The Volokh Conspiracy

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

The Volokh Conspiracy

Supreme Court

Justice Kagan Says Don't Call It the "Shadow Docket"

Justice Kagan tells Congress she prefers to call it the "emergency docket."

|

Associate Justices Elena Kagan and Amy Coney Barrett testified before Congress this week.

Much of the press coverage and online commentary has focused on the justices' discussion of their need for greater security and increasing threats to the federal judiciary, with a particular focus on Justice Barrett's comments on her personal experience. Contrary to the claims of some "conservative" influencers, Justice Barrett did not say anything suggesting such threats--including the swatting attempt on her home--had affected her work or decision-making. She actually said the opposite, that all of the justices "continue to do their jobs without fear or favor."

In the House, the justices were asked about the Court's handling of requests for interim or emergency relief on the so-called "shadow docket." The exchanges here are interesting, not least because Justice Kagan said it is no longer appropriate to use the "shadow docket" label.

Here is an excerpt from the transcript.

REP. HOYER: Let me go to -- and I'm not asking you about the substance of decisions, but I am asking you. There has been a substantial increase in what I guess we call shadow decisions. Is that a budget-related or policy-related phenomenon?

BARRETT: Well, let's see. I think that litigants have long had the ability to seek interim relief from the court, but I think you are certainly right, Ranking Member Hoyer, that we have seen a big change in the volume and the nature of such requests.

The court is doing its best to adapt and respond. I think it is a policy question, not so much a budget one.

I don't know if you have additional thoughts.

KAGAN: I am sure there will be additional questions.

(LAUGHTER)

HOYER: Does that impact on the transparency, which you referred to not putting up fences so that people had access?

There are concerns, obviously, that these shadow dispositions impact adversely on the knowledge the public has about how the court makes its decisions and who is making what decisions. Do you want to comment on that?

KAGAN: Ranking Member Hoyer, there are definitely issues with respect to the emergency -- we call it the emergency docket. Some of us call it the interim docket. I -- it's a terminology nightmare. I call it the emergency docket. And there are definitely questions about how it is appropriate to use that docket, when it's appropriate to use that docket, the standards to be applied, the way those standards actually work out in individual cases.

And you see that in some of our decisions, because we are, in many, if not most of these cases, not unanimous. There will be a majority and a dissent. The reason I think it is probably not appropriate, at least not now, to call it the shadow docket, is because we have done, I think, a better job in the recent past of, where appropriate, and it's not always appropriate, but where appropriate, explaining ourselves, at least to a moderate degree.

I think if you had asked me this question a year ago, I might have said that there would be -- there were some cases, and, in fact I did say, I had said in some public events that there were some cases where we did so little explanation of what lay behind our order that lower courts had a great deal of difficulty trying to figure out what that order was.

Were we saying something about the merits of the case? Were we saying about -- something about who had standing to contest the merits? Were we saying something about appropriate remedies? Nobody knew.

I don't think that that's so much a problem anymore. I think that, as we have gotten more experienced in these constant requests that are coming to us about requests for emergency relief, that we better recognize that at least sometimes there is a need for additional information.

And we have issued opinions, and sometimes majority and dissenting opinions accordingly.

Free Speech

Court Affirms Rejection of Allegedly Anti-Zionist Professors' Claims That University Should Have Stopped Jewish Professors from Filing Religious Discrimination Complaints Against Them

|

From Lax v. CUNY, decided in 2024 by N.Y. trial court judge Gina Abadi, and just affirmed Wednesday in a short opinion by the N.Y. intermediate appellate court:

 Plaintiffs are observant Jewish professors at Kingsborough Community College (Kingsborough), which is part of CUNY [City University of New York]. Defendant Professional Staff Congress (the Union) is the labor union for the faculty. Defendant the New Caucus of the Professional Staff Congress (New Caucus) is a political party of the Union. [Defendants] Wetzel and Perea were professors at Kingsborough and members of the New Caucus.

On February 26, 2021, plaintiffs filed this action alleging … hostile work environment discrimination on the basis of religion[,] … retaliation [for making discrimination complaints], … [and] assault and false imprisonment.

Plaintiffs allege that they and other observant Jewish faculty and staff members at Kingsborough have faced pervasive, anti-religious discrimination from a particular segment of fellow faculty members who are the leaders of a faculty group called the Progressive Faculty Caucus of Kingsborough Community College (PFC) and are also members of the New Caucus. Plaintiffs claim that the New Caucus members collaborated with the PFC members to dominate campus elections and call for the removal of observant Jewish faculty members, administrators, department chairs, and others at Kingsborough. Plaintiffs allege that Wetzel and Perea actually participated in, and aided and abetted, the conduct giving rise to their discrimination and retaliation claims.

Plaintiffs assert, among numerous alleged acts of discriminatory conduct, that the PFC denied entry to every observant Jewish applicant, including Lax; that the PFC and the New Caucus members lobbied against Lax and other observant Jewish candidates running in campus elections; that the PFC members called for the removal of observant Jewish faculty members, including Lax; that the PFC and the New Caucus members wrote in a communist newspaper regarding their "struggle" against a "network of Zionists" among the faculty at Kingsborough, and made similar comments in a publicly distributed campus survey; that there were discussions between Wetzel and others that observant Jews were undesirable for PFC membership; that Perea engaged in a malicious and relentless campaign to get Goldstein fired because he was a Zionist; that an internal PFC email mentioned the need to "bring violence to the Zionists on campus"; that anti-Semitic flyers were distributed on the Kingsborough campus; that a portrait of Goldstein's father was defaced; that nails were found in the tires of cars belonging to Lax and Goldstein; and that the PFC members called for plaintiffs' removal from their jobs at Kingsborough.

[Defendants] Wetzel … and Perea[ cross-claimed, arguing, among other things,] that CUNY is a government entity directly subject to the First Amendment … and that, in addition, CUNY has promised to protect their academic freedom and freedom of speech in assertions made in its contract with them, in its faculty handbook, on its website, and elsewhere, on which they relied to their detriment. [Their cross-claim] further alleges that Wetzel and Perea have used their academic freedom and First Amendment rights to utter progressive political views and criticism of [plaintiff] Goldstein, which plaintiffs claimed were anti-Semitic. It also alleges that Wetzel and Perea's political criticism of Israel is not anti-Semitic, and that the complaint's specific assertions against them regarding their alleged actions of anti-Semitism are frivolous.

Read More

Politics

Today in Supreme Court History: July 17, 1862

|

7/17/1862:  Congress enacts the Confiscation Act, which empowers the government to seize the property of the rebels. The Supreme Court considered the constitutionality of that law in The Confiscation Cases (1873).

The Chase Court (1873)

Second Amendment Roundup: Seventh Circuit Decides Barnett

After the Supreme Court grants cert on the identical issue, the circuit court offers a last hurrah

|

On July 9, the Seventh Circuit decided Barnett v. Raoul, upholding Illinois' ban on AR-15 rifles.  Maybe it hadn't received the memo that the Supreme Court granted cert on June 30 on the Seventh Circuit's decision in Viramontes v. Cook County, involving the identical issue of whether an AR-15 ban violates the Second Amendment?  Deciding Barnett gives the appearance of the Seventh Circuit filing the equivalent of an amicus brief in support of its prior decision in Viramontes.  (Cert was also granted in Grant v. Higgins, which concerns Connecticut's similar ban, see my post here.)

While always ready to uphold any restriction on Second Amendment rights, on July 1 the Ninth Circuit vacated submission in Miller v. Bonta, involving California's similar ban, pending the Supreme Court's resolution of the issue.  By contrast, the Third Circuit on July 6 invited supplemental briefs to be filed in its en banc proceeding of Cheeseman and Ass'n of N.J. Rifle & Pistol Clubs, both versus Attorney General of New Jersey, regarding New Jersey's AR-15 ban.  The briefs would address the effect of the Supreme Court's recent decisions in Wolford and Hemani.  If the court finds the New Jersey law unconstitutional, it will give the Supreme Court a contrasting view to the other appellate decisions that have uniformly upheld the bans.

A look at Barnett on the merits exhibits a doubling down of questionable premises.  U.S. District Court Judge Stephen McGlynn oversaw a four-day bench trial and held that the Illinois ban violates the Second Amendment, but the Court of Appeals rejected the lower court's factual and legal conclusions.  What is amusing (perhaps shocking) is that it was the Court of Appeals that had previously instructed the district court to hold a trial on various issues, but then the same Court of Appeals rejected the lower court's findings. This raises the question of what was the point of the trial?

In its opinion by Judge St. Eve and joined by Judge Easterbrook, the Barnett court assumed that the banned rifles are "arms" under Bruen step one, but found the ban to be consistent with "the principles that underpin the American regulatory tradition" under step two.  Ignoring the fact that the Supreme Court had already decided in Heller that the historical tradition of firearms regulation permitting an arms ban is whether the arm is "dangerous and unusual," the Seventh Circuit went on to do their own analysis as if Heller's binding precedent governing arms bans did not exist.

The court focused "on a leading example of this tradition: regulations of the Bowie knife—or, as one Reconstruction-era court called it, the 'instrument of almost certain death.' Cockrum  v. State, 24 Tex. 394, 402 (1859)."  Disregarding that Reconstruction only began in 1866, seven years after this antebellum decision, Cockrum involved a Texas law providing that use of a Bowie knife in an unlawful homicide constituted murder.  It was no analogue for a ban on peaceable possession: "The right to carry a bowie-knife for lawful defense is secured, and must be admitted."  The next sentence after the snippet quoted by Barnett refers to the person "who carries such a weapon, for lawful defense, as he may," who is liable for "an increased penalty … affixed to the abuse of this right, so dangerous to others."

Barnett goes on to refer to laws, which existed mostly in the Southern states, that largely regulated the concealed carry of Bowie knives.  No possession bans existed. And the same laws typically restricted the concealed carry of pistols.  The court addressed one law that purportedly went over the line – Georgia's ban on carrying pistols and Bowie knives. That law, however, allowed the open carrying of Bowie knives (see Section 4), while barring completely the carrying of pistols. What is more, the Georgia Supreme Court in Nunn v. State (1846) declared the ban on carrying pistols to be violative of the right to bear arms.  That was because it banned open carry as well as concealed carry.  But "Nunn is only one case," quips Barnett, which is not a surprise as no other state had a total carry ban law.  Not to mention that Nunn was endorsed by Heller and Bruen.

Now for the kicker: Barnett acknowledges that "Bowie knives were both widespread and used for lawful purposes."  They were "particularly suitable for self-defense" and "typically possessed for self-defense."

Sounds like Bowie knives met the common-use test.  Indeed, Bruen noted that in medieval times, "[a]lmost everyone carried a knife or a dagger in his belt," "[c]ivilians wore them for self-protection," and they "strike us as most analogous to modern handguns."

Despite Bruen's reiteration that the Second Amendment protects "weapons 'in common use' today for self-defense," Barnett asserts that "Bruen cuts against the conclusion that a weapon's 'common use' leaves it immune from regulation."  (The court takes "regulation" to mean banning.)  Citing the cert grant in Viramontes, Barnett claims that "the Court has not set out a comprehensive framework through which to evaluate challenges to restrictions on particular weapons, as its recent grant of certiorari in cases similar to this one indicates."  It seems more like the Court has repeatedly done just that, but that some lower courts don't want to follow it.

Chief Judge Brennan dissented in Barnett.  Noting that the district court had produced "the most comprehensive trial record in any Second Amendment case to date," he states: "Our Nation's enduring traditions forbid governments from prohibiting firearms commonly owned for self-defense. Because the people have overwhelmingly chosen the AR-15 rifle and its magazine as their weapon of choice, they are protected by the Second Amendment."

A major thrust of the dissent is on the common-use test.  "That test properly focuses on the people. The Second Amendment right is an individual right, as Heller held. The Court rejected a test in which judges decide what weapons are necessary for self-defense."  Given the millions of AR-15s in civilian hands and their legality in most states, "a court can account for how many of the firearms are owned and how many states ban their possession to determine whether a firearm is in common use."  Not much difficulty there.

What is in common use can be manipulated by the government – had the federal "assault weapon" ban of 1994 not expired a decade later, common use of AR-15s would have been receding.  Despite the argument that the common-use test is circular because "what can be banned depends on what has been banned," "it is not for us to inject the circularity argument back into Second Amendment law. If a majority of the Supreme Court did not adopt that argument in Heller, neither should we."  Similarly, the "dangerous and unusual" test has been criticized because the government can ban a new firearm design when it comes out so that it will always be unusual.  But to ban a weapon immediately, "the government must proffer evidence that it is being used by criminals, not law-abiding citizens for lawful self-defense."  Otherwise, "the government must 'wait and see' whether and how the public adopts and uses the firearm before it can be banned."

As Chief Judge Brennan states, "To say AR-15s are not in 'common use' does not pass the 'red face' test."  The majority does not even try to follow the test, instead applying its newly-minted "particularly dangerous weapons" test.  But that novel test is not based on any of the specific features of the AR-15, which the majority lists but avoids any mention of what makes them so dangerous.  The dissent does address the features: "The district court also heard from self-defense experts who all reported 'recoil[,] … lighter weight, shorter barrel, and ergonomic stock and grip' make 'AR platform rifles' well suited for self-defense, which is why they are commonly used in popular 'defensive carbine course[s].'"

The bottom line, in Chief Judge Brennan's words: "Whether a firearm is useful for self-defense is not a decision for judges. The people choose which weapons to own for self-defense."  Meanwhile, the Supreme Court will have to keep repeating itself to recalcitrant lower courts. The Court will hopefully rein in such lower court obstinacy when it decides Viramontes and Grant.

Free Speech

Journal of Free Speech Law: "Policing Expressive Governance: A Framework for Judicial Review of Executive Viewpoint Retaliation," by Simona Grossi

|

The article is here; here's the Introduction:

The gravest contemporary threats to expressive freedom do not always take the form of statutes or criminal sanctions. Increasingly, they take the form of procurement decisions, grant terminations, security-clearance revocations, and regulatory designations—the discretionary instruments of executive administration. When the executive deploys these instruments to penalize disfavored viewpoints while preserving the appearance of ordinary governance, it engages in what I have elsewhere called expressive governance. This phenomenon is doctrinally elusive precisely because it operates in domains where courts have long, and for sound institutional reasons, extended substantial deference to executive judgment.

A recent dispute crystallizes the problem. After a leading artificial intelligence company publicly maintained that its models could not be deployed for use in autonomous lethal weapons or the mass surveillance of citizens, and declined contract terms that would have required otherwise, the government designated the company a "supply-chain risk to national security"—a classification historically reserved for foreign adversaries—and moved to foreclose its commercial relationships across the federal defense ecosystem. The designation was framed as a national security judgment. But the sequence of events, the named targeting, and the disproportion of the response suggest a different object: retaliation for protected expression, accomplished through an administrative label. One might resist this inference, reading the episode as the disciplining of a difficult counterparty rather than retaliation for a viewpoint. The framework developed here does not foreclose that reading — it is designed to test it. Part IV takes up the objection directly.

Building on work I have developed elsewhere, this essay shows how the existing First Amendment doctrine supplies the governing principles to address expressive governance but lacks an administrable method calibrated to the low-visibility, discretion-cloaked form the problem now assumes. It then proposes such a method: a framework of three interlocking tools—a clear-statement requirement, a burden-shifting rule, and an evidentiary presumption of systemic distortion where the executive targets expressive intermediaries. The framework neither invents a new tier of scrutiny nor relaxes the deference that executive administration ordinarily warrants. Rather, it allocates proof and construes authority so that genuine managerial decisions remain insulated while viewpoint retaliation cloaked in discretionary form becomes detectable.

Free Speech

Trump Media's Lawsuit Against Wash. Post Over "Trust Linked to Porn-Friendly Bank Could Gain a Stake in Trump's Truth Social" Thrown Out

The court concluded that there wasn't enough evidence that the Post's statement (which the Post later retracted) was said with "actual malice," which is to say knowledge or recklessness about its falsehood.

|

From Trump Media & Tech. Group Corp. v. WP Co. LLC, decided today by Judge Tom Barber (M.D. Fla.):

In 2023, Defendant WP Company LLC (the "Post") published an article titled "Trust linked to porn-friendly bank could gain a stake in Trump's Truth Social," which reported on the finances of Trump Media Technology Group ("TMTG"). After almost three years of litigation, the Post has now admitted that portions of the article included false information. Specifically, the Post admits its story incorrectly stated that TMTG paid a $240,000 referral fee in connection with an $8 million loan from an entity known as ES Family Trust. The Post now admits that no such payment was made and recently chose to publish a "Correction" to that effect {"Discovery in the ongoing litigation has established that Trump Media didn't pay a loan referral fee of $240,000, as was stated in the article and was based on The Post's reporting at the time of publication."}. TMTG contends in this defamation lawsuit that the statements about the referral fee were false and defamatory and seeks almost $2 billion in damages resulting from the publication.

However, under controlling United States Supreme Court and Eleventh Circuit precedent following New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964), a jury will not have the opportunity to decide this case. To survive summary judgment, TMTG must show more than just that the Post's statements were false and defamatory.

Current law requires that TMTG also establish that the Post acted with "actual malice," that is, TMTG must prove that, at the time the Post published the statements, the Post either actually knew the statements were false or had serious doubt as to whether they were true or false. Further, to prevail under current law, TMTG must establish actual malice by evidence that goes beyond the "preponderance of the evidence" necessary in the usual civil case and adduce evidence on this issue that is clear and convincing.

These standards are exceedingly difficult for any plaintiff to meet, and TMTG has not met them here. TMTG's evidence establishes beyond any doubt whatsoever that the Post published false information—the Post has admitted that. Under the facts presented here, reasonable minds could certainly conclude the Post acted unreasonably and should have conducted a better investigation before making the challenged statements. But under controlling precedent, such a showing is not sufficient to establish actual malice by clear and convincing evidence. Accordingly, the Court is required to grant summary judgment for the Post….

Read More

Call for Papers on Policymaker Responses to the "Revolution" in Administrative Law

The GWU Regulatory Studies Center is seeking papers addressing recent changes to administrative law.

|

The George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center has issued a call for papers on "Policymaker Responses to the Revolution in Administrative Law."  Details below.

In the last 15 years, the Supreme Court has rewritten the textbooks on administrative law. The George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center seeks papers that address how lawmakers and regulators are responding to the revolution in administrative law wrought by the Roberts Court. Below, we have provided examples of possible subjects.

  • In cases like Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency, the Supreme Court called on agencies to curtail adventurous readings of their enabling acts. Have agencies done so? How are agencies regulating "major questions"? Are agencies strategically advancing the "best reading" of statutes in their decisions?
  • In Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) v. Jarkesy, the Court cast constitutional doubt on many agency adjudications. After Jarkesy, how have agencies changed their adjudicative practices? More broadly, how have administrative agencies and the Justice Department changed their enforcement strategies?
  • The Court has taken an expansive view of the president's constitutional authority to manage the law's execution, most recently in Trump v. Slaughter. How are presidents exercising this new personnel power? When a regime involves adjudication, to what extent, if any, are agencies ensuring the decision-maker's independence? Where do members of the Senior Executive Service fit within contemporary doctrine?
  • What is Congress's reaction, if any, to these seismic changes in administrative law? Has Congress enacted specific legislative responses to any of the significant regulatory decisions emanating from the Supreme Court? Is there lawmaker interest in providing clarity to enabling acts? Have doctrinal changes affected how Congress allocates resources to agencies?

This is a non-exclusive list. We welcome any submission that focuses on how the Court's evolving administrative law is influencing policymakers (rather than the lower courts). For example, we would welcome a paper that addresses agency implementation of the National Environmental Policy Act (also known as "NEPA") in the wake of Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County.

We welcome submissions from a range of perspectives, including public policy and administration, economics, law, political science, the natural and physical sciences, and economic history. Cross-disciplinary collaboration is encouraged.

Paper proposals will be judged in terms of academic rigor and practical viability. Conceptual, theoretical, and/or empirical proposals are welcome. Proposals should be no more than 700 words and highlight both the approach and practical implications of the research. Proposals are due on August 3rd and may be submitted here.

Selected paper authors will receive an honorarium of $7,000, with $3,000 payable on delivery of the draft paper and $4,000 due on completion of the project.

See here for full details.

Free Speech

Claim That Accuracy in Media Misidentified the Person Holding Allegedly Pro-Hamas-Violence Sign at Columbia Protest …

can go forward, Georgia appellate court rules.

|

An excerpt from the June 29 Georgia Court of Appeals decision in Accuracy in Media, Inc. v. Giusti, written by Judge Brian Rickman and joined by Chief Judge Trenton Brown and Judge Amanda Mercier:

Isabella Giusti ("Izzy"), Joni Saxon-Giusti, and Peter Giusti (collectively, "the Giustis") filed a lawsuit against Accuracy in Media, Inc., and its president Adam Guillette (collectively, "Accuracy in Media") asserting claims for defamation [and other torts]….

Here's a summary of plaintiffs' allegations:

Izzy, a native of Savannah, was a junior at Barnard College during the 2023-24 school year. Joni Saxon-Giusti and Peter Giusti are Izzy's parents. On April 18, 2024, Izzy joined a protest regarding the war in Gaza on Columbia University's main quad. During this protest, Izzy was arrested as part of a mass arrest of approximately 100 students. After Izzy was arrested, the New York Post ran an article identifying Izzy as one of the protesters who had been arrested.

On April 21, 2024, a masked person holding a sign that read "AL-QASAM'S NEXT TARGETS" was photographed in front of multiple pro-Israel counter-protestors near Columbia's main quad. According to the Giustis' verified complaint, the Al-Qassam Brigades are the military wing of Hamas, and, under the circumstances, the sign was rightly understood by those who saw it to be offensive and unacceptable and to imply that the counter-protestors should or would be subject to violence.

Izzy was not the masked person in the photograph holding the sign and was not at the protest when the photograph was taken. Nevertheless, several organizations opposed to the student protest at Columbia falsely claimed that Izzy was the person holding the sign.

Read More

Free Speech

Seeming Likely En Banc Call in Florida University Professor Speech Restrictions Case

|

I wrote about the opinion July 7, when it was issued (see below). Just now, I saw the court issued an order stating, "A judge of this Court withholds issuance of the mandate in this appeal." As I read the Eleventh Circuit's internal operating procedures, this likely means that an "active Eleventh Circuit judge" has indicated that "in the event the panel declines to grant rehearing, the judge requests that a poll be taken regarding en banc consideration."

This is unsurprising, given the 2-1 split on the panel and given the prominence of the case. And of course the indication of an up coming en banc vote isn't that telling, given that the vote may well come out against review. Still, because this is such a prominent case, I thought I'd note the development.

[* * *]

Some excerpts from [the] very long opinion in Pernell v. Fla. Bd. of Governors of State Univ. by Judge Britt Grant, joined by Judge Charles Wilson; note that the leading Eleventh Circuit precedent on this is Bishop v. Aronov, which both opinions discuss in considerable detail:

[A.] The provision at issue here disallows any "training or instruction that espouses, promotes, advances, inculcates, or compels" students at Florida's public colleges and universities to believe any of eight concepts relating to topics like race and sex:

  1. Members of one race, color, national origin, or sex are morally superior to members of another race, color, national origin, or sex.
  2. A person, by virtue of his or her race, color, national origin, or sex, is inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously.
  3. A person's moral character or status as either privileged or oppressed is necessarily determined by his or her race, color, national origin, or sex.
  4. Members of one race, color, national origin, or sex cannot and should not attempt to treat others without respect to race, color, national origin, or sex.
  5. A person, by virtue of his or her race, color, national origin, or sex, bears responsibility for, or should be discriminated against or receive adverse treatment because of, actions committed in the past by other members of the same race, color, national origin, or sex.
  6. A person, by virtue of his or her race, color, national origin, or sex, should be discriminated against or receive adverse treatment to achieve diversity, equity, or inclusion.
  7. A person, by virtue of his or her race, color, sex, or national origin, bears personal responsibility for and must feel guilt, anguish, or other forms of psychological distress because of actions, in which the person played no part, committed in the past by other members of the same race, color, national origin, or sex.
  8. Such virtues as merit, excellence, hard work, fairness, neutrality, objectivity, and racial colorblindness are racist or sexist, or were created by members of a particular race, color, national origin, or sex to oppress members of another race, color, national origin, or sex.

Though "promot[ing]" any of these concepts is barred, criticizing them is not. Beyond that, the Act allows instructors to introduce the ideas in a neutral fashion, permitting discussion "as part of a larger course"—so long as "instruction is given in an objective manner without endorsement of the concepts." And the law does not say how far past the classroom its restrictions extend—off-campus speeches and other settings may be in play….

Read More

What Has Heller Wrought In 18 Years?

"In nearly two decades, very little about the practical right to keep and bear arms has changed."

|

Brown v. Board of Education was decided in 1954. How much of an impact did Brown have on racial segregation in the United States over the next two decades?

Mapp v. Ohio was decided in 1961, Miranda v. Arizona was decided in 1966, and Katz v. United States was decided in 1967. How much did criminal procedure law change over the ensuing two decades?

Roe v. Wade was decided in 1973. Nineteen years later, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that precedent in Casey.

Romer v. Evans was decided in 1996. Nineteen years later the Supreme Court created a constitutional right to same-sex marriage.

And so on.

Certain landmark Supreme Court precedents have an immediate and significant impact on the state of constitutional law. Other precedents change very little. In my view, as we celebrate Heller's eighteenth birthday, not much has changed for gun owners living in blue states. To be sure, I think Heller was correct. And there have been some wins as states have revised their gun laws--often kicking and screaming. But the impact of Heller pales in comparison with the two decade run after other landmark cases. Even where there is "shall issue" conceal carry, virtually every public place is off limits, making it difficult to actually carry. States have imposed burdensome registration and licensing schemes, making simply keeping a firearm a hassle. And to date, the Court has seemed more interested in letting pot users own guns than deciding which arms and accessories are protected by the Second Amendment.

My new column in Civitas Outlook asks, "What the Heller?"

Eighteen years ago, on June 26, 2008, the Supreme Court decided District of Columbia v. Heller. This landmark decision declared that the Second Amendment protected an individual right to keep and bear arms that was not connected to militia service. As a result, the District of Columbia's handgun ban was unconstitutional. Eighteen years later, the Second Amendment has become a regular feature of the Supreme Court's jurisprudence. But as the right to keep and bear arms becomes old enough to vote, it is worth taking stock of how much has been accomplished on the ground. Regrettably, in nearly two decades, very little about the practical right to keep and bear arms has changed.

The biggest decisions, Heller and McDonald v. City of Chicago (2010), invalidated handgun bans that were virtually non-existent across the country. New York Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen (2022) halted the "may issue" conceal carry regimes, which were only in effect in a minority of states. Most recently, Wolford v. Lopez (2026) ruled that Hawaii could not presumptively ban firearms from all private property, but those businesses will gladly post signs to exclude gun owners. With each incremental victory, anti-gun governments have resisted the Second Amendment and marginalized gun owners. Unless the Supreme Court starts to vigorously enforce all facets of the Second Amendment, Heller will have amounted to little.

Moreover, perhaps the greatest unintended consequence of Heller and its progeny has been to provide progressives with a target to attack originalism:

Perhaps the biggest fallout from Heller is that the Second Amendment has become a cudgel the left can use to attack originalism. While most originalist cases promote judicial restraint, for example, Dobbs let the states decide the abortion issue, and Heller delegated to the courts the power to review gun control laws. I doubt anyone who was unpersuaded by Heller has become persuaded by Bruen and its progeny. The battle lines from 2008 haven't moved an inch. All that has changed is the membership of the Court: Justices Souter, Stevens, Scalia, Kennedy, Ginsburg, and Breyer have been replaced by Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, Barrett, and Jackson. What will the Second Amendment look like in another eighteen years? I suspect not much will change unless the Court begins vigorously enforcing cases that actually enable gun owners to exercise their right to keep and bear arms.

Heller was an originalist decision, except when it started making up exceptions out of whole cloth. Bruen was an attempt at originalism that almost all originalist scholars dispute. Rahimi walked back Bruen barely a year later, letting lower court judges update an Amendment that is not "trapped in amber." And as I'll explain in a future writing, I am almost completely lost after Wolford. The Court has lost the thread on the Second Amendment. Justice Barrett's scholarly exposition (and I do not mean that in a flattering way) leaves a lot to be desired. Justice Jackson is actually making some sense, even if I do not agree with her preference for an interest-balancing test.

In candor, I wrote this column after Hemani and Wolford were decided, but before the Court finally granted the AR-15 petition. The Cook County case might actually provide a material improvement to the rights of gun owners nationwide.

Have things improved since 2008? It's complicated. On the one hand, the Supreme Court has rightly restored the Constitution's original meaning. This is a victory for the rule of law. On the ground, however, things have not changed too much. Gun owners in red states had strong gun protections before Heller and retain those rights thanks to the political process. (Virginia is a gross outlier, as the purple state recently enacted draconian bans on firearms.) By contrast, gun owners in blue states may now be able to obtain a conceal carry permit, but there are very few places in urban environments where they can legally carry. And they still can't possess AR-15s. Indeed, some blue states have been galvanized by Heller to make gun ownership even more oppressive. Fortunately, on the final day of the term, the Supreme Court agreed to hear a pair of cases challenging bans on AR-15s in Illinois and Connecticut.

I'd like to think the Court took this case after so many relists to reverse the Seventh Circuit, but one could never know.

"There Is No Material Dispute That Tom Brady Is the GOAT"

|

It's judicial precedent now, from Judge J. Nicholas Ranjan (W.D. Pa.) in yesterday's Multiple Energy Tech., LLC v. Under Armour, Inc., ready for use in arguments, on coffee mugs, etc.

In the unlikely event that people are interested in the actual legal questions, here's the introduction:

There is no material dispute that Tom Brady is the GOAT. Part of his unparalleled success was due to his well-known but rather alternative nutrition, fitness, and recovery methods, which he helped to market more broadly as part of his company, TB12. One of these methods involved bioceramic powder, which is a substance that is integrated into clothing, and, when worn, allegedly improves sleep and muscle recovery. This powder is what this case is about.

In 2014, Tom Brady introduced the parties in this case, MET and Under Armour. MET made a type of bioceramic powder called Redwave. Under Armour, of course, makes athletic apparel. They entered into essentially an exclusive supply agreement, and by early 2017, the parties launched their bioceramic sleepwear product at a consumer show, Tom Brady endorsed the product, and MET and Under Armour signed a short-term agreement to work to bring the product to market.

Read More

Sex Crimes

Utah's New Rule Allowing Propensity Evidence in Sexual Assault Prosecutions

While propensity evidence is generally inadmissible in criminal cases, an exception for sexual assault cases is both common practice and good public policy.

|

During the 2026 session, Utah's legislature amended Utah's rules of evidence, adding a new provision (subsection 404(d)). The new provision allows prosecutors to present to juries sexual assault propensity evidence in sexual assault cases. The Federal Rules of Evidence have contained a similar rule (Rule 413) for more than two decades. Numerous states follow comparable approaches—either through rule or caselaw—tracking the common law approach of admitting evidence to prove a "lustful disposition." Utah's rules will now benefit from a provision codifying this approach in Rule 404(d).

Because of the significance of this new rule change, I've written an article with Utah County prosecutor Ryan McBride explaining the rationale behind it and how it will operate in practice. The article makes four arguments in favor of the new rule.

First, because most sex crimes are committed by perpetrators against victims in private places, admitting evidence of similar crimes is often critical to a successful prosecution of those perpetrators. In light of frequently conflicting testimony from victims and defendants in sexual assault cases, admitting similar crimes evidence serves to arm the jury with more information from which to determine the truth and reach an accurate verdict. When the defendant claims to have been unjustly accused, allowing evidence of other acts of misconduct often puts an entirely different light on the matter. Combining direct evidence of guilt with evidence of the defendant's past crimes may thus eliminate  reasonable doubt in a case that would otherwise be inconclusive. As Utah Senator Orrin Hatch concluded in co-sponsoring legislation adding Rule 413 to the Federal Rules of Evidence, the public interest in admitting evidence "that will illuminate the credibility of the charge and any denial by the defense is truly compelling." Letter from Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, Rep. Susan Molinari, and Rep. John Kyl to Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist 2 (Oct. 11, 1994).

Second, historically Utah law recognized a similar crimes exception, only for that precedent to be obscured or ignored by what appears to have been sexist assumptions about the unreliability of women reporting sexual assaults. Read More

Free Speech

Federal Judge in Texas Not Wild About Fifth Circuit's Recent Precedent

"[T]he Fifth Circuit ... discerned that pedanticism ought to be favored over practical wisdom."

|

From Judge Mark Pittman (N.D. Tex.) Monday in Kirkland v. O'Hare:

On December 9, 2025, Plaintiff attended an open meeting of the Tarrant County Commissioners Court ("Commissioners Court"), which is the governing body for Defendant Tarrant County. Plaintiff registered to speak during the public comment period associated with agenda item F1. Defendant Tim O'Hare ("Judge O'Hare"), County Judge of the Commissioners Court, briefly shushed applause from the audience following the previous speaker's remarks on agenda item F1. Plaintiff does not allege that he was clapping or that anyone was reprimanded or removed from the meeting for clapping.

Judge O'Hare called Plaintiff to give his remarks to the Commissioners Court. Plaintiff began by remarking, "Lord, I live in America where people cannot clap. That is insane to me." Judge O'Hare stopped Plaintiff's remarks, telling him, "Your time is done. Sit down. Go. It's not commentary on how we run the court. Your comments are limited to this item. Take a seat, you're not talking on this one." Judge O'Hare then called the next speaker.

Read More

Politics

Ban on "Personal, Impertinent or Slanderous Remarks" in City Council Public Comments Is Unconstitutional

So the Fifth Circuit held a few weeks ago.

|

In Merriott v. City of Bossier City, decided June 25 by Judge Irma Carrillo Ramirez and joined by Judges Edith Brown Clement and Dana Douglas struck down a City Council public comment policy that

Any person making personal, impertinent or slanderous remarks or who shall become boisterous while addressing the Council shall be forthwith, by the President Pro-tem, barred from further audience before the Council unless permission to continue by [sic] granted by a majority vote of the Council.

The opinion is long, but here's an excerpt of the analysis that holds that the policy is overbroad:

"Personal" is ordinarily understood to mean "of, relating to, or affecting a particular person." And a "remark" is ordinarily understood to mean "the act of remarking," "an expression of opinion or judgment," or "mention of that which deserves attention or notice." To "remark," means "to take notice of" or "to express as an observation or comment."

Based on the ordinary meaning of "personal remarks," the Policy prohibits speakers from uttering an infinite number of protected, relevant statements or questions. For example, a speaker must refrain from: (1) using a councilmember's name for the record; (2) mentioning that a councilmember may have a personal stake in the outcome of a vote; (3) stating that a councilmember engaged in a corrupt act; (4) highlighting that a councilmember had recently been convicted of a crime; (5) claiming that a councilmember lied to the public; (6) suggesting that a councilmember had a conflict of interest; and (7) bringing to public attention that a councilmember had been sued—just to name a few. The Policy forbids a citizen from noting that a councilmember has—even questionably—done anything that may be relevant to the public. The possible applications are unquantifiable, especially when not harnessed by any limiting principle….

Read More

More