The Volokh Conspiracy

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

The Volokh Conspiracy

Free Speech

Discrimination and Defamation Claim Stemming from Firing Based on Allegedly Racist Conduct Can Go Forward

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Birch v. John Muir Health, decided Tuesday by California Court of Appeal Justice Carin Fujisaki, joined by Alison Tucher & Ioana Petrou, stems from JMH's firing Birch "based on Birch's purported violations of JMH's polices against harassment and discrimination." The trial court granted summary judgment for JFH on Birch's claims for, among other things, discrimination and defamation, but the appellate court reversed. An excerpt from the long opinion:

In March 2003, Birch, a Filipina woman, began working for JMH as a registered nurse. Two years later, after earning a certificate in wound and ostomy care, she worked full-time on JMH's Skin Wound Assessment Team ("SWAT")…. From 2017 to 2019, Birch consistently received favorable performance reviews, with managers acknowledging her as a "subject matter expert" who exhibited passion, dedication, teamwork, and strong leadership skills….

In June 2019, Rachel Daniels ("Daniels"), a Black woman, began working as a per diem nurse on JMH's SWAT team. Daniels and Birch occasionally worked shifts together at the Concord Medical Center and initially enjoyed an amicable working relationship. [But the relationship soured in early 2020; for more details on the factual backstory, see the opinion. -EV]

The Court of Appeal held that Birch's discrimination claim can go forward:

Birch asserts there was a triable issue of fact as to whether JMH's termination of her employment was based on JMH treating Daniels more favorably because Daniels was Black. More particularly, Birch contends that even though she and Daniels were similarly situated, experienced mutual difficulties working together, and were both arguably in violation of JMH's core values and HR policies, Birch was the only one who was disciplined and terminated. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Birch as the party opposing summary judgment, we agree there is sufficient evidence to raise a triable issue of fact as to JMH's alleged discriminatory treatment….

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Free Speech

"[T]he First and Fifth Amendments Require ICE to Provide Information About the Whereabouts of a Detained Person"

ICE Salt Lake City apparently isn't answering its phone.

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From Reyes v. U.S. ICE, decided Wednesday by Judge Tena Campbell (D. Utah) (note that the government has not yet appeared to tell its side of the story):

Before the court is a Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed by Plaintiffs Esggar Reyes and Frederico Reyes Vasquez. Mr. Reyes Vasquez was arrested by Defendant United States Customs and Immigration Enforcement (ICE) on December 19, 2025. His son, Mr. Reyes, asserts that despite multiple efforts, he has been unable to reach ICE to obtain any information about his father's detention. Specifically, Mr. Reyes maintains that his counsel, Alec S. Bracken, attempted to call the Salt Lake City ICE field office on the number listed on ICE's website—i.e., (801) 736-1200—but that the phone automatically disconnected.

In the meantime, Mr. Bracken filed a petition for habeas corpus on behalf of Mr. Reyes Vasquez. That petition is now pending before the Honorable Jill N. Parrish. Judge Parrish ordered that Mr. Reyes Vasquez should not be transferred outside the District of Utah and set a hearing for the petition for Wednesday, December 31, 2025. Despite that order, Mr. Bracken asserts that Mr. Reyes Vasquez may have been removed from the United States on December 23, 2025.

Late yesterday, Mr. Bracken filed a complaint and a motion for a temporary restraining order in the above-captioned action. Through counsel, Mr. Reyes and Mr. Reyes Vasquez argue that ICE's failure to maintain a functioning method for communication is a violation of the Fifth Amendment's due process guarantee, the First Amendment's right to petition, and the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The Plaintiffs move the court to enter an order directing the Defendants to reconnect ICE's public inquiry phone line, to schedule a prompt hearing, and to grant any other relief the court deems just and proper….

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Journal of Free Speech Law: "Representing Benjamin Gitlow: Charles Recht and Walter Nelles," by Eric Easton

From the "Gitlow v. New York at 100" symposium, held this year at the Arizona State University Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law.

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The article is here; the Introduction:

As we celebrate the 100th anniversary of Gitlow v. New York, it is only natural that we focus on the landmark presumption of incorporation in the majority opinion and the dissenting opinion that would foreshadow today's incitement standard. But perhaps we can spare a moment to consider the dedicated lawyers who represented Gitlow and his fellow radicals throughout the process. That their efforts, at least in the short term, were largely futile is certainly attributable to the historical moment and the prevailing interpretation of the First Amendment, not to any lack of competence or commitment on their part.

Indeed, the lawyers who represented Benjamin Gitlow were among the best of a small cadre of lawyers who represented leftist radicals of various persuasions in the early 20th Century. Some, like Clarence Darrow, would achieve great fame in their own time; others, most in fact, would labor in relative obscurity and are largely forgotten today. And while all were dedicated to their radical clients, their backgrounds, career paths, and personal motivations could be quite different. This article will profile two of Gitlow's lawyers, Charles Recht and Walter Nelles. Both were involved from the earliest stages of Gitlow's representation, although only Nelles played a significant role in the U.S. Supreme Court proceedings. Along the way, we will encounter Darrow, Walter Pollak, and others who made substantial contributions to the Gitlow litigation.

In examining the representation of Benjamin Gitlow, let us keep in mind the various interests that powered it. Fundamental, of course, is the interest that all criminal defense lawyers have in the acquittal of their clients. But then some lawyers and clients may have political or personal interests that color their litigation strategy and tactics. And some may have philosophical or ideological goals that transcend mere acquittal and seek to alter the legal landscape as much for the future as the present. All of these factors are present in the Gitlow representation.

Free Speech

Trial Court Had Ordered Mother to Only Call Son by First Name (Javier), not Middle Name (Reece), in Public

But the Colorado Court of Appeals just reversed that, in part on First Amendment grounds.

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From In re Marriage of Teruel De Torres, decided Wednesday by the Colorado Court of Appeals (Judge Sueanna Johnson, joined by Judges Craig Welling and Lino Lipinsky de Orlov):

In this post-dissolution of marriage proceeding involving Jocelyn Javernick (mother) and Juan Javier Teruel De Torres (father), mother appeals the district court's December 22, 2023 order (December 2023 order), which … determined that … the parents may only refer to the child … as "Javier" or "Javi" (and not his middle name, "Reece") in … public settings.

The court dissolved the parents' marriage in May 2020. The parents have one child, who was born in September 2018. The child's full legal name is Javier Reece Teruel. During the dissolution proceedings, mother requested that the child's name be changed to Reece Teruel Javernick, claiming that the parents had called him Reece since birth. Father objected, arguing that mother was trying to distance the child from him by changing the child's name, particularly as the child shares father's first name….

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Politics

Were Statements in Roblox Chats About "Deal[ing] a Grievous Wound upon the Followers of the Cross" True Threats on Violence?

No, a district court held earlier this month, because they were made "while playing an online video game, speaking as a character, among other players who were similarly acting as characters in a virtual Church."

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From Judge Alan Albright (W.D. Tex.) in U.S. v. Burger earlier this month:

A three-count indictment alleged that Defendant James Wesley Burger violated 18 U.S.C. § 875(c) by making unlawful interstate-threatening communications ("the threatening communications") on Roblox—an online video game platform that allows players to create their own "experiences" or "games" on public or personal servers and to disseminate those games to other players. The threatening communications were made in a popular Roblox experience called "Church," which had logged 20 million visits at the time it was taken down after Mr. Burger's arrest.

To play Roblox, players would create an avatar, choosing its physical appearance and clothing. Upon entering "Church," the avatar would find a space with rows of pews and a pulpit. The Church experience provided a venue where the avatars could exist, walk around, observe, and if they chose, interact. Some players engaged in role-play, including arguments and "trolling," intentionally engaging in distasteful debate and attempting to be edgy and anger others. Some Roblox players dressed their avatars as "Middle East terrorists" and discussed "violent Jihadism."

In the context of Roblox's Church environment, Mr. Burger made multiple disturbing statements, including: (Count 1) threats to "deal a grievous wound upon the followers of the Cross;" (Count 2) "I've come to conclude it will be the 12 of Shawwal aa/And it will be a music festival/Attracting bounties of Christians/In'shaa'allah we will attain martyrdom/And deal a grievous wound upon followers of the cross/Pray for me and enjoin yourself to martyrdom;" and (Count 3) "I have guns In[]case the authorities want to arrest me … I am ready to sacrifice my life for my Rabb….[The Defendant would] Detonate what I've prepared Of munitions And use my firearms To take many with me," and "Yes wish me luck on the path of martyrdom In'shaa'allah."

The court ordered that the indictment be dismissed, on the grounds that the speech didn't fit within the "true threats" exception for First Amendment protection:

Defendant made the statements at issue while playing an online video game, speaking as a character, among other players who were similarly acting as characters in a virtual Church. The Government would need to convince the jury that Mr. Burger, while typing as his character, making statements to the other online characters, in a fictional game understood as such by all participants, created a substantial risk his communications would be understood as a threat by other Roblox players. There is no showing that Mr. Burger recklessly disregarded the risk that other online characters, also playing a game, would see his fictional character's statements and understand them to be a true threat.

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How Does He Know When You've Been Bad or Good?

Thought I'd reprise a post that I'd put up a couple of times before.

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This was supposedly written for and sung at a U.S. Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel Christmas party during the Carter administration; please let me know if you have a more precise attribution:

You'd better watch out,
You'd better not cry,
You'd better not pout;
I'm telling you why.
Santa Claus is tapping
Your phone.

He's bugging your room,
He's reading your mail,
He's keeping a file
And running a tail.
Santa Claus is tapping
Your phone.

He hears you in the bedroom,
Surveills you out of doors,
And if that doesn't get the goods,
Then he'll use provocateurs.

So—you mustn't assume
That you are secure.
On Christmas Eve
He'll kick in your door.
Santa Claus is tapping
Your phone.

And a slightly different version:

Donald Trump

Thoughts on the Supreme Court Ruling Against Trump in the Illinois National Guard Case

The decision is a preliminary "shadow docket" ruling. But it strongly suggests the majority believes Trump's use of the Guard is illegal.

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Members of the Texas National Guard assemble at the Army Reserve Training Center in Elwood, Illinois
Texas National Guard members in Illinois (Brian Cassella/TNS/Newscom)

 

On Monday, in Trump v. Illinois, the Supreme Court ruled against Donald Trump in an important case involving his use of the National Guard for domestic law enforcement. The ruling is not a final decision on the merits; it is just a rejection of Trump's motion for a stay of the lower court ruling against him. But the Supreme Court decision strongly suggests the majority believes Trump's actions are illegal, and will rule against him when and if the Court considers the case more fully. In the meantime, Trump's use of the National Guard in Illinois remains blocked. I think the Court got this key issue right, though I might have preferred they rely on somewhat different reasoning.

The official rationale for Trump's use of the National Guard here is the supposed need to counter anti-ICE protests in the Chicago area, some of which had allegedly included elements of violence. In order to deploy the Guard, Trump invoked 10 U.S.C. Section 12406, which can only be used to federalize state National Guard forces and employ them for law enforcement in one of the following situations:

1) the United States, or any of the Commonwealths or possessions, is invaded or is in danger of invasion by a foreign nation;

(2) there is a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States; or

(3) the President is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States

No one claims Illinois has been invaded, and - as the Seventh Circuit explained, there is pretty obviously no "rebellion or danger of a rebellion" in Chicago. Thus, Trump primarily relies on the argument that he is "unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States." In an unsigned opinion, the Supreme Court majority rejected that claim:

The Government asked this Court to stay the District Court's order…. We directed the parties to file supplemental letter briefs on an issue that the District Court had addressed but the parties' initial briefs had not: the meaning of the term "regular forces" in §12406(3). In its supplemental brief, the Government argues that the term refers to civilian law enforcement officers, such as those employed by Immigration and
Customs Enforcement or the Federal Protective Service.

Respondents, echoing the District Court, maintain that the term refers to the regular forces of the United States military. We conclude that the term "regular forces" in §12406(3) likely refers to the regular forces of the United States military. This interpretation means that to call the Guard into active federal service under §12406(3), the President must be "unable" with the regular military "to execute the laws of the United States." Because the statute requires an assessment of the military's ability to execute the laws, it likely applies only where the military could legally execute the laws. Such circumstances are exceptional: Under the Posse Comitatus Act, the military is prohibited from "execut[ing] the laws" "except in cases and under circumstances expressly authorized by the Constitution or Act of Congress." 18 U. S. C. §1385. So before the President can federalize the Guard under §12406(3), he likely must have statutory or constitutional authority to execute the laws with the regular military and must be "unable" with those forces to perform that function.

At this preliminary stage, the Government has failed to identify a source of authority that would allow the military to execute the laws in Illinois. The President has not invoked a statute that provides an exception to the Posse Comitatus Act.  Instead, he relies on inherent constitutional authority that, according to the Government, allows him to use the military to protect federal personnel and property. But the Government also claims—consistent with the longstanding view of the Executive Branch—that performing such protective functions does not constitute "execut[ing] the laws" within the meaning of the Posse Comitatus Act. See Supp. Letter Reply Brief for Applicants 8; 1 Supp. Op. OLC 343, n. 1 (1971) (collecting sources). If that is correct, it is hard to see how performing those functions could constitute "execut[ing] the laws" under
§12406(3).

This seems right to me. The term "regular forces" is one usually used in a military context, not one dealing with civilian law enforcement. For a more detailed defense of this position, see the excellent amicus brief by Georgetown law Prof. Marty Lederman, which may have influenced the Court.

At the same time, I think the stronger and more straightforward rationale for the Court's ruling would have been to simply endorse the district court's and the Seventh Circuit's conclusion that there was no breakdown of law and order sufficient to qualify as an "inability" to enforce the law, regardless of whether the term "regular forces" exclusively refers to the military or not. There is less ambiguity about this than about the meaning of "regular forces."

Taken literally, an "inability" to fully enforce the law always exists. In virtually every community there are people who get away with violating federal law. For example, over 50% of adult Americans admit to having used marijuana at some point in their lives; marijuana possession is a federal crime. Many have also violated other federal laws and regulations without getting caught. Moreover, if "inability" exists anytime federal law isn't fully enforced, it makes the "invasion" and "rebellion" prongs of Section 10246 redundant, since those circumstances virtually inevitably create situations where federal law cannot be fully enforced. Thus, I think Section 3 applies only when there is a general breakdown of law and order, as may happen when there is large-scale rioting or the like.

Justice Kavanaugh concurred in the result, making it a 6-3 decision. But he argues the majority's reasoning went too far. He does, however, seem to agree with the basic point that the "regular forces" referred to in Section 3 are regular military forces, and that Section 3 therefore can only be used invoked in situations where the president is authorized to use the military.

In a dissent joined by Justice Thomas, Justice Alito argues that the court violated the "party presentation" rule, which requires decisions to consider only issues raised by the parties. I am no expert on party presentation, so perhaps I am missing something here. But it seems to me that the issue of what qualifies as inability to "execute the laws" with "regular forces" clearly was raised, and that's enough for the Court to be able to consider whether "regular forces" are limited to the military or not. In addition, as the majority notes, the Supreme Court actually asked for additional briefing on this very issue. At SCOTUSblog, Dan Epps offers additional considerations that weigh against Alito's position.

Alito also argues that the disturbances caused by the anti-ICE protests were more substantial than the district court ruling indicates. I think the district court is much more persuasive on this issue. In addition, appellate courts are not allowed to overturn trial court factual findings unless the latter are "clearly erroneous," and there is no such blatant error here.

Justice Gorsuch wrote a separate dissent in which he partially agreed with Alito's analysis, such as on the party presentation question. But - much more than Alito and Thomas - he leaves open the possibility that he might ultimately decide the case in favor of Illinois, including on both statutory and constitutional grounds.

As Dan Epps points out, a footnote in Justice Kavanaugh's concurring opinion seems to backtrack on his previous endorsement of the use of racial profiling in immigration enforcement. In footnote 4, Kavanaugh states the following:

The Fourth Amendment requires that immigration stops must be based on reasonable suspicion of illegal presence, stops must be brief, arrests must be based on probable cause, and officers must not employ excessive force. Moreover, the officers must not make interior immigration stops or arrests based on race or ethnicity. Cf. Whren v. United States, 517 U. S. 806, 813 (1996) ("[T]he Constitution prohibits selective enforcement of the law based on considerations such as race").

By contrast, in his much-criticized concurrence in Noem v. Vasquez Perdomo, he said racial profiling is acceptable, so long as race isn't the only factor considered:

 To be clear, apparent ethnicity alone cannot furnish reasonable suspicion [for an           immigration stop]; under this Court's case law regarding immigration stops,                 however, it can be a "relevant factor" when considered along with other salient              factors.

As Epps notes, "the two statements are reconcilable if one interprets based on' as 'based on alone,' but in my view a more natural sense of that phrase is that a decision is 'based on' a fact if that fact is a relevant (and perhaps decisive) factor in the decision." Epps speculates Kavanaugh might be trying to "walk back" position on this issue, as a result of the widespread criticism it attracted. I hope Epps is right! For reasons I outlined in my critique of the Perdomo ruling, Kavanaugh's approach in that case was badly wrong, and should be rejected by anyone committed to the constitutional principle of color-blindness in government policy.

As Jack Goldsmith notes in his analysis of the Supreme Court's rejection of the stay, this decision may not end Trump's efforts to use the military for law enforcement. He could instead resort to the Insurrection Act. Conventional wisdom suggests the president is supposed to get great, possibly preclusive deference when invoking that law, though I think that conventional wisdom is significantly overblown. For reasons I outline here, when the executive invokes sweeping emergency powers, courts should carefully scrutinize whether the type of emergency needed to trigger their use actually exists. I may have more to say about that issue later.

The legal struggle over Trump's domestic use of military forces is by no means over. But Monday's ruling is a significant victory for opponents of this egregious abuse of power. As Goldsmith also points out, the ruling is likely to impact not just the Illinois litigation but similar ongoing cases in California and Oregon. I summarized those cases in my post about the Seventh Circuit ruling in the Illinois case.

Politics

The Logical Consequence of Enforcing Indigenous Treaties

A Canadian judge held a 513-day trial, and ruled that the "indigenous Cowichan Nation holds 'Aboriginal title' over 800 acres of land."

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A few weeks ago, the Free Press published a remarkable story about legal developments in Canada. In short, a judge ruled that the indigenous Cowichan Nation holds superior title over an 800 acre plot of land, based on claims from the 19th century. People who previously owned that land in fee simple now hold it subject to a servitude by the Nation.

After an 11-year legal battle and a 513-day trial that is the longest in Canadian history, a judge ruled in August that the indigenous Cowichan Nation holds "Aboriginal title" over 800 acres of land—including a swath along Road No. 6 that includes Batth's house and fields. The decision was a seismic shift in Canadian property law, declaring for the first time that indigenous land rights are greater than the rights held by private owners like Batth. It seemed unimaginable, but it was real.

Let me pause right there. How can a trial possible last 513 days? Here, I will invoke Jeff Brown's Law.

The longer these trials go on, and the more evidence presented, the more the brain's ability to discern reality falters.

Does anyone think a single judge could possible keep nearly two years of evidence in mind? Such a proceeding, at a certain point, is no longer judicial, but instead becomes political. In related news, the NAACP is put on trial the question of whether naming a school after Robert E. Lee is inherently racist.

The trial, in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia, was ostensibly about whether a school board violated the rights of Black students when it reinstated the names of two schools that once honored the Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson after they'd been replaced in of 2020.

But when arguments ended last week, it was clear that the case, Virginia State Conference N.A.A.C.P. et al. v. County School Board of Shenandoah County, represented something much larger. Hanging over five days of proceedings was the question of how the nation moved from the racial reckoning of 2020, when Confederate memorials were purged from the public square, to 2025, when President Trump led the Confederacy's historical retrenchment — and whether the fight over historical awareness still has life in it.

That's because part of the plaintiffs' strategy for assailing the renamed Stonewall Jackson High School and Ashby-Lee Elementary was to put the Confederacy itself on trial, not on the usual culture war battlefields of social media or television, but in a court of law. (Turner Ashby was also a Confederate commander.)

Does anyone think this case can be decided based on neutral principles of law?

Back to the Free Press Story:

According to the judge, land grants to British settlers by the government about 150 years ago never erased the previous indigenous ownership, and the sections of provincial law that bestow and protect land titles do not apply when Aboriginal title is in force. She ordered British Columbia to spend the next 18 months figuring out what to do about the ownership collision. . . .

The plaintiffs didn't ask the judge, Barbara Young of the Supreme Court of British Columbia, to seize anyone's house or land. But she wound up going far beyond what they did ask for. . . .

As a result, all of this property now has a servitude over it.

David Rosenberg, senior litigation counsel for the Cowichan Nation, tried to assure me that the current owners have nothing to worry about—as long as they don't try to build anything or get a renovation permit, or sell their land. If they do any of those things, Rosenberg said, then the government might have to consult with or even secure consent from the Cowichan Nation, because Aboriginal title now gives the Cowichan a constitutional say over what happens on that land.

Professor Dwight Newman explains:

Dwight Newman, a law professor at the University of Saskatchewan who studies indigenous rights, said the idea that Aboriginal title and private property can "coexist," as the judge put it in her ruling, doesn't really make sense, because both are supposed to be "exclusive" forms of ownership. Each one claims the full right to control the land.

"If you have two owners with exclusive rights, one of them will always have to give way. In practice, that means private homeowners will end up having to defer, at least in part, to Aboriginal title," Newman told me. While the appeals drag on, "uncertainty around mortgage financing, land titles, and investment is likely to grow."

Another expert explains that the judge used 19th century Indian law to rewrite modern property law:

Tom Isaac, a well-known expert in indigenous law who advises businesses and governments, said that the judge's ruling "erased 99 percent of the words" on property titles held by the current owners in the black zone. "It makes us the only jurisdiction in the Western Hemisphere where a supposedly guaranteed and indefeasible land title is defeasible." . . .

"By reaching back to what the Cowichan were doing on the land in 1846, the judge essentially used a 19th-century snapshot to rewrite 21st-century property rights," said Isaac, the lawyer. The ruling triggered the most "profound political and legal reckoning" of his career, he added. Many of the people he speaks to are wondering if Canada's approach to land rights and reconciliation is sustainable at all. . . .

The Free Press article highlights the danger of vapid land acknowledgments. They are not so harmless when activist judges take them to their logical conclusion.

Nothing like this has ever happened in Canada. Because of the judge's ruling, all those land acknowledgments that are only half-listened-to at school assemblies and hockey games actually have extremely complicated consequences, at least in British Columbia—and perhaps all across the country someday.

"I never really gave land acknowledgments much thought, but now I do," Batth told me.

… Many Canadians sleepwalked through every step, never imagining that they could lead to a court ruling that literally shifts the legal ground beneath them. Now, land acknowledgments and broader settler-colonist narratives are starting to encounter more skepticism, at least on the political right. Last month, Dallas Brodie, the leader of breakaway conservative party OneBC, introduced a bill in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia to eliminate Truth and Reconciliation Day as a provincial holiday.

The logical consequence of enforcing Indigenous treaties is restoring land claims.

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Searching Old Digital Haystacks: Some Thoughts on the Richman v. United States Litigation

Interesting Fourth Amendment issues, with a novel remedy.

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In federal district court in Washington, DC, Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly handed down two opinions in the last two weeks in a case involving Daniel Richman, a friend and occasional advisor to former FBI Director James Comey. In the first opinion, dated December 12, the Judge ordered the government to return to Richman digital copies of the contents of his computers.  In the second opinion, released yesterday, Judge Kollar-Kotelly clarified her first order and addressed government objections.

There's a lot going on in these cases.  But the opinions happen to raise important questions of how the Fourth Amendment and the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure apply to searching and seizing computers. Given my academic focus on those legal issues, I thought I would blog about them and offer some thoughts for the law nerds hoping to learn more about those legal issues and how this new set of opinions deals with them.

Here's the basic problem.  When the government gets a warrant to search a computer, it generally seizes the physical device, copies all the data, and then searches the government's copy of the data for the evidence sought.  Put another way, investigators make a copy of the digital haystack and then search the copy for the needle that the warrant described as the evidence to be sought.

All of this has an important implication: When the case is over, either charged or uncharged, the government still has a copy of that digital haystack.  And if you're the government, you might want to keep that digital haystack.  Storage is cheap, so it's not like you need to free the space. And having that haystack might come in handy some day.  Maybe someday, maybe even in an unrelated case, you'll have an investigative need that can be met by going back to that digital haystack and looking for a whole new set of needles.

The key question now is, what are the rules for dealing with that haystack years later?  Can the government search that already-previously-seized data again, this time for new evidence, either without a warrant—or even with one?  And if the owner of the haystack wants the haystack back, can he get it back—and what does getting it back mean?

(1) Introducing the Richman Case 

Daniel Richman is a lawyer and law professor who is a close friend of James Comey.  Richman has sometimes acted as Comey's counsel, both informally and in the legal sense.  During the first Trump Administration, DOJ obtained warrants to search Richman's computers and online accounts for evidence of unlawful disclosure of classified information that had been obtained through Comey.  No charges were brought, and the case was closed in 2021.  But the  government retained copies of Richman's digital files.

Now fast forward to the second Trump Administration. A lot of people have followed this way more closely than I have, and my apologies if I get some of the details wrong here.  But as you know from following the news, there has been great deal of interest in the current executive branch in prosecuting James Comey.  As I understand things, whereas the Trump 1.0 DOJ investigated Comey for allegedly leaking classified information, the Trump 2.0 DOJ is targeting Comey for allegedly lying to Congress about whether he had authorized Richman to act as a source for news stories.

Here's where the computers come in.

What happened, apparently, is that investigators in Trump 2.0 realized that they still had copies of Richman's digital files held over from the investigation during Trump 1.0.  So they searched Richman's files again, this time searching for what Comey had authorized Richman to do.  At least some of that information was then used as a basis to get an indictment against Comey.  Investigators did not get a second warrant to do this new round of search.  They had a copy of the files, so they searched it for what they wanted without new warrants.

Richman has now come into court, seeking a return of his property under Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.  Rule 41 gives people a limited right to return of property unlawfully seized from them.  As I understand Richman's argument, he's saying that the government never had a right to get copies of all of his data, and that the continued retention of his files violated his Fourth Amendment rights, and that the remedy is to return to him all the copies of his data. Read More

Free Speech

Conviction for Use "of Racially Charged Language" to Police Officer

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From Montmouth County (N.J.) Superior Court Judge Michael Guadagno's opinion in State v. Metcalfe, decided in Oct. 2024 but just affirmed earlier this month by the New Jersey intermediate appellate court. Neither court discussed whether the speech fits within an existing First Amendment exception, such as for "fighting words" (face-to-face personal insults that are likely to cause a fight).

Asbury Park Police Officer Ahmed H. Lawson testified that …  he was on foot patrol … when he observed defendant talking with a security guard, Simon, who had just escorted defendant out of the [Capitoline Restaurant]. Police Officer Joseph Swansinger was standing next to Simon [by a crowd of people waiting to enter]. When Lawson stopped to talk with Swansinger, Simon was explaining to defendant why he could not be readmitted to the Capitoline. During this conversation, defendant turned to Lawson and said he felt sorry for him because he was compromising his integrity by listening to a white police officer (Swansinger is white; Lawson and defendant are black)[:]

{Brother I'm so sorry. I am so sorry that you have to deal with this shit. Here, here in this fucking County. I'm so sorry. Cause you know what, it's not even your fault. You literally even have to deal with his ass (pointing to Swansinger). This for you to get a fucking raise or anything like that too. It fucking makes no sense either. But you know what? I just want to let you know I apologize to you. You don't have to apologize to him. You don't have to apologize to nobody out here. It sucks though. For you to even speak up for that right because of this white motherfucker right here.}

Lawson testified that defendant had slurred speech and was "clearly intoxicated." He noticed that defendant's actions were drawing the attention of some of the people in the area because of what defendant was saying. As a result, Lawson told defendant he was being disorderly and asked him to leave. Defendant began to leave and walked across the street but came back and began to address Lawson in an "obnoxious" and "belligerent" fashion, calling him a "house nigger." {"You know what we call you back in my home? The House Nigger. Want to know why? Because whatever he does (pointing at Swansinger) it don't matter."}

Lawson again told defendant he was being disorderly and asked him to leave. Lawson testified that it was not his intention to arrest defendant, but when he refused to leave, defendant was arrested for disorderly conduct. On cross-examination, Lawson testified he was not upset when defendant called him a "house nigger." …

The relevant statute, N.J.S.A. 2C:33-2, provides

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