The Volokh Conspiracy

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

The Volokh Conspiracy

Free Speech

Accusation of "Sexual Abuse and Sexual Violence" for Allegedly Nonconsensually Posting Bondage Pictures May Be Defamatory

"Doe's assertion that distribution of intimate photos without consent has been considered sexual abuse and sexual violence, and therefore, his website is truthful ... presents factual issues, the resolution of which is not appropriate at the motion to dismiss stage."

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From Judge Sarah Pitlyk (E.D. Mo.) yesterday in Doe v. Sutton:

This case arises from a relationship between Counterclaim Defendant John Doe and Counterclaim Plaintiff Leslie Sutton. Sutton operated a Twitter account where she posted sexual content and advertised private online subscription services. Doe initially reached out to her as a client, seeking to engage in activities such as bondage, domination, submission, and related sexual fetishes, but the parties later developed a romantic relationship based on their shared sexual proclivities. During their relationship, Doe discussed these proclivities with Sutton's online clientele, including during livestreams hosted by Sutton. He also wore a collar while in public with Sutton.

During their relationship, Sutton took two photos of Doe, which, while not sexually explicit in a traditional sense, appealed to Sutton's online clientele. One photo showed Doe fully clothed while wearing a collar, and the other depicted him tying Sutton's shoe. Sutton posted one of these photos to her private Twitter account where it was visible to individuals who were aware of their relationship and sexual proclivities. Sutton posted the other photo to an account related to her online services. When Doe asked Sutton to remove the photos from her online accounts, she "immediately deleted the Twitter post, and attempted to remove" the other photo.

The romantic nature of their relationship eventually ceased. After their relationship ended, Doe reached out to Sutton and threatened to contact law enforcement unless she deleted her online accounts. Sutton complied.  This did not satisfy Doe. On August 30, 2023, he allegedly took three distinct actions against Sutton. First, he filed a lawsuit against her in the Circuit Court of St. Louis seeking damages for the dissemination of the photos, which was subsequently removed to this Court. Second, he created a website accusing Sutton of sexual abuse, which listed Sutton's name, contact information, and private online account information (such as her anonymous online usernames). Third, he mailed a copy of the lawsuit to Sutton's parents.

Sutton counterclaimed against Doe, and the court allowed her defamation claim to go forward based on Doe's saying she had committed "sexual abuse and sexual violence" against him:

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Free Speech

Conspiracy Lawsuit Against National Students for Justice in Palestine Parent Organization Can Go Forward

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From today's corrected opinion by Judge Andrew Carter (S.D.N.Y.) in Horowitz v. AJP Educ. Found., Inc., the plaintiff's allegations:

Horowitz is a documentarian and civil rights activist. AMP [American Muslims for Palestine] is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation …. Defendant NSJP [National Students for Justice in Palestine] is an unincorporated association … that was created and is operated by AMP.

AMP was founded for the direct purpose of serving certain political aims in the United States. Defendant NSJP is AMP's on-campus brand, a project created to manage and control a network of chapter and affiliate organizations across hundreds of campuses on behalf of AMP so that they can be used to serve its political aims.

In April 2024, AMP and NSJP began a largescale operation coordinating, guiding, and commanding NSJP's network of on campus chapter to engage in protests by building encampments to participate in civil disobedience with the goal of making certain political demands. One example of these activities occurred on April 24, 2024, when AMP's Executive
Director, Osama Abuirshaid, visited an encampment at Columbia University …. Abuirshaid made a fiery speech to the encampment protestors and declared to the NSJP protestors that there was a "war" on them in America. He also stated that there was a war against their First Amendment rights, and that police were repressing them.

Abuirshaid shouted that AMP and the protestors were "going to continue to fight" until they achieved their political goals. Abuirshaid's visit to NSJP's Columbia chapters and affiliates and their encampment coincided with the creation of the encampment at CUNY the following day—which the Columbia chapters assisted with….

On April 25, 2024, over 200 members of NSJP's chapters and affiliates at CUNY gathered to set up an encampment in a public square at CUNY's campus at the City College of New York ("CCNY"). In the late afternoon on April 26, 2024, Plaintiff Horowitz entered CCNY's campus to film a video. He approached the encampment with an American flag.

A mob of protestors from the encampment surrounded him. After swarming from the encampment to surround Horowitz, the mob immediately ripped the American flag from Horowitz hands, smashed it on the ground, and began beating him. The attack occurred during the middle of the day, in broad daylight, in full view of the surrounding campus, the encampment, and hundreds of onlookers. The mob's members kicked, punched, and headbutted Horowitz, aiming strikes at his throat, spleen, and kidney.

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April 1, 2026

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Today is a day unlike any other than I can remember.

At 10:00 a.m., the Supreme Court heard oral argument in Trump v. BarbaraIn this case, the Trump Administration asked the Supreme Court to rule that the Fourteenth Amendment does not grant birthright citizenship to the children of illegal aliens. Many scholars, including myself, had thought this issue had been settled for more than 150 years. But over the past year, there has been an explosion of scholarship that has presented arguments on both sides of the case. I have concluded that this issue is much closer than when I first studied it, but on balance, I think the plaintiffs have the stronger argument.

In another first, President Trump attended the oral argument. This is apparently the first time a sitting President has attended a Supreme Court case--especially one about him. President Nixon wanted to argue the Pentagon Papers case, but decided against it. Here is how Randy and I described the exchange in our 100 Cases book:

On June 23, a circuit split formed. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals, based in New York, enjoined the Times from publishing certain materials that could harm national security. But the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled for the Washington Post. On June 24, the parties filed appeals in the Supreme Court. In the Oval Office, President Nixon said, "I ought to argue that case before the Supreme Court, if it gets there." He joked that Justice "Black and the rest of them would take out after me like gangbusters, and I'd knock their goddamn brains out." On June 25, the Justices agreed to hear the case, and scheduled oral argument for June 26. Nixon would not argue the case.

According to the New York Times, Trump left after Solicitor General Sauer finished his argument. I suspect he was not pleased--in particular with the questions posed by Justices Gorsuch and Barrett. Though if Trump had stuck around, the President might have seen some tough questions posed for Cecilia Wang, counsel for the ACLU.

Today, around 6:30 p.m., the Artemis mission is scheduled to blast off for the moon.

Tonight, around 8:00 p.m., President Trump will give a primetime address on the conflict in Iran. Will he announce a ceasefire or an escalation? Tune in to find out.

What a remarkable day. As is my practice, I no longer write April Fool's Day posts.

Justice Harlan's Lectures Gets A Shout-Out In Birthright Citizenship Case

Justice Gorsuch twice referenced Justice Harlan's constitutional law lecture on Wong Kim Ark.

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As I write, Solicitor General has just concluded his arguments in Trump v. Barbara, the birthright citizenship case. I will avoid making any firm predictions until the case is concluded, but things do not look good for the government here.

In the meantime, I wanted to flag a question Justice Gorsuch asked. He flagged Justice John Marshall Harlan's lecture notes on Wong Kim Ark. I didn't realize that the ACLU had cited the article on Harlan's lectures that I co-authored with Brian Frye and Michael Michael McCloskey in 2013. Here is the excerpt from the brief:

Indeed, the Wong Kim Ark dissenters recognized that the majority had rejected any domicile requirement under the Clause. 169 U.S. at 705-06 (Fuller, C.J., dissenting). Chief Justice Fuller noted that under the Court's ruling, "the children of foreigners, happening to be born to them while passing through the country," are natural-born citizens. Id. at 715 (emphasis added). Justice Harlan, who joined the dissent, put the point more concretely in a subsequent lecture:

Suppose an English father and mother went down to Hot Springs to get rid of the gout, or rheumatism, and while he is there, there is a child born. Now, he goes back to England. Is that child a citizen of the United States, born to the jurisdiction thereof, by the mere accident of his birth?

Justice John Marshall Harlan: Lectures on Constitutional Law, 1897-98, Lecture 27 (May 7, 1898), in 81 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 12, 344 (Brian L. Frye et al., eds., 2013) (footnote omitted). Justice Harlan thought the answer should be no, but he recognized that the majority disagreed, explaining: "I was one of the minority, and of course I was wrong." Id.

I don't have the transcript yet, but Gorsuch seems to have quoted that line, directly. Justice Harlan would often joke that he was in the "minority."

Presumably, Harlan was referring to Hot Springs, Bath County, Virginia, a spa resort renowned for the curative powers of its hot springs, especially in relation to rheumatism and gout.

Here is the full passage from the article:

We had an illustration of the application of this amendment in the present term of our court. It was the case about the Chinese subject, to which I had called your attention heretofore.665 It was the case of the Chinaman born in San Francisco, twenty-odd years ago, of Chinese parents. Father and mother were living in San Francisco, the father engaged in business there, but they were subjects of the Emperor of China. And this boy was born to them in San Francisco. And the question was whether or not this Chinaman, the son of Chinese parents—residing in the United States, but nevertheless subjects of the Emperor of China—was a citizen of the United States, by reason of the fact that he was born there. The question turns upon two or three words of this amendment: "All persons born in the United States." Well, he was born here. But now come the words, "and subject to the jurisdiction thereof." Now, if that boy was within the meaning of that clause, "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States, then he became a citizen of the United States, and of the state wherein he resided. The majority of the Court held that he was. The minority held that he was not born to the jurisdiction of the United States, as to this Constitution. He was not born subject to the political jurisdiction of the United States. Of course, he owed allegiance to our laws, as every man who comes here, but he was not born under the jurisdiction of the United States, within the meaning of this article of the Constitution. I was one of the minority, and of course I was wrong.666 Suppose an English father and mother went down to Hot Springs to get rid of the gout, or rheumatism, and while he is there, there is a child born.667 Now, he goes back to England. Is that child a citizen of the United States, born to the jurisdiction thereof, by the mere accident of his birth? My belief was never intended to embrace everybody in our citizenship if he was the child of parents who cannot under the law become naturalized in the United States. I was unable to believe that when the boy's parents could not become citizens of the United States, that it was possible for him to become a citizen of the United States. One of the results of the opposite view is that when that man goes back to China, and the Emperor should conclude to cut his head off—a custom which prevails to a very great extent among these people—we would have to prevent it. And if we could not do this, make him pay for it afterwards. Or, if they impress him into the Chinese army, we would have to protect him. Of course, I am wrong, because only the Chief Justice and myself held these views, and as the majority decided the other way, we must believe that we were wrong.

Frye, McCloskey, and I published another article analyzing the lecture notes. Here is how we described the lecture:

One of Harlan's most passionate lectures was his discussion of United States v. Wong Kim Ark329 on March 19, 1898.330 In Wong Kim Ark, the Supreme Court considered whether birth in the United States was sufficient to grant United States citizenship to a person of Chinese descent.331 The Court, in a 6–2 decision by Justice Gray, held that Wong Kim Ark, who was born in the United States to Chinese citizens, acquired American citizenship at birth by the principle of jus soli.332 Chief Justice Fuller, joined by Justice Harlan, dissented, arguing for the principle of jus sanguinis, under which a child inherits citizenship from his or her father, regardless of birthplace.333 Wong Kim Ark was argued on March 5 and 8, 1897.334 When Harlan discussed it in class on March 19, 1898, he expressed views closely reflecting the dissent he eventually joined.335 Harlan argued that Chinese-Americans could not be assimilated into the American populace, and thus were not entitled to birthright citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment.336 The case would be decided nine days later on March 28, 1898, after which Harlan explained how he reconciled his views with those of the majority.337 This discussion illuminates Harlan's chimerical views on race, and juxtaposes his enlightened dissents in Plessy v. Ferguson338 and the Civil Rights Cases339 with his xenophobic views in Wong Kim Ark.

Josh Blackman, Brian Frye and Michael McCloskey, John Marshall Harlan: Professor of Law, 81 George Washington Law Review 1063 (2013).

 

Gorsuch returned to the Harlan line during Respondent's time. Cecilia Wang referenced Justice Harlan's lectures in Washington, D.C.

I undertook the project of transcribing the notes back in 2008. I was a third-year law student in Ross Davies's legal history class. In 2013, when I co-authored this article, I could not have fathomed that Wong Kim Ark might be a live issue before the Supreme Court, but here we are. I always marvel how scholarship drafted behind the veil of ignorance proves useful in controversies that were unimaginable.

Birthright Citizenship

Slavery, Birthright Citizenship, and Today's Upcoming Supreme Court Oral Argument

The administration's arguments for denying birthright ctizenship to children of undocumented immigrants are at odds with the main purpose of the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

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Josiah Wedgewood's famous 1787 image created for the antislavery movement. (NA)

Much ink has been spilled over the issues at stake in today's upcoming Supreme Court oral argument in Trump v. Barbara, the birthright citizenship case. There are many reasons why the Trump administration's position is badly wrong. Prominent constitutional law scholars Akhil Amar, Vikram Amar, and Samarth Desai recently published a helpful overview of some key issues at SCOTUSblog. But one key point has, I fear, still not gotten the attention it deserves: all of the standard arguments for the administration's position suffer from the crucial weakness that they are at odds with the main purpose of the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment: granting citizenship to freed slaves and their children. I covered this issue in a recent Lawfare article:

Trump v. Barbara, the birthright citizenship case, is currently before the Supreme Court. At the heart of the case is a Jan. 20, 2025 executive order that sought to deny birthright citizenship to children born in the U.S. whose parents are in the country either illegally or on temporary visas. The case has produced a vast array of amicus briefs as well as the briefs of the parties. But one key issue has not received the attention it deserves.

Accepting the government's position would undermine the central purpose of the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. For that reason alone, the Trump Administration should lose the case, especially from the standpoint of originalism.

Virtually all informed observers agree that the main purpose of the Citizenship Clause was to grant citizenship to newly freed slaves and their descendants, reversing the holding of the Supreme Court's infamous 1857 Dred Scott decision, which ruled that Black people could never be citizens of the United States. Indeed, the Trump administration's Supreme Court brief in Trump v. Barbara says exactly that: "The Clause was adopted to confer citizenship on the newly freed slaves and their children." But all of the administration's arguments for denying birthright citizenship to children of undocumented immigrants and non-citizens present in the U.S. on temporary visas would, if applied consistently, also have denied citizenship to numerous freed slaves and children thereof.

This reality puts the government's arguments at odds with the original meaning of the Citizenship Clause. Since contemporaries almost universally understood that Clause as granting citizenship to freed slaves, their children, and other Black people born in the United States, any interpretation of  "subject to the jurisdiction" that requires denying birthright citizenship to large numbers of slaves and children thereof must be rejected. That is particularly true from an originalist standpoint, which requires adherence to the understanding of the words prevalent at the time of ratification.

The rest of the article goes through the various standard arguments advanced by the administration and its supporters, such as claims that their parents' illegal entry puts children outside the scope of US jurisdiction, arguments based on various notions of "allegiance," domicile arguments, and theories of "complete political jurisdiction." I  explains how all of these theories share the same fatal flaw.

Free Speech

No Pseudonymity for Lawyer Alleging Quid Pro Quo Sexual Harassment and Retaliation

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From Judge Ronnie Abrams yesterday in Doe v. Legal Aid Society (S.D.N.Y.):

[1.] [Pseudonymity is more justified if] the litigation involves matters of a highly sensitive and personal nature. This case involves allegations of sexual harassment, which undoubtedly qualify. Thus, while this factor weighs in Plaintiff's favor, courts in this District have routinely held that allegations of sexual harassment and assault alone "are not sufficient to entitle a plaintiff to proceed under a pseudonym." …

[2.] Plaintiff presents no evidence of any existing or potential threats or intimidation that she would experience should her identity be revealed. She claims only that revealing her identity would cause her and her former clients at LAS emotional harm and embarrassment. As to the allegation that it will pose a risk of mental harm to her and her clients, it is conclusory at best.

Moreover, "a plaintiff must allege more than public humiliation—she must provide corroboration from medical professionals that detail the risk to plaintiff." Such evidence "must detail how revealing [P]laintiff's name in particular, as opposed to the trauma that could occur through reliving the experience through litigation, would cause harm." Plaintiff provides no such evidence, and as such, the Court cannot "speculate about the nature and severity of any mental injury from disclosure." …

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Harassment

EEOC May Subpoena Penn's Records as to "Jewish-Related Organizations" (and Others) in Investigation of Anti-Semitic Harassment at Penn

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From Judge Gerald Pappert (E.D. Pa.) yesterday in EEOC v. Univ. of Pa.:

Based on public statements by the University of Pennsylvania's president and others affiliated with the school that individuals had been subject to antisemitism on Penn's campus, United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commissioner Andrea K. Lucas issued in December of 2023 a charge that Penn engaged in a pattern or practice of harassment of Jewish employees in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In July of 2025, the EEOC issued an administrative subpoena to gather evidence relevant to that charge.

The EEOC viewed this as a "garden variety" use of one of its common investigative methods, where it seeks contact information for possible victims of the employer's alleged misconduct or witnesses thereto. But unlike investigations into, for example, sexual harassment or racial discrimination, the subpoena sought information pertaining to people's faith, making its requests more intrusive and calling for greater sensitivity, something the EEOC now acknowledges.

One of those requests in particular sought, among other things, lists of school groups and organizations "related to the Jewish religion," including personal contact information for Penn employees in those groups. Though ineptly worded, the request had an understandable purpose—to obtain in a narrowly tailored way, as opposed to seeking information on all university employees, information on individuals in Penn's Jewish community who could have experienced or witnessed antisemitism in the workplace. Penn resisted the subpoena on various grounds and when the parties could not resolve their differences, the EEOC filed this subpoena enforcement action.

Penn and other groups and associations the Court permitted to intervene significantly raised the dispute's temperature by impliedly and even expressly comparing the EEOC's efforts to protect Jewish employees from antisemitism to the Holocaust and the Nazis' compilation of "lists of Jews." Such allegations are unfortunate and inappropriate. They also obfuscate the Court's limited role and the discrete legal issues before it. And the EEOC no longer seeks any employee's specific affiliation with a particular Jewish-related organization on campus….

The EEOC's subpoena … seeks, among other things, (1) the names of employees who reported antisemitic harassment to Penn; (2) the Jewish-related organizations on campus and the private contact information (personal phone number, email address and mailing address) of the employee members in each organization; (3) the private contact information of employees in Penn's Jewish Studies Program; (4) the private contact information of employees who participated in Penn's March 2024 listening sessions on antisemitism; and (5) the private contact information of employees who received a Penn survey on antisemitism.

The court rejected (among other things) the argument that the subpoena unconstitutionally interfered with employees' privacy:

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Birthright Citizenship

On the Original Legal Meaning of "Subject to the Jurisdiction Thereof"

The allegiance reading has no basis in the historical usage of this language in American law

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There has been some originalist debate of late about the proper reading of the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The fate of the Trump administration's executive order excluding new categories of individuals from birthright citizenship depends to a significant degree on whether there is any historical support for the revisionist interpretation of the constitutional text. The Supreme Court is hearing oral arguments on this issue today.

One recent suggestion in support of a restrictionist reading of the Citizenship Clause is that the requirement that individuals be both born within the United States and "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States should be understood to have an allegiance component. This "allegiance-based" reading of "subject to the jurisdiction" is said to better capture the original meaning of Fourteenth Amendment. If the allegiance-based theory is correct then the longstanding understanding of the constitutional text is wrong and the administration's executive order is somewhat more plausibly consistent with the Constitution -- and a large number of people should not properly be regarded as natural-born citizens of the United States.

In a new paper, I examine, along with a co-author (James Heilpern), whether "subject to the jurisdiction" would have had a familiar legal meaning to lawyers in the mid-nineteenth century, and if so what that original public meaning might have been. A comprehensive survey of judicial opinions, statutes, treaties, legislative debates, and legal treatises provides a clear answer to this question. These were commonly used terms with a well-known meaning in 1866 when the Fourteenth Amendment was drafted.

As a piece of legal text, "subject to the jurisdiction" was neither ambiguous nor obscure. Its meaning would have been straightforward and familiar in the community of legal interpreters charged with understanding and implementing the constitutional text, not to mention the draftsmen who incorporated this language into the Constitution.

The original public meaning of the phrase "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States simply meant land, people, and objects within the governing authority of the United States and placed under its laws and judicial proceedings. Such jurisdiction was frequently shared and concurrent such that individuals could simultaneously be subject to the governing authority of the United States and to some other governmental power. Such jurisdiction could be triggered by a variety of factors, but the most common was simple presence within the territory governed by the United States. An individual's allegiance to the United States might well trigger extraterritorial jurisdiction when such an individual was abroad and outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States, but allegiance was never a necessary condition to making one subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.

There are, of course, complexities about how such a legal rule might apply in particular situations, and lawyers sometimes disagreed about particular applications then as they would now. It is also possible that the drafters of the Fourteenth Amendment chose to use this conventional legal language in a very unconventional way and meant something unusual and surprising by this phrase. This paper does not explore the implications of this legal rule for Trump's executive order and does not examine the evidence for an unconventional usage in this particular case. The paper does, however, demonstrate that the 39th Congress that drafted the Fourteenth Amendment routinely used this legal language in the conventional way in other contexts.

American lawyers in 1866 would have known what "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States meant. That original public meaning of this piece of lawyerly text is consistent with the conventional understanding of that text. The original public meaning will not be helpful to the Trump administration's case.

The new paper -- "Subject to the Jurisdiction" as Legal Text -- can be found here.

Justice Alito: "Just out of curiosity, do you think we should ask Claude to decide this case?"

I suspect many lawyers use AI, but now they will be even more hesitant to admit it.

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In 2009, I launched FantasySCOTUS. At the time, the idea was novel: a league where people could predict the outcome of Supreme Court cases. I soon realized I had the makings of a nascent prediction market. We began to aggregate the votes and offer expert predictions on all of the pending cases before the Court. The best players would predict up to 85% of the cases accurately. By 2014, I partnered with colleagues to develop a machine learning algorithm that would predict Supreme Court cases. We called it {Marshall+}. At its peak circa 2016, the algorithm was nearly as accurate as our best users--approximately 70% accurate.

Admittedly, over time, interest in FantasySCOTUS has faded. I chalk it up to a few factors. First, the Supreme Court has become more predictable. With the new appointees, fewer votes are up for grabs in most cases. I think the novelty of predicting outcomes has somewhat worn off. Instead, the focus is not on affirm/reverse, but how the Court rules. Second, coding each case for our algorithm proved to be too time-consuming. The juice was no longer worth the squeeze. Third, AI has completely obliterated all of our work. It is now possible to ask an AI agent to predict a case, and that work will be far more accurate than what our algorithm might have generated with hours of preparation. I maintain FantasySCOTUS at this point mostly as a novelty. There are a dedicated group of players who still make predictions, and I am thankful for their commitment. But I doubt this league will ever return to its heyday.

In the early days, I was often asked if the Supreme Court Justices would check FantasySCOTUS. I had no way of knowing, but I would joke with reporters that Justice Kennedy might check the league to see which way to vote.

Now, it seems, things have come full circle.

On Monday, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in Jules v. Andre Balazs Properties. The question presented concerns arbitration. I won't even pretend to understand the facts. Rather, I was intrigued by a single question asked.

Adam Unikowsky represented the Petitioners. Adam has made headlines of late for his work on AI. His most ambitious project employed Claude to automate a Supreme Court oral argument. You should listen to it. It sounds really real. And, it seems, the Justices are aware of Adam's efforts.

During the seriatim round, Justice Alito asked Adam:

JUSTICE ALITO: Well, just out of curiosity, do you think we should ask Claude to decide this case?

The transcript notes there was "laughter." I heard the distinct and prolonged laughs of Justices Kagan and Barrett. There may have been others.

Adam swiftly replied:

MR. UNIKOWSKY: No. I --I adhere to the wise judgment of --of this Court.

I think the effect of this joke is that lawyers will now be afraid to even suggest they use AI. But it seems clear that many lawyers are using AI to generate questions that may be posed at oral argument--though they may not admit it. I give Adam credit for being transparent with his methods. Though, Adam may have gotten burned.

For whatever it is worth, Professor Scott Dodson asked Claude to generate a opinion in the case in the style of Justice Kagan.

Judge Leon Blocked The East Wing Ballroom Based on Offended Observer Standing

After Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, a claim for a purely "aesthetic injury" should fail.

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Two months ago, Chief Justice Roberts began the Court's opinion in Bost v. Illinois State Board of Elections this way:

Under Article III of the Constitution, plaintiffs must have a "personal stake" in a case to have standing to sue. FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, 602 U.S. 367, 379, 144 S.Ct. 1540, 219 L.Ed.2d 121 (2024). They must, in other words, be able to answer a basic question: " 'What's it to you?' " A. Scalia, The Doctrine of Standing as an Essential Element of the Separation of Powers, 17 Suffolk U. L. Rev. 881, 882 (1983)

These sentences should be enough to reverse Judge Leon's injunction blocking the construction of the new East Wing ballroom.

I'm sure you've seen many press stories about today's opinion, but have you actually read the standing analysis? In an earlier ruling, the court relied on a purported aesthetic injury.

A member of the National Trust regularly walks near the White House, and enjoys the beauty of the architecture. But she doesn't like the new design. This distress, she claims, gives her Article III standing to challenge the construction at the White House. She has no monetary interest. Rather, she simply doesn't like how the structure appears.

Hoagland intends to continue visiting President's Park roughly once a month. Id. at 12. She asserts that construction of a ballroom of the form and scale proposed by the President would disrupt her enjoyment and use of President's Park and cause her to "suffer both professional and personal injuries, including to [her] aesthetic, cultural, and historical interests." Id. at 13-14. The President's proposed ballroom would, in Hoagland's words, "overshadow[]" the White House and "diminish [its] primacy," thereby disrupting the message that "our president lives in a house." Id. at 13. Based on her claims of aesthetic injury, Hoagland could sue in her own right. It is well-settled that the "desire to use or observe" something, "even for purely [a]esthetic purposes, is undeniably a cognizable interest for purpose of standing." Lujan, 504 U.S. at 562-63.

The plaintiff is distressed by what she might have to see. To use Justice Gorsuch's phrasing, Hogland is an "offended observer." Here is how Gorsuch described the doctrine in American Legion:

"If individuals and groups could invoke the authority of a federal court to forbid what they dislike for no more reason than they dislike it, . . . [c]ourts would start to look more like legislatures, responding to social pressures rather than remedying concrete harms . . . ."

I am very familiar with the aesthetic injury claim. It was raised in the Mifepristone litigation. Judge Ho expressly invoked it in his concurrence.

In addition to the injuries analyzed by the majority, Plaintiffs have demonstrated another basis for Article III standing: the aesthetic injury they experience in the course of their work. See, e.g., Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U.S. 727, 734-35, 92 S.Ct. 1361, 31 L.Ed.2d 636 (1972) (recognizing aesthetic harm as "injury to a cognizable interest"); Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 562-63, 112 S.Ct. 2130, 119 L.Ed.2d 351 (1992) ("[T]he desire to use or observe an animal species, even for purely esthetic purposes, is undeniably a cognizable interest for purpose of standing."); id. at 566, 112 S.Ct. 2130 ("[T]he person who observes or works with a particular animal threatened by a federal decision is facing perceptible harm."). It's well established that, if a plaintiff has "concrete plans" to visit an animal's habitat and view that animal, that plaintiff suffers aesthetic injury when an agency has approved a project that threatens the animal. See Lujan, 504 U.S. at 564, 112 S.Ct. 2130. . . .

Unborn babies are a source of profound joy for those who view them. Expectant parents eagerly share ultrasound photos with loved ones. Friends and family cheer at the sight of an unborn child. Doctors delight in working with their unborn patients—and experience an aesthetic injury when they are aborted.

Plaintiffs' declarations illustrate that they experience aesthetic injury from the destruction of unborn life.

In short, if naturalists can claim an aesthetic injury to see plants and animals, then pro-life doctors could claim a similar injury with regard to newborn babies.

On appeal, the Supreme Court could have considered AHM's "aesthetic" standing argument raised in Judge Ho's concurrence. But Justice Kavanaugh did not. The ground for standing was not even mentioned. Indeed, I think the Court chipped away at "offended observer" standing in Footnote 3:

The doctors also suggest that they are distressed by others' use of mifepristone and by emergency abortions. It is not clear that this alleged injury is distinct from the alleged conscience injury. But even if it is, this Court has long made clear that distress at or disagreement with the activities of others is not a basis under Article III for a plaintiff to bring a federal lawsuit challenging the legality of a government regulation allowing those activities. See, e.g., Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Inc., 454 U. S. 464, 473, 485–486 (1982); United States v. Richardson, 418 U. S. 166, 175 (1974); Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U. S. 727, 739 (1972).

What is the relationship between Mifepristone and the Ballroom? Are we to believe that an astute art critic can claim an "aesthetic" injury for staring at slabs of marble but a doctor cannot claim an "aesthetic" injury for seeing the miracle of life? This would be yet another asymmetry in standing. Offended liberals can always get to federal court but conservatives cannot.

I do not see how a claim for "aesthetic injury" is consistent with the Court's recent standing cases--especially when the claim is based on subjective architectural sensibilities. To borrow from The Fountainhead, we can call this doctrine "Ellsworth Toohey" standing.

Foreign Law in American Courts

"There Is Evidence That This Particular Proceeding Before the Beijing Court Was Dominated by the" Chinese Communist Party,

holds a federal court in declining to enforce the Beijing judgment, and in therefore concluding that Stanford holds title to documents donated to the Hoover Institution by a Chinese Mao-era dissident.

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A short excerpt from from today's long opinion by Judge John Tigar (N.D. Cal.) in Stanford Univ. v. Yuzhen; I am an employee of Hoover and Stanford, but I haven't been involved in the lawsuit, and wasn't prompted by anyone to write bout it:

Plaintiff Board of Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University seeks to quiet title in certain materials denominated the Li Materials, which consist of original materials written by Chinese political figure Li Rui [and by people connected to him] …. Stanford and Li's daughter, Li Nanyang, contend that: (1) during his lifetime, Li Rui gave the Li Materials to Li Nanyang and instructed her to make a permanent gift of the Li Materials to Stanford, to be preserved by and made freely available for scholarly research and public review at the Hoover Institution Library & Archives at Stanford University ("Hoover"); and (2) in accordance with Li Rui's instructions, the original Li Materials were donated to and delivered to Hoover by Li Nanyang prior to Li Rui's death.

Defendant and Counterclaimant Zhang Yuzhen, who was Li Rui's second wife, contends that Li Rui did not transfer ownership of his original manuscripts to Li Nanyang, and that Li Nanyang did not have the legal right to donate any of Li Rui's original materials to Hoover prior to Li Rui's death. Zhang Yuzhen further contends that pursuant to the Chinese court's judgment in a proceeding called the Zhang Action, she is the sole owner of the original manuscripts contained in the Li Materials, and that this Court should recognize and enforce the Chinese judgment and order Stanford to return to Zhang Yuzhen the original manuscripts that were improperly transferred to Stanford by Li Nanyang….

Li Rui held various government positions in the People's Republic of China during the 1950s. He became Chairman Mao's personal secretary in 1958, placing him at the center of political activity in China.

Li Rui was a person of strong opinions who spoke out against the CCP during his lifetime and who "ha[d] a lot of guts." In 1959, Li Rui attended a leadership meeting of the CCP called the Lushan Conference. At the conference, Li made comments critical of Mao Zedong and the CCP. Because of these criticisms, Li Rui was exiled and transferred between jail and work camps for approximately 20 years….

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"Rising Wave of Antisemitism" Doesn't Justify Letting Jewish Plaintiff Sue Pseudonymolusly

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From Doe v. Life Time, Inc., decided today (correctly, I think) by Judge Dora Irizarry (E.D.N.Y.):

The Complaint alleges that Plaintiff attended Life Time Fitness from 2018 to 2024, and in 2023 his local gym hired Defendant Ahmed to "man the front desk in the evenings." Ahmed is alleged to be a member of the Muslim faith who "flaunts his religion." The Complaint alleges that, as an employee, Ahmed discriminated against Jewish members, such as Plaintiff [in violation of federal and state antidiscrimination law], by prohibiting Plaintiff from entering the gym after 8:00 PM on weekends, while allowing members of the Muslim faith to enter.

Plaintiff recounts a specific encounter on October 26, 2024, in which Plaintiff arrived with a guest wearing a yarmulke (a small round head covering worn by male practitioners of the Orthodox Jewish faith) and requested late entry. Ahmed is alleged to have denied entry and then admitted to selectively enforcing policies when pressed by Plaintiff. The situation escalated and Plaintiff's membership to the gym was suspended. Plaintiff alleges that his membership was reinstated the next day; however, on December 14, 2024, three Life Time employees, including Ahmed, assaulted him in the gym locker room.

Plaintiff attests that he raised Ahmed's discriminatory actions to his gym's general manager, but nothing was ever done. After lodging a number of complaints, Plaintiff alleges that the general manager banned him from the gym. Plaintiff further alleges he never was given a reason from Life Time as to why he was banned….

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crime victims

A Fifth Circuit Bait-and-Switch to Ignore Crime Victims' Rights

In 2023 the Fifth Circuit denied the victims' families challenge to the illegally negotiated Boeing DPA as being "premature"--but today the Circuit denied the families' challenge as coming too late.

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Today the Fifth Circuit denied my Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) challenges to the Justice Department's 2021 deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) and 2025 non-prosecution agreement (NPA) with Boeing. VC readers will recall this case, as I have blogged about it many times over the years, including here, here, and here. In today's ruling, the Circuit said that the families' victims rights challenges to these agreements came too late to allow any remedy. But earlier, in 2023, the Circuit had said that the families' challenges were "premature." The fact that the families now will seemingly never receive any remedy is a cruel judicial bait-and-switch, revealing how much work remains to be done to create truly enforcable crime victims' rights in the criminal justice system.

Here's the case in a nutshell: In and around 2016 to 2019, Boeing lied to the FAA about the safety of its new 737 MAX aircraft. When two MAX aircraft crashed in late 2018 and then again in early 2019, the Justice Department investigated. And, in 2021, the Department charged Boeing with criminal conspiracy to defraud the FAA through its lies. But the Department immediately entered into a DPA in the Northern District of Texas to resolve the criminal case.

In subsequent litigation, the families proved that the 346 passengers and crew on board the two doomed 737 MAX flights were "crime victims" under the CVRA—they had been directly and proximately harmed by Boeing lies. If Boeing had revealed the safety issues surrounding the MAX to the FAA, the result would have been training of pilots that would have prevented the two crashes. This makes Boeing's conspiracy crime the "deadliest corporate crime in U.S. history," as Judge Reed O'Connor in the Northern District of Texas later described it.

In their litigation, the victims' families challenged the sweetheart DPA, which allowed Boeing to avoid a criminal conviction in exchange for payment of penalties and compensation to the families, along with Boeing's promises to improve safety in its manufacturing processes. The families explained--and proved--that the Justice Department  had concealed the DPA from the victims' families, violating the CVRA which required the Justice Department to confer with the prosecutors. In October 2022, Judge O'Connor concluded that the Justice Department had violated the families' CVRA rights connected to the DPA by failing to confer. But later, in January 2023, Judge O'Connor ruled, quite reluctantly, that he was powerless to provide the victims' families with any remedy.

In February 2023, I filed a petition with the Fifth Circuit asking it to overturn Judge O'Connor's ruling that he could not award any remedy for the CVRA violation. After oral argument, in December 2023, the Fifth Circuit ruled that any relief was "premature" because it was confident that the district court would uphold the families' CVRA "rights at every stage of the court's criminal proceedings." In re Ryan, 88 F.4th 614, 627 (5th Cir. 2023). Accordingly, the Fifth Circuit denied the petition to allow proceedings to continue in the district court.

Less than a month later, the DPA's three-year term was set to expire on January 7, 2024. But two days before that expiration, on January 5, 2024, a mid-cabin door plug on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 suddenly detached from a Boeing 737 MAX, exposing Boeing's failure to follow its DPA safety obligations. In light of these and numerous other dangerous failures by Boeing, in May 2024, the Justice Department determined that Boeing had breached its obligations under various DPA provisions. Further negotiations between the Justice Department and Boeing produced a proposed guilty plea arrangement between Boeing and the Justice Department—and objections to the plea from the victims' families. And in December 2024, the district court rejected the proposed guilty plea. The district held that, for various reasons, the agreement was not in the public interest.

In the most recent proceedings, the Justice Department moved to dismiss its earlier-filed charge against Boeing in favor of resolution through a non-prosecution agreement (NPA).  The Department and Boeing entered into a binding NPA, and then afterwards the Department moved to dismiss the pending charged under Rule 48(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.

I filed objections for the families to the dismissal motion, arguing that it was (finally) time to award a remedy for the Department's CVRA violations all the way back in 2021, when it entered into the DPA and concealled what it was doing from the victims' families. And I also argued that the Department had failed to properly confer about its new NPA.

Following oral argument, in November 2025, Judge O'Connor granted the Justice Department's dismissal motion. In his order, Judge O'Connor essentially agreed with many of the factual objections that I have made for the families who lost loved ones because of Boeing's crime. Indeed, he even stated that the NPA was not consistent with the public interest. But, reluctantly, Judge O'Connor granted the Department's motion to dismiss the charge, concluding that he lacked a legal basis for blocking the  Department's ill-conceived non-prosecution plan.

In December, I filed two CVRA petitions for review with the Fifth Circuit. The first petition challenged Judge O'Connor's failure to award any remedy for the violation of the families' CVRA rights when the DPA was negotiated and consumated. The second petition challenged Judge O'Connor's decision to approve dismissal of the charge against Boeing based on the new NPA.

Today, the Fifth Circuit rejected both of my petitions in a ten-page per curiam order. Read More

Free Speech

Justice Jackson's Dissent, on Why Viewpoint-Based Restrictions on Professional-Client Speech May Be Permissible

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A short excerpt from Justice Jackson's long solo dissent today in Chiles v. Salazar, where she argued that the Colorado ban on conversion therapy for minors was constitutional:

The conclusion that a State can regulate the provision of medical care even if, in so doing, it incidentally restricts the speech of some providers, fully comports with the First Amendment's animating principles. These principles include the well-settled notion that context matters when evaluating First Amendment challenges to state regulation. The context that frames today's debate is the kind of speech that is at issue here—what I am calling (as shorthand) "professional medical speech." …

[A.] [P]rofessional medical speech occurs when a medical professional speaks to a client (1) in the context of the professional-patient relationship; (2) on matters within the provider's professional expertise as defined by the medical community; (3) for the purpose of providing medical care.

First, professional medical speech is speech uttered within the bounds of the professional-patient relationship. That relationship imposes certain duties and restrictions on the medical professional. For example, medical providers are bound by the twin duties of beneficence (the obligation to act for the benefit of the patient) and nonmaleficence (the obligation not to harm the patient).

Second, professional medical speech is speech within the healthcare provider's area of expertise as a member of the medical community. Within the professional-patient relationship, the professional has knowledge that the patient does not have, including knowledge of which medical treatments are appropriate and how to administer them. The patient comes to the provider to access that expertise, which is informed by—and constrained by—what the medical community knows.

Finally, and most importantly, professional medical speech is made for the purpose of providing the patient with medical care. This speech is a tool employed to treat patients. In this sense, professional medical speech facilitates the professional's goal of providing the patient with the treatment, procedure, or healthcare that is within her expertise and that forms the basis of the professional-patient relationship.

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Was CASA Really Worth It?

The executive branch sacrificed its power to the Supreme Court, yet gained virtually nothing.

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On the eve of the birthright citizenship case, it is useful to think back to last year. The Trump Administration could have rushed the merits to the Supreme Court, but instead only sought certiorari in the nationwide injunction issue. And to win that case, the executive branch sacrificed its own power. The Solicitor General said it would bind itself to the decisions of the Supreme Court. No decision, not Marbury, not Cooper v. Aaron, ever stipulated that point. Now a coordinate branch of government surrendered. And to what end? Was CASA such an important case that justified that unilateral disarmament?

I think the answer is no. In the year since CASA, there have been a never-ending spate of universal vacaturs against the executive branch. District Courts have certified classes on the fly. And the Supreme Court has shown no interest in clamping down this practice. And if, as expected, the Supreme Court strikes down the birthright citizenship order, all of this litigation will have been for naught. The executive branch is weaker because of this order. What was gained?

On the other side, the doomsday predictions from CASA simply have not come to fruition. Richard Re brings the receipts:

First, the CASA dissenters repeatedly suggested that relief would be practically unavailable, at least for many affected individuals, if universal relief were disallowed. . . . As it happened, the EO was swiftly enjoined and so has yet to go into effect. Moreover, that outcome was not only foreseeable but foreseen by at least some justices and commentators. . . .

Second, the CASA dissenters, especially Justice Kagan at oral argument, worried that the merits of the birthright citizenship EO would never reach the Supreme Court. . . . To some degree, this second worry was parasitic on the first one, for a lack of SCOTUS review might not be a problem if the relevant executive action were still expeditiously enjoined via class action. At any rate, the oral argument resulted in a promise from the SG that he would in fact seek certiorari on the merits, and that is of course what happened. . . .

In CASA, the dissenters raised concerns that were unusually immediate and specific. Perhaps they left enough wiggle room for plausible deniability. But to the extent that the dissenters made testable claims, those claims have not been borne out. The dissenters' doomsaying, in other words, can be viewed as both falsifiable and falsified. One might remember this example when considering other assertions in dissenting opinions.

CASA was so important last year. This year, it barely matters. Yet another instance where it is difficult to know in the moment what Supreme Court rulings will have any resonance in the longterm.

What Took So Long In Chiles?

The 8-1 case was argued on October 7, and decided on March 31.

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I give a lot of thought to timing on the Supreme Court. Internal deliberations are usually a black box, unless there are some leaks. All we know for sure is when a case is argued and when it is decided.

Today, the Court decided Chiles v. Salazar. This case was argued six months ago on October 7. The vote was 8-1. Justice Gorsuch wrote the majority opinion, which was about twenty-pages long. Justice Kagan wrote a short concurrence, joined by Justice Sotomayor, that was about four pages long. Justice Jackson wrote a solo dissent that spanned more than thirty pages.

Why did this case take six months? It seems pretty clear the majority opinion coalesced fairly early on. There is not much daylight between the majority and the concurrence. I have to imagine that Justice Gorsuch circulated his majority opinion fairly quickly. There are no footnotes suggesting attempts to modify or water-down the majority opinion.

What we don't know is how Justice Jackson affected the process. The majority opinion offers a few citations to Jackson's dissent, but there is no lengthy back-and-forth. I don't think there was much engagement here at all. Indeed, it is telling that Justice Kagan felt compelled to respond to Justice Jackson in a footnote.

This opinion also makes me think about Callais, which was argued on October 15. I doubt that case will be 8-1. But it may take around the same time, if not longer.

For those who care about such things, Justice Alito is the only Justice who has not yet written a majority opinion from October.

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