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From Wikipedia, photo by Dmitry Rozhkov of display "Rock on bones" in Gallery "Vinzavod", Moscow (2008)
My father Vladimir was remarking yesterday about an item from his youth in the USSR: People wanted to hear Western music (such as jazz and rock), but the Soviet authorities wouldn't allow it to be distributed. One could sometimes hear it on foreign shortwave broadcasts, but how to record it? And if one could get a smuggled foreign LP, how to duplicate it? Consumer tape recorders were generally unavailable. People had record players, and some people managed to cobble together recording machines for LPs. But the standard recording medium—vinyl—wasn't available to ordinary consumers.
So people would record instead on used X-rays, such as the ones you can see above. The story made its way into the West some time ago; there's a recent book on the subject, Bone Music: Soviet X-Ray Audio, and an accompanying web site. Here's an excerpt from the site:
5/17/1954: Brown v. Board of Education and Bolling v. Sharpe are decided.
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Today's order is here; the application that was denied is here. The state's argument for a stay, which the Court rejected, begins thus:
Days before Virginia's deadline to begin administering the 2026 election for members of the United States House of Representatives, the Supreme Court of Virginia invalidated an amendment to the Commonwealth's Constitution that authorizes the General Assembly to adopt new congressional maps.
The Court purported to find a procedural flaw in the amendment's passage and ratification: that the General Assembly failed to pass the amendment prior to the "next general election" before passing it a second time and referring the amendment to the people for their approval. The basis for that holding was the Court's view that, contrary to the Constitution's own definition of the term "election" to refer to a single day in November, the term instead encompasses the entire period of early voting beginning in September. Based on that novel and manifestly atextual interpretation, the Court overrode the will of the people who ratified the amendment by ordering the Commonwealth to conduct its election with the congressional districts that the people rejected.
A stay is warranted because the decision by the Supreme Court of Virginia is deeply mistaken on two critical issues of federal law with profound practical importance to the Nation. The decision below violates federal law in two separate ways. First, it predicated its interpretation of the Virginia Constitution on a grave misreading of federal law, which expressly fixes a single day for the "election" of Representatives and Delegates to Congress. See 2 U.S.C. § 7. Where a state court's decision on purportedly state-law grounds was "interwoven with the federal law," this Court may intervene to ensure that the state court's decision complies with federal law. Michigan v. Long, 463 U.S. 1032, 1040 (1983). See also Three Affiliated Tribesof Fort Berthold Rsrv. v. Wold Eng'g, P.C., 467 U.S. 138, 153 (1984) (vacating state supreme court decision whose interpretation of state statute "rest[ed] on a misconception of federal law").
Second, by rejecting the plain text of the Virginia Constitution's definition of the term "election" to adopt its own contrary meaning, the Supreme Court of Virginia "transgressed the ordinary bounds of judicial review such that it arrogated to itself the power vested in the state legislature to regulate federal elections." Moore v. Harper, 600 U.S. 1, 36 (2023) (cleaned up). Either violation is sufficient for this Court to reverse the decision below. Accordingly, there is a "reasonable probability that this Court will grant certiorari and will then reverse the decision below."
From yesterday's decision by Judge Anthony Trenga (E.D. Va.) in Fseisi v. O'Keefe Media Group:
The Complaint alleges the following:
Defendant James O'Keefe is a conservative political activist whose organization, Defendant O'Keefe Media Group ("OMG"), frequently engages in "sting" operations in which its agents use false identities to arrange meetings with individuals affiliated with government, mainstream media, or progressive organizations, and surreptitiously record them with the goal of publishing the subject's potentially unflattering or controversial statements so as to tarnish the reputations of the subject or their affiliated institution or, in OMG's words, to "expos[e] corruption." Plaintiff, a top secret-cleared information systems security consultant to government agencies, including the Central Intelligence Agency, the National Security Agency and the Office of Director of National Intelligence, fell prey to one such operation in April 2024, during what he thought were two romantic dates with "Jane Doe," who unbeknownst to Plaintiff, was an OMG employee.
Jane Doe contacted Plaintiff via the Bumble dating app and, during both dates, represented herself as a liberal and pressed him for details on his work, including whether certain government agencies may have surveilled or withheld information from then-former President Donald Trump. In response to this questioning, Plaintiff stated, inter alia, that while "anything was possible" and he could not give Jane Doe a straight answer, he "believed" some information was withheld, and that NSA or CIA "could have" surveilled Trump. {The videos posted by OMG, which Defendants link to in their Motion and which the Court may consider as intrinsic to the Complaint, contain statements that are much more explicit than those alleged in the Complaint (and do not appear to be cut or deceptively edited).}
On the second date, Plaintiff noticed what he thought was a recording device in Jane Doe's bag (which she had kept on the table during both dates) and asked her whether he was being recorded. In response, she denied that, but then repeatedly refused to allow him to inspect her bag and shortly left the restaurant. Despite this experience, Fseisi later agreed to meet Jane Doe again in the District of Columbia, where he was instead confronted by O'Keefe and a cameraman.
A discussion of the Supreme Court's "Shadow Docket" on the We the People Podcast.
Last week, I recorded a We the People podcast episode for the National Constitution Center discussing the increased volume of applications and orders on the Supreme Court's interim docket, aka the "shadow docket," with Professor Steven Vladeck of the Georgetown Law Center, moderated by Julie Silverbrook. The podcast has now been released as is available for listen here, or on your podcast platform of choice.
But the court is unanimous on the sanctions for the particular Assistant D.A. who was involved, and added: "We strongly encourage trial courts to carefully review proposed orders with the understanding that artificial intelligence software, with all of its potential risks and benefits, may have been used to prepare such proposed orders."
From Payne v. State, decided last week, in an opinion by Justice Benjamin Land:
Hannah Payne was sentenced to life in prison plus 13 years for the murder and false imprisonment of Kenneth Herring and the possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. In response to Payne's motion for new trial, the assistant district attorney assigned to the case, Deborah Leslie, filed a brief that contained non-existent cases and cases that do not stand for the proposition asserted in the brief.
In an order largely prepared by ADA Leslie, the trial court denied Payne's motion for new trial. That order contained citations to non-existent cases and cases that do not stand for the proposition asserted in the order.
In response to Payne's appeal, ADA Leslie once again cited cases that do not stand for the proposition asserted. As a result of these filings, we have been sidetracked from our obligation of resolving the merits of Payne's appeal and have had to devote significant time and resources to the discovery of this misconduct and deciding what to do about it. As outlined below, we admonish ADA Leslie and the Clayton County District Attorney's office; we sanction ADA Leslie and suspend her privilege to practice in our Court; and we vacate the trial court's order denying Payne's motion for new trial and remand the case to the trial court with instruction that it issue a new order that does not contain the citation of fake cases or other misattributed case citations….
A camp chair, a shaking of faith, and a murder in front of a Waffle House.
Please enjoy the latest edition of Short Circuit, a weekly feature written by a bunch of people at the Institute for Justice. Read More
From Trump v. Dow Jones & Co., decided Wednesday by Judge Darrin Gayles (S.D. Fla.):
On July 18, 2025, President Donald J. Trump filed his Complaint … for defamation based on an article in the Wall Street Journal … linking President Trump to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. On April 13, 2026, on Defendants' motion, the Court dismissed the Complaint without prejudice based on President Trump's failure to plausibly allege that Defendants acted with actual malice …. [See this post on the dismissal. -EV]
On April 14, 2026, President Trump filed the Motion, requesting leave to conduct limited discovery on (1) "[h]ow each Defendant acted with actual malice"; (2) "[h]ow Defendants purposefully avoided the truth of the statements at issue"; and (3) "[h]ow Defendants allegedly obtained the letter and supposedly verified its contents, including Plaintiff's signature." …
The Court stayed a lower court order that would have blocked FDA rules allowing the prescription of mifepristone to terminate pregnancies via telemedicine.
Yesterday evening, as expected, the Supreme Court granted mifepristone manufacturers' requests for a stay of an order of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit blocking a 2023 Food and Drug Administration regulation allowing doctors to prescribe mifepristone as an abortifacient via telemedicine. The order was issued shortly after the expiration of an administrative stay entered, and then extended, by Justice Alito. Justices Thomas and Alito each dissented. There are no other recorded votes.
As is common in such situations, the order in Danco Laboratories v. Louisiana stays that of the lower court pending the disposition of the appeal and any subsequent petition for certiorari. This means the case will find its way back to the Court, perhaps even later next term.
The order was unsurprising because, as I noted here, the Fifth Circuit's order blocked the implementation of a federal regulation on questionable grounds. Louisiana's suit is based upon an aggressive and somewhat speculative theory of standing and the Fifth Circuit's order relies upon faulty reasoning from a prior, since-vacated, opinion from the prior round of mifepristone litigation. Thus there were at least two stay considerations weighing strongly in the manufacturers' favor: The Fifth Circuit had blocked a federal regulation and the manufacturers have a strong argument they are likely to prevail on the merits.
That said, Justices Thomas and Alito make some weighty points in their defense, and the issuance of a stay here was never certain. As I noted last week, while an army of amici filed briefs with the Court, the federal government did not. The federal government neither sought a stay from the Court nor filed a brief supporting the manufacturers' defense of the FDA's rule. So while blocking a regulation may presumptively constitute irreparable harm to the federal government, it is not clear that such concerns should carry much weight if the federal government does not raise them. The federal government is not obligated to defend every agency regulation at every turn, even against questionable judgments. (And, for what is worth, this is not the first time this has happened with the FDA. For example, the agency dropped its appeal to American Association of Pediatrics v. FDA, in which a district court accepted a questionable standing claim and forced the agency to regulate vaping products more aggressively.)
Absent an FDA filing, the manufacturers had to establish irreparable harm on their own, and this is where Justices Thomas and Alito found their stay requests wanting. Neither found the manufacturers' concerns about reduced mifepristone sales particularly compelling. Nor was either moved by concerns that the Fifth Circuit order would make it more difficult to obtain mifepristone in jurisdictions that (unlike Louisiana) allow its use.
As Justice Thomas noted, federal law (the Comstock Act) already prohibits the distribution of abortifacients via the mail. Therefore, he reasoned, the manufacturers were effectively complaining that the Fifth Circuit order would deprive them of "lost profits from their criminal enterprise." I take Justice Thomas' point in the Comstock Act, which remains on the books even if it is never enforced, but the FDA order at issue is not limited to mail-order prescriptions.
Justice Alito made some similar points, while also stressing that mifepristone manufacturers are well aware that the FDA's 2023 order facilitates the provision of mifepristone in jurisdictions where its use to terminate pregnancies is illegal, that the FDA has acknowledged concerns about the analyses upon which the 2023 regulation was based, and that the manufacturers' claim of irreparable harm is undermined by the fact that the FDA has given no indication it would take any enforcement action against manufacturers were the 2023 rule stayed, and it could not be forced to take such actions by federal courts. Prescribing doctors and potential users of mifepristone may be affected, but neither were parties to the case.
Justice Alito's dissent validates Louisiana's concern that it's post-Dobbs ability to enforce its own abortion laws has been undermined by "certain medical providers, private organizations, and States that abhor" its laws. No doubt this is true. If other states and the federal government allow the distribution of something, whether mifepristone or marijuana, other states may have a more difficult time enforcing their own prohibitions. The federal government has the unquestioned power to limit the distribution of mifepristone into states where its use is barred, but it has chosen not to, and the FDA is not required to base its regulations on such concerns. [As for what other states can or cannot do, I recommend Professor Steve Sachs' comments at this Federalist Society panel on abortion law post-Dobbs]
Justice Alito also paused to note that the Court's issuance of an "unreasoned order" granting stays of a lower court action, no doubt to tweak those (both on and off the Court) who routinely complain about "shadow docket" orders issued without explanation (and, in this case, on behalf of private corporations too). He can be forgiven for thinking that many complaints about "shadow docket" orders are driven as much or more by disagreements on the merits as they are concerns about process.
From Bisogno v. Libertella, decided two months ago by the New York Appellate Division, Justices Francesca E. Connolly, Paul Wooten, Helen Voutsinas, and James P. McCormack:
On May 9, 2013, the plaintiff and the defendants appeared for a hearing in the Family Court, Richmond County, relating to a child support proceeding between the defendant John Libertella (hereinafter John) and his former wife. The plaintiff, a lawyer, appeared on behalf of his sister-in-law, John's former wife. John was accompanied by his father, the defendant Giovanni Libertella. As the parties left the hearing, they were involved in a verbal altercation, which John video-recorded on his phone. The defendants told a court officer that the plaintiff punched John in the face and that John wanted the police called. The police were called, and the plaintiff was arrested.
In November 2013, the District Attorney's office dismissed the charges against the plaintiff. Multiple news outlets reported on the altercation and the plaintiff's subsequent arrest.
The plaintiff commenced this action against the defendants asserting, inter alia, causes of action sounding in defamation per se, false arrest, and malicious prosecution. After a trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against both defendants on the cause of action alleging defamation per se and against John on the causes of action alleging false arrest and malicious prosecution….
The court upheld the finding of liability:
From Robinson v. Damphousse, decided Wednesday by Judge Alan Albright (W.D. Tex.):
Plaintiff Dr. Idris Robinson is a non-tenured, but tenure track Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Texas State University. On June 29, 2024, Dr. Robinson delivered a speech in Asheville, North Carolina titled "Strategic Lessons from the Palestinian Resistance" ("Asheville Speech"). Professor Robinson in no way affiliated the talk with Texas State University. During the Asheville Speech, audience members who disagreed with Dr. Robinson's views attempted to livestream the event. A scuffle broke out. The police report documenting the incident does not identify Dr. Robinson as a suspect or witness. Defendants do not contend that Dr. Robinson incited or encouraged the violence.
Dr. Robinson resumed teaching in the fall without incident. After the 2024 fall semester, and again in March 2025, Dr. Robinson received excellent performance reviews. ECF No. 1-3 at 74 ("Dr. Robinson is a fantastic colleague, excellent in all areas of review. Worthy of Merit."); id. at 109 (2024-2025 3rd Year Tenure-Track Reappointment) (noting that the Associate Provost's Action Recommendation is to reappoint Dr. Robinson for one-year and that Dr. Robinson is "making good progress towards tenure").
On June 5, 2025, individuals who disagreed with the content of Dr. Robinson's Asheville Speech began calling for Dr. Robinson's firing on Instagram. That day, due to the posts, Texas State University began receiving complaints about Dr. Robinson. One day later, Dr. Robinson was placed on administrative leave due to "multiple complaints and allegations regarding an incident that occurred in the summer of 2024." In July 2025, Dr. Robinson was informed that "the decision has been reached not to extend your contract beyond the 2025-2026 academic year…." …
Dr. Robinson contends the University's non-renewal decision was due to the content of the Asheville Speech, which Dr. Robinson contends violates his First Amendment Rights. To date, Defendants have not offered any other reason for Dr. Robinson's non-renewal, nor do Defendants refute Dr. Robinson's contention that he was not renewed due to the Asheville Speech….
The court issued a preliminary injunction requiring that Robinson be reinstated; an excerpt from the analysis:
Professors Bruce A. Green and Rebecca Roiphe opine on the disqualification of a Santa Clara County prosecutor.
I am happy to pass along a guest post from Professors Bruce A. Green and Rebecca Roiphe, who are experts in the ethical standards for prosecutors. They wrote about a recent case from Santa Clara, California, in which a judge disqualified District Attorney Jeff Rosen from prosecuting pro-Palestinian protestors who occupied the Stanford University.
When New York Attorney General Letitia James was campaigning for office, she called Donald Trump an "illegitimate president" and vowed to investigate him, his family, and anyone in his orbit. New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg was less explicit. While he emphasized his experience investigating Trump's family and promised to continue his predecessor's investigation into Trump, he also stated that he would follow the facts and law. Courts allowed James and Bragg to oversee cases against Trump, despite the fact that Trump himself along with some observers used these statements to claim that they were politically motivated.
In contrast, a California state judge recently concluded that an elected prosecutor went too far in campaigning for office and could no longer be trusted to make prosecutorial decisions free of political bias. On May 7, a Santa Clara County judge disqualified District Attorney Jeff Rosen and his entire office from prosecuting pro-Palestinian protestors who occupied the Stanford University President's office in 2024, citing campaign statements Rosen made the previous December while the case was pending. Specifically, Rosen proclaimed his commitment to the State of Israel and the Jewish people and included a link to information about the prosecution. According to reporting, the judge found it problematic that Rosen had referred to the protests as antisemitic even though the individuals were not charged with hate crimes.
Local prosecutors are often elected, so their political engagement is unavoidable. Although prosecutors are not expected to be as disinterested as judges, they are not supposed to have a political axe to grind when they decide whom to investigate and prosecute. This raises the question of how elected prosecutors can properly campaign for office without jeopardizing public faith in high profile prosecutions. What sort of statements provides appropriate information to the electorate and which cross a line? Which campaign messages warrant disqualification because the prosecutor will appear to have prejudged the case before reviewing all the evidence? The law is unsettled and varies among different jurisdictions. There are, nonetheless, certain principles that ought to guide elected prosecutors, allowing them to communicate their priorities to the public without expressing prejudice. When they come close to the line, courts should use disqualification sparingly, reserving it for cases of clear bias.
Elected prosecutors are expected to implement the priorities and values of the community, and so voters are entitled to know where candidates stand on certain issues. For example, D.A. Rosen's statements about fighting antisemitism are not only permissible but also appropriate. If the community wants its elected prosecutor to protect the Jewish community, they know that Rosen is on it. But commitments to prosecute particular cases and pursue particular individuals are problematic because they might reflect actual bias and undermine public faith in the ultimate prosecutions. It was unclear whether the link on Rosen's campaign page or his fundraiser emails crossed this line, and the trial judge had considerable discretion to make that call based on the facts presented by both sides.
Courts rarely find that prosecutors' statements on the campaign trail are such obvious expressions of bias against a particular individual that the prosecutor cannot be trusted to make decisions in the case based on the facts and the law. Unlike other officials, who represent their constituency's policy interests, prosecutors have a duty to seek justice. While this may seem like a vague mandate, it is not meaningless. Prosecutors are required to protect the innocent, prosecute the guilty, treat similar cases similarly, and seek proportionate punishment. Sometimes, this requires resisting, not complying with, popular sentiment. Courts generally assume prosecutors will abide by this obligation even in high-profile or politically charged cases, but they police the outer limits.
Campaign statements that reflect a willingness to cave to public pressure, or to compromise these professional obligations for popularity, are troubling. Even if the prosecutor would act independently once elected, these sorts of statements might well lead the public to lose faith in the elected prosecutor's decision-making. Even if we take Alvin Bragg at his word that he would follow the facts and law, his public statements touting his past cases against Trump and his family might give the public pause. They provided fodder to Trump's sympathizers, including in Congress, who questioned the validity of the charges Bragg's office brought against Trump. The cost to the legitimacy of the system is itself concerning, even if prosecutors live up to their professional obligations.
The question remains whether trial courts can and should do anything to address this problem. As we have previously discussed, courts have varying degrees of discretion to disqualify elected prosecutors based on conflicts of interest. In Texas, a trial judge may disqualify a prosecutor only if the "conflict rises to the level of a due-process violation," whereas California courts take a much broader view of their power. But even in California, courts are hesitant to disqualify an elected prosecutor, thereby depriving the electorate of its chosen representative. All prosecutors have beliefs and personal ambitions, and courts can do little to address these even if they could interfere with impartiality. For example, a court would likely disqualify a prosecutor who obtained a book or movie contract regarding a pending case but can do little about prosecutors' general desire to be associated with a high-profile case and to enter the public spotlight.
If the prosecutor in the Santa Clara case had done nothing more than vow to oppose antisemitism and to protect the Jewish community from criminal attack, there would have been no plausible ground to disqualify him. Prosecutors, like judges, are expected to be able to put aside even strongly felt ideological or personal beliefs to pursue justice in individual cases. The fact that Rosen is personally committed to the state of Israel, that he equates anti-Zionism with antisemitism, or antisemitism with anti-Americanism, are all beside the point. Our system assumes he can be fair in individual cases, even when they touch on these topics.
To the extent that Rosen's campaign material and fundraiser emails addressed the pending case against the protesters and implied that he had some animus toward the defendants in this case or had prejudged how to handle the case before reviewing the evidence, then the judge's decision to disqualify Rosen would make more sense. The trial court in Rosen's case considered an appellate decision from four years earlier, in which the elected prosecutor of San Luis Obispo was disqualified from prosecuting a Black Lives Matter protester after the prosecutor successfully campaigned based on opposition to that movement. The appellate court upheld the disqualification decision, endorsing the trial judge's observation that while defendants are not "entitled to a prosecutor to which they are politically or socially or ideologically aligned," they are "entitled to a prosecution not clouded by political or personal advantage to the prosecutor." This case is an unusual attempt to rein in political bias, but perhaps reflects a growing desire to protect the legitimacy of prosecutions in the face of growing allegations of weaponization.
The lesson is that candidates for office as a prosecutor, like judges, should keep their own counsel if they have views on pending cases. This may not be easy, as the public often focuses disproportionately on high-profile investigations. Aspiring district attorneys can address the policies implicated in these cases but should otherwise confine themselves to discussing their views of criminal law policy and their approach to prosecution in more general terms. Adhering to these guidelines is especially important as the public grows increasingly skeptical of disinterested prosecution.
5/15/2000: U.S. v. Morrison is decided.
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