allows teachers to "respond[ ] to a question from a student" on human sexuality. It also permits teachers to instruct on academic standards "developed by the department [of education]" on enumerated subjects (such as science and math) and to provide required instruction on child abuse and child sexual abuse notwithstanding the restriction imposed by the curriculum limitation. But the General Assembly otherwise left the terms "instruction" and "human sexuality" undefined….

Plaintiff, who teaches "grades 1–3" sued, alleging that the law would "capture, or at least chill, protected speech that she primarily wishes to engage in while serving as an elementary school teacher," "such as the choice to include books in her classroom library that touch on topics of parenting, and gender and sexual identity, to place stickers on her water bottle and car communicating pro-LGBTQ+ messages, and to correct students when they use pejorative terms related to sexual identity." She also "worries that, with no discernable boundaries as to what constitutes 'instruction' or 'human sexuality,' she may unintentionally run afoul of the statute and risk losing her teaching license."

But the court rejected her overbreadth and vagueness challenges. It began by determining what "instruction" the law covers:

Read More

Free Speech

FBI Director Kash Patel Loses Defamation Lawsuit Over Morning Joe Statements

The wild things are in the nightclubs.

|

From today's by Judge George C. Hanks, Jr. (S.D. Tex.) in Patel v. Figliuzzi, which stemmed from his exchange on MSNC's Morning Joe with defendant Cesare Frank Figliuzzi, Jr., "the former assistant director for counterintelligence at the FBI":

Host: "So, Frank, let's turn to FBI Director Kash Patel, who has sort of taken a surprisingly backseat role—at least to this point, in the first 102 or 103 days, wherever we are right now. What do you make of that, that he's just been a little less visible than I think a lot of people and Trump observers expected him to be?"

Figliuzzi: "Yeah, well, reportedly, he's been visible at nightclubs far more than he has been on the seventh floor of the Hoover building. And there are reports that daily briefings to him have been changed from every day to maybe twice weekly. So this is both a blessing and a curse, because if he's really trying to run things without any experience level, things could be bad. If he's not plugged in, things could be bad, but he's allowing agents to run things. So we don't know where this is going."

Patel claimed the "been visible at nightclubs far more than he has been on the seventh floor of the Hoover building" was actionable defamation, but the court found that it was nonactionable rhetorical hyperbole instead:

Read More

AI in Court

AI Hallucinations in Filing by a Top Law Firm

Remember: It could happen at your firm, too.

|

The pale-throated sloth, from Marshall, Annales du Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, via Wikipedia.

David Lat (Original Jurisdiction), whose newsletter I very much recommend, writes about this:

Tonight brings huge news out of Sullivan & Cromwell. We can now add S&C, truly one of the world's most prestigious and profitable firms, to the AI "Hall of Shame": the list of law firms that have submitted court filings containing AI-generated "hallucinations." …

[Ironically], as noted by Joe Patrice of Above the Law, Sullivan & Cromwell is the law firm that … advises OpenAI on the "safe and ethical deployment" of artificial intelligence (a representation S&C touts on its website). Physician, heal thyself?

[And] the AI errors were called to [Dietderich's] attention by… Boies Schiller Flexner. Why is it ironic that BSF, one of the nation's leading litigation firms, caught these mistakes? Because until now, Boies Schiller was the reigning champion of "Elite Law Firms Guilty of AI Fails." (In addition to the AI snafu chronicled in that story, which took place last year, BSF subsequently failed to catch AI-generated errors in a filing by co-counsel in a different case.) …

When I covered BSF's AI error last year, I gave props to then-partner John Kucera: he "fully and freely admitted the errors, and he didn't throw any colleagues under the bus." I'll say the same here about Andy Dietderich. He's a senior partner at S&C, having joined the firm almost 30 years ago; he leads its restructuring practice, which he fonded; and he's a giant of the bankruptcy bar, Chambers Band 1. Nobody was paying him $2,500 an hour to do legal research; this screw-up was clearly the handiwork of an associate (or perhaps I should say former associate). But Dietderich signed the letter solo, and he didn't point the finger at anyone else.

Here's the substance of Dietderich's letter:

Read More

Does A Shadow Docket Ruling Create "Clearly Established" Law For Purposes of Qualified Immunity

Would a school district that violated Mirabelli still have QI?

|

The Supreme Court's emergency docket ruling in Mirabelli and denial of certiorari in Foote will send conflicting signals. On the one hand, the Court blocked California's policy on the shadow docket. On the other hand, the Court allowed a similar policy from Massachusetts to go into effect.

I received an email from a lawyer indicating that his school district was maintaining their "secret transition" policy, notwithstanding Mirabelli.

A question arises. Would this school district retain qualified immunity? Does Mirabelli, as an emergency docket ruling, create "clearly established" law? I know the Supreme Court has told us that emergency docket rulings are precedential. But is the law "clearly established"? Would this sort of ruling be clearly established by the Supreme Court for purposes of AEDPA?

Perhaps it can be argued that Mirabelli did not actually establish any new law. The decision merely reaffirmed century-old precedents, Pierce v. Society of Sisters and Meyer v. Nebraska. But other emergency docket precedents arguably do establish new law. Just yesterday the Court GVR'd Smith v. Scott, fittingly enough a QI case, based on a recent per curiam opinion.

This might be a way for lower court to push back on the shadow docket--by holding these rulings do not establish clear law for purposes of QI. The Supreme Court, I suspect, would say that any ruling of the Supreme Court would suffice.

Free Speech

No Constitutional Problem with Compelling AI Disclosures in Court Filings

|

From Friday's decision by Judge Nina Wang (D. Colo.) in Hessert v. Street Dog Coalition:

Plaintiff asks the Court to "[v]acate the reference to the standing order on AI as … not applicable and unconstitutional." Plaintiff argues that the Court's Standing Order improperly compels speech in violation of the First Amendment, violates his due process and equal protection rights, "encroaches upon" work product, and amounts to legislating from the bench. These arguments are without merit. This request is DENIED.

The challenged standing order on AI appears to be this one; it requires that,

Every filing shall contain an AI Certification regarding the use, or non-use, of generative AI (such as ChatGPT, Harvey.AI, or Google Gemini) in preparing the filing, signed by all individuals who contributed to the drafting of the filing. To the extent that generative AI was used in any drafting of the filing, each individual must certify that any language drafted by AI (even if later edited by a human) was personally reviewed by the filer or another human for accuracy and that all legal citations reference actual non-fictitious cases or cited authority.

Court rules of course routinely compel certain statements in briefs (e.g., certificates of service, word count certificates, disclosures of funding for amicus briefs, tables of contents, and so on) and routinely restrict statements in briefs or in trial (e.g., attempts to use inadmissible evidence, personal insults of opponents and of judges, and more). These rules are generally not subject to First Amendment scrutiny.

Read More

Elizabeth Prelogar's Unexpected and Unusual Argument

The former Solicitor General did not sign any briefs but somehow popped up on the docket and argued the case.

|

Whenever a new petition is granted, I always check the counsel of record. I keep a running tally of how many cases leading members of the bar argue. When the Court granted cert in T.M. v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation, I took note. The Counsel of Record for the Petitioner was Kannon Shanmugam of Paul Weiss. This was (likely) a pro bono case, as T.M. sued the hospital system for medical malpractice. The Counsel of Record for the Respondent was Lisa Blatt of Williams & Connolly. I remember looking forward to seeing Shanmugam and Blatt argue. These two are titans of the Supreme Court bar.

Except it wasn't meant to be. For reasons that are not clear, Elizabeth Prelogar of Cooley LLP argued the case today. Prelogar's name was not on the Petitioner's opening brief or the reply brief.

Shanmugam is still listed as counsel of record, but Prelogar's name now appears on the docket page.

It is common enough for a veteran SCOTUS litigator to give a case to a fellow partner or an associate, to give them experience at the high court. It also happens that when two big SCOTUS firms are on a case, there is some process to decide which firm gets to argue. Sometimes the client chooses. When there is more than one client, it can get messy. When all else fails, a coin toss can resolve the conflict. But I can't recall a situation like this: where a veteran SCOTUS litigator in a pro bono case files all of the cert-stage and merit-stage briefs, and then hands the case off to a SCOTUS litigator at another firm. Indeed, the fact that this case is pro bono is significant. There was only one client, who is a person, rather than a institution. I don't think there was a General Counsel department advising T.M. about who would be the best attorney to argue the case. Here, Shanmugam was on the cert petition, so he has had the case for some time.

For whatever it is worth, this is Prelogar's first Supreme Court argument since returning to private practice. She has had cert denials in Stroble v. Oklahoma Tax Commission and Tuopeh v. South Dakota and Little v. Llano County.

Why did Prelogar swoop in at the last minute? I don't know. Perhaps there is a conflict? I checked the docket, and Shanmugan is on the brief for next week's case of Cisco Systems v. Doe, though Chris Michel at Quinn Emanuel is counsel of record. Mere mortals may have trouble arguing two SCOTUS cases back to back, but Shanmugam has super advocacy skills. In 2024, he argued a case in February and another case in March. In 2021, he argued a case on November 10 and on November 30. In 2020, he argued a case on November 3 and on December 8 and on January 19. In 2018, he argued a case on October 29 and on November 7. And even if it was too much for Shanmugam to argue back-to-back, certainly there is someone else at Paul Weiss who could have picked up the case. There must be more to the story.

The change in counsel may affect the outcome of the case. There are often problems when an attorney argues a case, but did not brief it. I think this may have happened today.

The petition did not ask for the Court to overrule the Rooker-Feldman doctrine.Yet, as Justice Alito pointed out, Prelogar seems to want to overrule Rooker-Feldman.

Read More

More
Make a donation today! No thanks
Yes! I want to put my money where your mouth is! Not interested
I’ll donate to Reason right now! No thanks
My donation today will help Reason push back! Not today
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll support Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks