The Volokh Conspiracy

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

The Volokh Conspiracy

Lackey v. Stinnie: What, Exactly, Is a Preliminary Injunction?

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Next week the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral argument in Lackey v. Stinnie, a case that presents two questions about whether and when a party who receives a preliminary injunction may recover attorneys' fees as a "prevailing party" under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. An en banc decision of the Fourth Circuit said yes to prevailing party status for the plaintiff who secured a preliminary injunction before the challenged statutory provision was repealed.

The case is interesting for many reasons. One is the unusual split among the amici. The government amici, including conservative states and the Biden administration, lined up in support of the petitioner (arguing that the PI-receiving plaintiff was not a prevailing party). The public interest organizations lined up in support of the defendant (arguing for prevailing party status). That might not seem surprising–after all, fee shifting is an important part of the latter group's business model.

But below the surface two points are worthy of note. One is that many challenges to rules and statutes, at least at the federal level, are now led by coalitions of states. In this case, the states revert to form as paradigmatic defendants, instead of being challengers. The other point of note is that the public interest organizations that engaged in the case, although from across the political spectrum, tended to be more conservative ones. Attorneys' fees help drive public interest litigation, and the valence of a substantial portion of that litigation has shifted remarkably from what the amici would have looked like, say, ten years ago. And, of course, it will shift again.

More interesting, though, are the alternative visions of the preliminary injunction sketched out by the parties and their amici. The petitioners argue that the nature of the preliminary injunction is inconsistent with treating it as a judgment or final determination on the merits. No one has prevailed yet. The respondents treat the preliminary injunction as a judgment, a full determination of the merits. And they need to treat it that way so it is the judicial action itself, not the legislature's response to it, that is decisive.

I don't think it's really open to question who is right on this point. The petitioners (and the SG) correctly state the law of the preliminary injunction, and the respondents do not correctly describe what it is. I understand that one could come at this case in terms of incentives for strategic behavior, thinking about the political economy of public interest litigation and legislative responses. And that could open up a range of normative judgments (and that is the approach taken by some amici supporting the respondents). But if we approach it from the perspective of what a preliminary injunction is, and what consequences should follow from it, there is no room for doubt.

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Immigration

Video of Federalist Society Daniel Webster Series Debate on Border Issues

I debated former Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich over various issues related to the southern border, particularly whether illegal migration and cross-border drug smuggling qualify as an "invasion" under the Constitution.

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I recently participated in a debate over border-related law and policy issues with former Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich. We particularly focused on the question of whether illegal migration and drug smuggling qualify s an "invasion" under the Constitution, thereby triggering states' power to "engage in war" in response; Texas has argued the answer is "yes" in two cases currently before the courts. The debate was part of the Daniel Webster debate series, sponsored by the Georgetown University Law Center Federalist Society. Unfortunately, I am unable to embed the video in this post, because the producer has blocked that option. But it is available on Youtube here.

I have written more extensively, about why illegal migration and drug smuggling are not "invasion" in this article, and in an amicus brief in one of the cases before the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

 

Second Amendment Roundup: Follow ATF into a Political Briar Patch?

27 States target agency overreach in Garland v. VanDerStok.

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The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments next week, on October 8, in Garland v. VanDerStok, the challenge to the radical expansion of the regulatory definition of "firearm" in the Gun Control Act (GCA).  Neither Congress nor the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) ever touched that statutory definition passed by Congress in 1968. And both left the non-controversial regulatory definition of "firearm frame or receiver" undisturbed since 1968. But suddenly in 2022 ATF promulgated a Final Rule redefining those terms to include materials, tools, and information that a person with knowledge and skill can use to fabricate a firearm or a frame or receiver.

One of the most hard-hitting amici briefs filed in support of the challengers to the regulation is the brief of the States of West Virginia and 26 other States.  ATF, the brief argues, "is a political briar patch because of its rulemaking authority." That characterization is from a law review article with the parodistic title "Almost Heaven, West Virginia?: The Country Road to Take Firearm Regulation Back Home to Congress and the States."  That play on words brings together John Denver's "Take Me Home, Country Roads" with the major question doctrine set forth in West Virginia v. EPA, 142 S. Ct. 2587 (2022).  If that rule of law applies to anything, it applies to ATF's recent the regulatory rampage.

Given the political volatility of the "gun control" issue, Congress has historically been torn between constituents who support the Second Amendment and those who wish to criminalize various forms of acquisition and possession of firearms.  Because that the issue is a "major question," Congress writes gun statutes carefully and narrowly in a manner that leaves nothing to chance.  As the States' Brief says:

Given the sensitivity of this work, one might at least expect ATF to tread carefully before purporting to regulate in unexpected and aggressive new ways. But recently, it hasn't. ATF has instead seemed determined to stretch the words found in statutes like the GCA and NFA [National Firearm Act] to reach conduct never anticipated by the lawmakers who passed them. This case, concerning ATF's efforts to regulate gun kits and other forms of private firearms assembly under the guise of calling them "frames or receivers" subject to the GCA, is just the latest example of that effort.

This is not the first, and it won't be the last, overreach by ATF.  As the States' Brief continues, "many of the Amici States here have been compelled to step in and sue ATF multiple times over the past few years just to return the agency to its actual area of authority."  Thus, "when the Court encounters another ATF regulation offering a purportedly creative solution to a long-standing problem, it should be wary."  The Brief describes "some of the specific machinations ATF has used in the past to get to its desired results—erasing ordinary meaning, stripping words from context, ignoring comments, short-circuiting APA requirements, and blinding itself to the real-world consequences of its own actions."

Succinctly put, "The rule here overreaches. But the Court need not follow ATF into the briar patch."  Instead of addressing just the specific statutory issue before the Court, the Brief demonstrates how this regulation is only one of four recent ones that reveal ATF's pattern and practice of usurping "major questions" that Congress reserved to itself.

The State's Brief goes on to discuss these four pushes of the envelope, each of which I've analyzed in this blog – bump stocks, pistol braces, definition of "engaged in the business," and definition of "firearm."  It argues that ATF has disregarded the limits of its own authority and the requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act.  While possession of firearms in the wrong hands poses danger, only Congress can address the problem: "Neither the ATF nor this Court can impose naked policy preferences, especially so on hot-button issues like these."

"But to understand just why ATF's regulatory work can't really be trusted," the Brief continues, "it helps to travel through the rabbit hole of its fickle regulatory scheme. It's a dizzying ride."

First, as the Court recently addressed in Garland v. Cargill, 602 U.S. 406 (2024), for years ATF classified bump stocks as mere accessories, but then in 2018 abruptly reversed course and redefined them as "machineguns."  The definitions of various types of firearms in the GCA and NFA are in the hands of Congress, and ATF's regulatory definition contradicted the statute.

Second, after finding in seventeen classifications over several years that use of stabilizing braces on pistols is unrestricted, ATF reclassified them as short-barreled rifles under the NFA.  Its proposed regulation included a worksheet to determine if a specific braced pistol is "designed and intended to be fired from the shoulder."  The final regulation, adopted in 2023, scrapped the worksheet and relied on a vague, six-factor test based on subjective criteria under which virtually all pistols with braces would be short-barreled rifles.  The Fifth Circuit in Mock v. Garland, and the Eighth Circuit in Firearms Regulatory Accountability Coalition v. Garland, found the final rule to violate the APA.

Third, in 2024 ATF adopted a final rule expanding what it means to be "engaged in the business" of dealing in firearms.  As passed in 1968, the GCA had no definition.  A 1982 Senate Judiciary Committee Report found that ATF agents were "anxious to generate an impressive arrest and gun confiscation quota," so they "repeatedly enticed gun collectors into making a small number of sales."  In response, the Firearm Owners' Protection Act of 1986 provided that persons are "engaged in business" only if they: "[1] devote[d] time, attention, and labor to dealing in firearms [2] as a regular course of trade or business [3] with the principal objective of livelihood and profit through [4] the repetitive purchase and resale of firearms."  That was tweaked by the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act of 2022 to insert "predominantly" for "principal objective" and to delete "livelihood."

But ATF's final rule on this subject says that there is no minimum number of transactions required, one may be enough, and the seller need not obtain pecuniary gain.  Indeed, a mere offer to sell could be "engaging in the business," while selling zero firearms.  Since under this new definition almost anyone selling a firearm becomes a "dealer" requiring a license, almost all sales will require a background check, a result that Congress never intended and never enacted into law.  As the States' Brief puts it: "So by making almost everyone a 'dealer' under the GCA, ATF sneaks universal background checks in the back door."

The States' Brief makes a point that applies to all of these regulatory expansions: "the GCA does not give ATF authority to define terms in the first instance."  Section 921(a) of the GCA, which consists of "Definitions," begins "As used in this chapter," after which it states what each term "means."  Congress delegated authority to ATF to expand the meaning of a single term, "collector," which Congress said "means any person who acquires, holds, or disposes of firearms as curios or relics, as the Attorney General shall by regulation define…."  As the Brief observes, Congress thus "instructed ATF to create a definition only for one minor phrase in the GCA…."

That said, § 926(a) also provides that "The Attorney General may prescribe only such rules and regulations as are necessary to carry out the provisions of this chapter…."  As the Brief adds, "even if ATF could define a minor term here or there, there is no world in which it is 'necessary' for ATF to redefine the statute's most crucial terms, thereby eviscerating the definitions Congress created."

Fourth, with that, the Brief clamps down on the Final Rule at issue here.  In each of these rules, to use Justice Gorsuch's observation in one of the bump stock cases, "[t]he law hasn't changed, only [the] agency's interpretation of it." Guedes v. ATF, 140 S. Ct. 789 (2020) (denying cert.).  Congress has not changed its definition of "firearm" since it enacted the GCA in 1968, and ATF did not alter its definition of "frame or receiver" it promulgated in 1968 until it adopted the Final Rule here.

ATF's 1968 definition provided that a "firearm frame or receiver" is "[t]hat part of a firearm which provides housing for the hammer, bolt or breechblock, and firing mechanism, and which is usually threaded at its forward portion to receive the barrel."  Under the proposed rule, a "frame or receiver" was drastically reduced to include any part that could "hold" or "integrate" "one or more fire control components," which was in turn defined as "a component necessary for the firearm to initiate, complete, or continue the firing sequence." As the Brief notes, "that definition would have covered all sorts of firearms parts, which meant modern firearms would then have many different 'frames' or 'receivers.'" ATF conceded that definition to be unworkable and nixed it.

Instead of proposing a new definition for public comment, ATF adopted its Final Rule with quite a different definition focusing on, in its words, the "primary energized component designed to hold back the hammer, striker, bolt, or similar component."  In the words of the Brief: "Put differently, ATF shifted from focusing on every discernible component of a firing sequence (and any housing or structure for it) to fixing on just one specific piece."

So "frame or receiver" began as the complete housing of a firearm's operating parts (1968), changed to potentially multiple housings for the same firearm (proposed rule), and ended with the housing for a single part, excluding the complete housing for all of the parts (final rule).

As the States' Brief argues, this case thus presents a "logical outgrowth" problem—a situation in which the agency "significantly amended the rule between the proposed rule and final versions, making it impossible for people to comment on the rule during the comment period." Ohio v. EPA, 144 S. Ct. 2040 (2024).  In other words, "the agency preferred to skip to the end and reach its desired result. This bait-and-switch is yet another reason not to countenance this rule."

Bringing together the four recent instances in which ATF attempted to extend its regulatory reach to an unprecedented magnitude, the Brief affirms what should be obvious:

Congress has not outlawed weapons parts kits, stabilizing braces, or bump stocks. Nor has it dubbed every person handling a gun a firearms dealer. ATF can't take these actions in Congress's place. The agency's error, here, provides another peek behind the curtains. And looking backstage, it's clear that ATF is a legislative body poorly disguising itself as an executive one—even going so far as to use procedural maneuvers to avoid scrutiny. ATF has a history of ignoring statutory text and APA mandates.

The States' Brief ends with the truism that policy concerns can't trump statutory text.  "Left with little in the way of textual support, many of ATF's amici argue that this Court should depart from the statute's plain meaning because excluding 'ghost guns' from the GCA's scope would purportedly have dire consequences."  But that's a matter for Congress, not the agency or the Court.

Campus Pro-Hamas Events on October 7: What Should be Done?

The groups holding these events are quite openly and publicly telling you who they are and what they believe, and that's important information to have.

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At various universities around the country, Students for Justice in Palestine and other pro-Hamas groups are holding events on October 7. Some of these events celebrate Palestinian "resistance," while others, throwing in a blood libel for good measure, commemorate a non-existent genocide of Palestinians by Israel since the war in Gaza began.

Let's recall what happened on October 7, 2023. Thousands of Hamas terrorists, followed by "civilian" hangers-on, attacked border towns in southern Israel along with a music festival. The perpetrators recorded themselves gleefully murdering innocent people–peacenik kibbutznik and party-goers, children in front of their parents (there is one harrowing video you can find online of an eight-year-old girl asking, in vain, that the terrorists murder her), not the elderly, just everyone in their path. The murders were often undertaken in the most gruesome ways, including burning people alive. They also undertook an orgy of rape and torture, and kidnaped a few hundred Israelis, from a baby to an eighty-five year-old.

Let's also recall that on October 7, woefully underprepared Israeli forces struggled to repel the invasion. Not a single Israel soldier entered Gaza that day.

This tells us two things. First, those who see October 7 as anything but a day that should be devoted to the memory of the innocents brutally murdered, raped, tortured, and kidnaped that day at the very least are indifferent to that suffering, and at worst applaud the worst violence against Jews since the Holocaust. Unfortunately, many are in the latter category. As Seth Mandel writes, "American universities are full of psychopaths both in the student body and often in the professoriate (and sometimes administration)."

Second, there is no reason for anyone protesting the Israeli response in Gaza to the war Hamas started to use October 7 as a commemorative date, except to intentionally intrude on Jewish memory and commemorations of the atrocities of that day. To again quote Mandel, they choose October 7 "not despite the pain it causes Jews on campus but because of that pain." It's a form of emotional and political warfare, as if on September 11, 2002 students held events about a purported genocide by US forces fighting the Taliban.

So what should be done about morally repugnant university events to be held on October 7? If, as at Wake Forest, such events are sponsored by university academic departments, a university is well within its rights to shut them down, as Wake Forest did. Academic departments are subdivisions of the university, and the university may tell these departments that it refuses to allow its subdivisions, speaking as agents of the university, to sponsor events using October 7 for pro-Hamas propaganda.

For student events, however, the answer is that nothing should be done by university officials. At public universities, students have a First Amendment right to be as openly morally repugnant as they choose. Thus, a Maryland judge was correct in rebuffing the University of Maryland's attempt to stifle a pro-Hamas October 7 event. At private universities, if the university has a policy of not censoring student political events, it should not make an exception for these.

Yes, it's true that at many universities there would be a far stronger administrative reaction to an event celebrating the lynching of black people, or gay-bashing, or atrocities against Native Americans, and so on. And if students can prove that the university treats Jewish students' complaints and concerns differently than other groups', that is valid grounds for a lawsuit or Title VI complaint. And university officials certainly have no excuse not to denounce October 7 celebrations if (and only if) they regularly denounce other student events they find morally repugnant. (And of course, counter-demonstrations must also be permitted.)

Part of me wishes that I could make a principled argument for shutting these events down, but part of me does not. The groups holding these events are quite openly and publicly telling you who they are and what they believe in. To quote Mandel once more, their "leaders don't want to wait a day to hold the rally because while any other day could mark the war, no other day could mark the murder and mayhem of Oct. 7. The day is important to them because the massacre of Jews is important to them." And that's important information to have.

Donald Trump

Upcoming Virtual Panel on Trump v. Anderson [updated]

I will be on a panel with Prof. Neil Siegel (Duke) and Prof. Derek Muller (Notre Dame) in a webinar sponsored by the Loyola University Chicago School of Law.

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On October 17, 12-1 PM central time/1-2 PM eastern time, I will be participating in a virtual panel on the Supreme Court's decision in Trump v. Anderson, which held that states cannot disqualify Donald Trump from the 2024 presidential election on the basis that he was ineligible for the presidency under Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment. The panel is sponsored by the Loyola University Chicago School of Law.  The other participants will be  Prof. Derek Muller (Notre Dame), a prominent election law scholar, and Prof. Neil Siegel of Duke Law School, a prominent constitutional law scholar. The event will be moderated by Prof. Tyler Valeska (Loyola).

Free registration available here. And here is the official description of the panel:

This panel will examine the Supreme Court's decision earlier this year in Trump v. Anderson. That decision prevented states from barring Donald Trump from their presidential ballots under Section III of the Fourteenth Amendment on the grounds that he engaged in insurrection on January 6, 2021. The panelists will debate the Court's outcome and reasoning, explore the case's implications for our democracy, and consider how Congress and other institutions might respond.

Both Neil Siegel and I have written articles about the case, and both are available on SSRN. Here are the links:

Neil Siegel, "Narrow But Deep: The McCulloch Principle, Collective-Action Theory, and Section Three Enforcement."

Ilya Somin, "A Lost Opportunity to Protect Democracy Against Itself: What the Supreme Court Got Wrong in Trump v. Anderson,"

Part II of my article includes a brief critique of Siegel's.

Free Speech

Unethical for Lawyers to Tell Clients Their Judges May Be Biased Based on Race, Sex, Etc.?

"The judge soon learned that, in a recorded conversation between defense counsel and the defendant, the attorney had referred to the age, race, political affiliation, and gender of the court's judges, and suggested that the court 'should look a little bit more like the people that are in front of them.' The attorney also suggested that the defendant would not receive a fair trial from the court's judges, who are a different race and gender from the defendant. Finally, the attorney used a pejorative term, drawing on racial and gender stereotypes, to refer to the complainant."

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That appears to be the assumption behind N.Y. Advisory Committee on Judicial Ethics opinion 24-73, at least when "the attorney's comments are so egregious that they seriously call into question the attorney's honesty, trustworthiness, or fitness to practice law," whatever that might mean in this context; the opinion was released May 9 but just posted on Westlaw:

While the inquiring judge was presiding in a criminal matter, the defendant questioned whether he/she could receive a fair trial before any judge of the court. The judge soon learned that, in a recorded conversation between defense counsel and the defendant, the attorney had referred to the age, race, political affiliation, and gender of the court's judges, and suggested that the court "should look a little bit more like the people that are in front of them."

The attorney also suggested that the defendant would not receive a fair trial from the court's judges, who are a different race and gender from the defendant. Finally, the attorney used a pejorative term, drawing on racial and gender stereotypes, to refer to the complainant. [It appears to me that "complainant" here means the person bringing the matter before the Commission—i.e., the judge—and not the defendant. -EV] The judge found the comments "very troubling" and asks whether he/she must report the attorney.

A judge must uphold the judiciary's integrity and independence (see 22 NYCRR 100.1) and must always avoid even the appearance of impropriety (see 22 NYCRR 100.2). Further, a judge must always act in a manner that promotes public confidence in the judiciary's integrity and impartiality (see 22 NYCRR 100.2[[A]), and must not allow family, social, political, or other relationships to influence the judge's judicial conduct or judgment (see 22 NYCRR 100.2[B]).

A judge must "require lawyers in proceedings before the judge to refrain from manifesting, by words or conduct, bias or prejudice based upon age, race, creed, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, religion, national origin, disability, marital status or socioeconomic status, against parties, witnesses, counsel or others" (22 NYCRR 100.3[B][5]). Additionally, if a judge receives information indicating a "substantial likelihood" that a lawyer committed a "substantial violation" of the Rules of Professional Conduct, that judge must take "appropriate action" (22 NYCRR 100.3[[D][2]).

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Sex Work

University Doctor's Financial/Sexual/Mentoring Arrangement with Non-Student Leads to Title IX Claim

Not a student or "bona fide intern[]," no Title IX claim, the judge concludes.

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In Doe v. Univ. of Michigan, decided last Thursday by Judge Shalina Kumar (E.D. Mich.), Doe claimed that, when she was a "a nineteen-year-old student at Michigan State University," she met Dr. Schoenfeld, "a forty-nine-year-old gastroenterologist at the University" of Michigan "through an online website where they each sought a personal relationship." (Michiganders of all institutional loyalties will appreciate that the two universities are not the same.) According to Schoenfeld's filing in a related defamation suit he filed against Doe in California, the site was SeekingArrangement.com, and "Seeking Arrangement's advertised purpose was facilitating relationships between younger 'sugar babies' and more established 'sugar daddies.'"

From the Court's summary of the facts and alleged facts,

Doe hoped to attend medical school. Doe and Schoenfeld entered a "mentoring relationship with intimacy," in which Schoenfeld would pay Doe $1250 per month and help her attain her goal of attending medical school, and Doe would have sex with Schoenfeld and "maintain her appearance." Over the course of this relationship, Doe alleges Schoenfeld subjected her to sexual violence and abused her. Their sexual relationship lasted a few months, from February 2013 to May 2013. But Schoenfeld continued mentoring Doe so that she could one day gain admission to the University's medical school.

There appears to be no dispute that the financial and sexual arrangement existed (Schoenfeld seems to have acknowledged it the California defamation lawsuit). The allegations of sexual violence and abuse, however, are very much disputed: As a result of the California litigation, Doe entered into a judgment retracting the allegations, as part of a settlement in which Schoenfeld promised to pay her and her then-lawyer $150K, though she is trying to recant the retraction—a bit more on that at the end of the post. Back to the court's statements of the allegations in Doe's Complaint (which the court assumed for purposes of deciding the motion to dismiss):

In 2015, Schoenfeld offered Doe an internship at the University's Taubman Center …. Doe accepted and began the internship without submitting any type of application, providing any identification, undergoing a background check, or completing HIPAA compliance training. Indeed, Doe did not receive any communications or acknowledgement from the University about an internship or shadowing opportunity, nor did she sign any code-of-conduct attestations as typically required.

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Foreign Law in American Courts

Foreign Islamic Unilateral Divorce (Created by Saying "Talaq" Three Times) Not Recognized in U.S. Court

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An excerpt from Khan v. Azeez, decided yesterday by the Louisiana Court of Appeal, in an opinion by Judge Shannon J. Gremillion, joined by Judges D. Kent Savoie and Candyce G. Perret:

Khan and Azeez are citizens of India and were married there in 2003 but have resided in the United States since 2007. They first lived in Maryland, then moved to Quincy, Illinois in 2017. They are the parents of two teenaged children, one born in 2005 and the other in 2008. Khan and Azeez traveled to India in November 2018, whereupon Khan deserted his wife taking her passport with him.

He was then unilaterally granted a divorce under Islamic law by uttering of the word "talaq" (divorce) three times, a practice which India declared illegal and unconstitutional on July 31, 2019, retroactive to September 19, 2018, under the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act. It states that a declaration of triple talaq is void and illegal and "any pronouncement of talaq by a Muslim husband upon his wife, by words, either spoken or written or in electronic form or in any other manner whatsoever, shall be void and illegal" and subjects the husband to a three year prison term and a fine. Upon her eventual return to the United States in March 2019, Azeez immediately filed a petition for dissolution of marriage in an Adams County, Illinois court on March 13, 2019.

Khan objected to the Illinois court's jurisdiction arguing he had been divorced via the talaq method [and that there had been an Indian court judgment acknowledging the divorce -EV] …. [T]he Illinois trial court denied Khan's exception finding that the UCCJEA (Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act) and basic principles of human rights required a finding that the divorce by talaq and any subsequent child custody determinations were invalid….

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Politics

Glossip v. Oklahoma: The Story Behind How a Death Row Inmate and the Oklahoma A.G. Concocted a Phantom "Brady Violation" and Got Supreme Court Review (Part III)

Courts must be cautious in death penalty and other criminal cases when presented with a prosecutor's confession of "error"—such the Oklahoma A.G.'s dubious confession in this case.

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The past two days, I have blogged (here and here) about Glossip v. Oklahoma, a death penalty case that the Supreme Court will hear next Wednesday. I explained in my two earlier posts how Glossip and Oklahoma (through Attorney General Gertner Drummond) have concocted a phantom Brady violation where none exists.  Simply put, Glossip's prosecutors never withheld evidence. In this third and last post in the series, I discuss how courts should respond to confessions of "error" by prosecutors in possibly politically motivated circumstances. The Glossip case is a cautionary tale suggesting that courts should not blindly accept such confessions but rather should independently review the underlying record to determine the truth.

The Glossip case revolves around Glossip's claim that prosecutors' notes reveal evidence withheld from the defense team concerning a prosecution witness (Justin Sneed). The State of Oklahoma, through Attorney General Gertner Drummond, has confessed "error" and agrees with Glossip's claim.

My amicus brief for the family of Barry Van Treese, the murder victim, responds to these claims. In my first post, I explained that Glossip and General Drummond misinterpret the prosecutors' notes and fail to provide the Supreme Court with important context about the notes' meaning. In my second post, I discussed Glossip's and Drummond's failure to address these concerns in their reply briefs. Today, I review the issue of what weight the Supreme Court should give to General Drummond confession of "error" in resolving the case. As with my two earlier posts, today's post draws on and summarizes my more detailed amicus brief and its incorporated appendix.

The issue of what weight to give to a confession of error is important in Glossip. Ultimately, lacking anything meaningful in the text of the prosecutors' notes, the parties' joint argument for overturning Glossip's conviction rests on Attorney General Drummond's confession of error. But the Supreme Court should give that confession no weight.

First, General Drummond is not confessing his own error. Instead, he "confessing" (if that is the right term) that the experienced local prosecutors suppressed evidence. But General Drummond can no more validly opine that the prosecutors agreed to hide evidence than he could that they conspired to rob a liquor store. Without supporting evidence, his unfounded opinion is entitled to little weight.

Second, it is not really clear that General Drummond is offering his own opinion. He has essentially outsourced the project of evaluating a potential error. Drumond released the prosecutors' notes to Rex Duncan, his lifelong friend and political supporter, as part of a purported "independent" investigation. Then, Duncan borrowed from a report from an anti-death penalty law firm (Reed Smith) and use it to draft a report with unsupported conclusions about what the notes meant. Next, General Drummond accepted those conclusions about the notes and confessed "error." And then, armed with the confession of error, Glossip parroted these dubious "facts" to the lower courts and, ultimately, to the Supreme Court—cloaked in the claim that they represented the "considered judgment of the State officer chiefly responsible for enforcing Oklahoma's laws …."

This bizarre sequence cannot launder the fact that no credible evidence of prosecutorial misconduct exists. The so-called "independent" report of Rex Duncan is not reliable evidence. On the key points (e.g., what happened when prosecutors Smothermon and Ackley interviewed Sneed), Duncan has not carefully examined the prosecutor's notes. Indeed, Duncan's acclamatory tone reveals the true, political nature of his project. He writes in his report to Drummond that "[y]our decision to seek a stay of execution and more thoroughly examine this case may be the bravest leadership decision I've ever witnessed." Cert. Pet., App. 66a

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Free Speech

Insulting Anti-Gay Preaching at PrideFest Event May Have Been Protected by the First Amendment

(depending on whether the preacher also violated content-neutral conduct restrictions).

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From an order this Monday by Judge Kevin Castel (S.D.N.Y.) In Rusfeldt v. City of New York (just an excerpt of a long opinion):

Pastor Aden Rusfeldt brings claims arising from his interactions with and arrest by officers of the New York City Police Department ("NYPD") that occurred while he was holding up a large sign on a long pole reading "Fags and Whores Burn in Hell" at the June 27, 2021 PrideFest in Manhattan….

The First Amendment protects Rusfeldt's right to express his message and the Pride festivalgoers' right to express their hostility to his message. The expressive elements of Rusfeldt's hateful message and the festivalgoers' expressed antipathy to the message do not require law enforcement to turn a blind eye to the potential that the physical proximity of the two groups could lead to unlawful behavior. But the permissible means to mitigate the potential for escalation cannot be the removal of a person engaging in protected speech merely to appease others offended by his expressive activity. Provocations to immediate violence may change the calculus.

When police officers learned that objects and liquids had been thrown by members of the crowd of Pride festivalgoers in the direction of Rusfeldt, they stepped into action. They could have ordered the crowd dispersed or arrested an offender, if the person was observed and could be identified and apprehended. Police officers selected a different response, at first standing in between Rusfeldt's group and the crowd and then moving metal barriers into place between the two groups, which did not impair the ability of Rusfeldt or the festivalgoers to deliver their messages.

Law enforcement also had concerns that Rusfeldt was on the sidewalk with a long pole holding his message aloft, potentially blocking the sidewalk and presenting a hazard to others. Police officers told Rusfeldt to move—or, as defendants now characterize it, ordered him to disperse. Rusfeldt was ultimately arrested. The "Complaint/Information" for the violation of at least one of New York's disorderly conduct provisions (N.Y. Penal Law § 240.20(7)), which was affirmed by the officer on the date of the arrest, noted that Rusfeldt was "in possession of a large metal pole. Defendant was asked to relinquish the pole and refused to do so." The charges were later dismissed without any court appearance.

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Second Amendment Roundup: ATF's Final Rule Implicates the Right to Bear Arms

Its restrictions on self-made firearms are inconsistent with the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.

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Getting closer to October 8, when the Supreme Court will hear oral argument in Garland v. VanDerStok, I'd like to address whether ATF's 2022 Final Rule drastically expanding the meaning of the statutory term "firearm" implicates the Second Amendment.  By redefining "firearm" to include unfinished materials, information, jigs, and tools, the supply has dried up for persons freely to obtain what they need to construct self-made firearms.  Indeed, that is the purpose of the rule.

No one disputes that the right to keep and bear arms entails the right to acquire them, which presupposes that firearms must be made.  As explained in my previous post, the Federal Firearms Act of 1938 was the first federal law to require those engaged in the business of manufacturing firearms to obtain licenses.  To date, the Gun Control Act (GCA), passed in 1968, provides no restrictions on a person acquiring materials and making his or her own firearm.

ATF's commentary to the Final Rule argues that it does not violate the Second Amendment, because "the GCA and this rule do not prohibit individuals from assembling or otherwise making their own firearms from parts for personal use," nor do they "prohibit[] law-abiding citizens from completing, assembling, or transferring firearms without a license" as long as they are not "engaged in the business."  Yet the rule does prevent individuals from "making their own firearms from parts" by purporting to extend the statutory definition of "firearm" to raw material and previously-unrestricted parts that may no longer be bought and sold except through federal firearm licensees.

The Supreme Court in District of Columbia v. Heller did not "cast doubt on … laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms."  ATF's regulations are not "laws" and have no basis in the laws passed by Congress, which enacted the exclusive definition of "firearm."  The Final Rule impedes the making and acquisition of firearms by imposing new, onerous restrictions, costs, and potential criminal jeopardy.

The commentary quotes the above words from Heller, but those words do not justify the policy argument in the next sentence: "PMFs [privately made firearms], like commercially produced firearms, must be able to be traced through the records of licensees when the PMFs are involved in crimes."  First, as covered in my last post, that a firearm was traced does not indicate that it was used in a crime.  Second, a firearm "must be able to be traced" only when, as the GCA provides, it comes from a licensed manufacturer or importer, is distributed by a licensed dealer, and is required to be marked with a serial number.  ATF's contention regarding the need for tracing is not a legal argument, but is purely a policy argument which can only be addressed by Congress.
In New York State Rifle & Pistol Ass'n, Inc. v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1, 17 (2022), the Supreme Court held: "When the Second Amendment's plain text covers an individual's conduct, the Constitution presumptively protects that conduct. The government must then justify its regulation by demonstrating that it is consistent with the Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation."

Before looking for possible historical regulations, consider the Court's longstanding interpretative guide, expressed long ago in Ex parte Bain (1887), that "in the construction of the language of the Constitution . . . we are to place ourselves as nearly as possible in the condition of the men who framed that instrument. Undoubtedly, the framers … had for a long time been absorbed in considering the arbitrary encroachments of the Crown on the liberty of the subject…."

I've documented countless such encroachments in The Founders' Second Amendment, but especially pertinent here is the 1777 plan by British Colonial Undersecretary William Knox: "The Militia Laws should be repealed and none suffered to be re-enacted, & the Arms of all the People should be taken away, . . . nor should any Foundery or manufactuary of Arms, Gunpowder, or Warlike Stores, be ever suffered in America…."  And consider this letter from Thomas Jefferson in 1793, two years after ratification of the Second Amendment: "Our citizens have always been free to make, vend, and export arms.  It is the constant occupation and livelihood of some of them."

Extensive documentation of this aspect of our history is set forth by Joseph Greenlee in "The American Tradition of Self-Made Arms," 54 St. Mary's L.J. 35 (2023).  He distilled a good part of this research for VanDerStok in the amicus brief of the National Rifle Association.

During colonial times, Greenlee shows, acquisition of firearms by importation and local manufacture was essential for food and protection.  Gunsmiths in towns and on the frontier made and repaired guns, often obtaining intricate parts like locks and barrels from other sources.  The trade was carried out by individual craftsmen.  The outbreak of the War for Independence brought a high demand for muskets from the States and the Continental Congress.  This cottage industry produced over a fourth of the long arms used by American troops during the war.  Even children helped assemble cartridges.

James Whisker, a prominent historian of early gunmaking, writes in The Gunsmith's Trade (1992): "Gun crafting was one of several ways Americans expressed their unrestrained democratic impulses at the time of the adoption of the Bill of Rights.… The climate of opinion was clearly such that it would have supported a broad distribution of this right to the people…."

Private gunmakers in the United States have developed many of the most significant innovations in firearm technology.  They include the forgotten makers of Pennsylvania rifles, Samuel Colt and his revolvers, the developers of Winchester lever action rifles, John Moses Browning and his countless innovations, and John Garand, inventor of the M1 Garand battle rifle that gave American GIs an edge in World War II.  Countless Americans, in bygone times and today, fashion, make, assemble, customize, and repair their own firearms.  As long as they were not engaged in the business of manufacturing firearms, Congress has never regulated private gunmakers.

ATF's Final Rule aims to prohibit the free acquisition of items that are not firearms by redefining them as firearms.  The government's brief brushes off any Second Amendment consequences – saying "the Rule's interpretation of the Act is entirely consistent with the Second Amendment" – without even attempting to show, as Bruen requires, that the Final Rule "is consistent with the Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation." While this has not been litigated as a Second Amendment case, the rule of constitutional doubt should discourage an expansive reading of the GCA.

The amici brief of the Gun Violence Prevention Groups steps in to provide a Bruen analysis, relying on a Student Note "Gunmaking at the Founding" forthcoming in Stanford Law Review.  However, part VI of the NRA brief, relying on that same source, refutes it point by point.  The following seven categories (in quotation marks) are claimed to constitute a "historical tradition of firearm regulation," but for the following reasons given in the NRA brief, they do no such thing:

  1. The "standard setting" laws established what arms could be used in militia service or sold to governments for militia use.
  2. The "inspection" laws required militiamen to prove to militia officers that they possessed the mandated militia arms.
  3. The "licensing" law was a 1642 Connecticut law requiring a license for any "Smith" to "doe any work for" hostile American Indians or for any person to "trade any Instrument or matter made of iron or steele" to them.
  4. The "labor" laws simply refer to the legal relationship between masters and apprentices.
  5. The "impressment" laws were generally wartime measures that required gunsmiths to prioritize military arms.
  6. The "restrictions on dangerous persons" include prohibitions on providing firearms to allegedly dangerous persons and restrictions on repairing firearms for American Indians.
  7. The "gunpowder-making" regulations did not apply to firearms and instead targeted gunpowder storage and sales.

The Gun Violence Prevention Groups' brief also cites "the longstanding practice of marking weapons—a precursor to modern-day serialization."  But the marking requirements applied only to public arms owned or used by the States.  As historian Whisker relates, "a gunsmith could choose to mark his guns, or not mark them, in any way he chose."  During the Revolution, many gunsmiths refrained from marking their firearms so that, in case the British won, those firearms could not be traced back to their makers.

As the Republic grew, some manufacturers voluntarily inscribed their firearms with serial numbers and others did not.  It was not until 1958 that licensed manufacturers were required to engrave serial numbers on firearms, excluding shotguns and .22 caliber rifles.  Only in 1968 did Congress require licensees to serialize all "firearms" as it defined them.  To date, it remains lawful under the Gun Control Act to make your own gun without restriction.

Finally, it is worth recalling that, in passing the Firearm Owners' Protection Act of 1986, Congress found that "the rights of citizens … to keep and bear arms under the second amendment to the United States Constitution … require[d] additional legislation to correct existing firearms statutes" and reaffirmed its intent not to "place any undue or unnecessary Federal restrictions or burdens" on firearm owners or "to discourage or eliminate the private ownership or use of firearms by law-abiding citizens for lawful purposes."  It admonished that the Attorney General may prescribe "only such rules and regulations as are necessary to carry out the provisions of this chapter."  The Final Rule simply disregards these statutory "rules of engagement" and writes off the Second Amendment as if it is a "second class right."

 

Free Speech

Judge Blocks California Law Restricting "Materially Deceptive" Election-Related Deepfakes

The judge concluded that the law, AB 2839, likely violates the First Amendment, and therefore issued a preliminary injunction blocking it from going into effect.

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From today's decision by Judge John Mendez (E.D. Cal.) in Kohls v. Bonta:

Plaintiff Christopher Kohls (aka "Mr. Reagan") is an individual who creates digital content about political figures. His videos contain demonstrably false information that include sounds or visuals that are significantly edited or digitally generated using artificial intelligence …. Plaintiff's videos are considered by him to be parody or satire. In response to videos posted by Plaintiff parodying presidential candidate Kamala Harris and other AI generated "deepfakes," the California legislature enacted AB 2839. AB 2839, according to Plaintiff, would allow any political candidate, election official, the Secretary of State, and everyone who sees his AI-generated videos to sue him for damages and injunctive relief during an election period which runs 120 days before an election to 60 days after an election….

AB 2839 does not pass constitutional scrutiny because the law does not use the least restrictive means available for advancing the State's interest here. As Plaintiffs persuasively argue, counter speech is a less restrictive alternative to prohibiting videos such as those posted by Plaintiff, no matter how offensive or inappropriate someone may find them. "'Especially as to political speech, counter speech is the tried and true buffer and elixir,' not speech restriction." …

The court began by concluding that AB 2839 doesn't fall within the existing defamation exception to First Amendment protection, and isn't subject to any other doctrine that categorically lowers protection for false statements in election campaigns:

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Harassment

"Stalking" a Child or Being at the Same School Event with One's Own Children?

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Florida appellate courts have published many opinions in recent years (correct ones, I think) reminding trial courts of the limits on anti-harassment/stalking/cyberstalking restraining orders. Whether that is a mark of the soundness of the Florida appellate courts, of the frequency of errors by Florida lower courts, something else, or a mix of these, I can't say. But here's a recent example, from Hoover v. Peak, decided in August by  Judge Thomas Winokur joined by Chief Judge Timothy Osterhaus and Judge Joseph Lewis, Jr.:

On Independence Day, 2023, Hoover aimed a Roman candle firework at several children present in his neighborhood. Peak's daughter, C.P., was one of those children. C.P. had her back turned to Hoover when the firework went off, and she suffered a minor injury to her thigh.

Peak reported the incident to the Department of Children and Families, which led to Hoover's arrest for child abuse. Hoover was also arrested for a separate domestic incident with his now estranged wife Mandelin Hoover. The court granted Mandelin Hoover a domestic violence injunction against Hoover with a no-contact provision.

Then, in August 2023, Hoover and his ex-wife—not Mandelin Hoover—attended their daughter's ninth-grade orientation at Crestview High School. C.P. was also a ninth-grader at Crestview High School. Thus, Peak, her husband, C.P., and Mandelin Hoover (Peak's purported best friend) also attended the orientation. While at the orientation, Peak and Hoover crossed paths on four occasions. Peak believed that Hoover understood his criminal case for child abuse due to the fireworks incident to also include a no-contact order as to C.P. In fact, no such provision existed.

Peak sought out the school police deputy to inform him that Hoover was on the premises and that he should be removed. At the same time, Hoover turned into the same hallway but after seeing Peak's family, he walked away. Based on the four encounters at orientation, Peak filed the underlying petition for an injunction for stalking against Hoover….

The trial court held "that Peak satisfied her burden of showing that a reasonable person would have been placed in substantial emotional distress by Hoover's actions," and granted a harassment restraining order against Hoover, but the court of appeals reversed:

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Free Speech

"[T]his Is a Matter of Law, Not of Wounded Feelings": Univ. of Maryland May Not Ban All Oct. 7 Demonstrations …

as a means of stopping an anti-Israel "vigil" organized by the UMD chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine.

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Yesterday's opinion by Judge Peter Messitte (D. Md.) in Univ. of Md. Students for Justice in Palestine v. Bd. of Regents held (generally quite correctly, I think) that the University's revoking the SJP's reservation of space for a demonstration violated the First Amendment, because it was an attempt to suppress SJP's viewpoint. An excerpt of the facts:

SJP [at first was given a reservation, in August, for an event that it] described … as an interfaith vigil to be held on the University's College Park campus on October 7, intended to mourn lives lost in Israel's purported "genocide" in Gaza. In revoking the approval, the University also banned all student-organized events on the College Park campus on that day, as well as such events throughout the University system statewide….

For years, UMCP students as well as outsiders have used UMCP's McKeldin Mall as a forum for free expression, one of only four venues that UMCP allows for students to host "Scheduled Expressive Activity." The Mall is a rectangular field, consisting of some nine acres, centrally located on the College Park campus…..

SJP indicates that it primarily planned to use their reservation of McKeldin Mall to hold a vigil commemorating the thousands of lives lost since what it characterizes as the initiation of Israel's current attack on Gaza. Over the course of the day, the group stated that it would also host several other activities, including teach-ins about Palestinian history, culture, and solidarity between Palestinians and other marginalized groups; tables highlighting Palestinian art and traditional crafts; a visual display of kites, a motif in Palestinian poetry; as well as a vigil and inter-faith prayers. The group indicated that it had invited several SJP members who have personally lost family members in Gaza to speak. {SJP expressly indicated that it expected 25 to 50 student attendees and expressly agreed to comply with all student-organization event guidelines and policies.} …

SJP says it chose October 7 specifically because October 7 marks the beginning of what it calls Israel's most recent "genocidal campaign" which, SJP claims, has resulted in the death of over 40,000 Palestinians in Gaza. Another recognized student organization, Jewish Voice for Peace at the University of Maryland …, has agreed to co-sponsor SJP's event….

In response to public opposition, the University of Maryland canceled the event and indeed ban all student-sponsored events on Oct. 7; here's how UMD College Park's president publicly explained the cancellation:

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Politics

Glossip v. Oklahoma: The Story Behind How a Death Row Inmate and the Oklahoma A.G. Concocted a Phantom "Brady Violation" and Got Supreme Court Review (Part II)

Glossip and Oklahoma have no response to the fact that that Glossip's defense team knew all about the allegedly "withheld" Brady information.

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In yesterday's post, I discussed Glossip v. Oklahoma—a case that the Supreme Court will hear next Wednesday about allegations that prosecutors withheld evidence in a death penalty trial. In that post, I reviewed my amicus brief for the murder victim's family, which contains extensive documentation proving that the prosecutors never withheld any evidence. In this second post, I discuss Glossip's and Oklahoma's (non)responses to the facts that I presented. The parties' failure to respond confirms that their Brady claim is concocted and that they are forcing the victim's family to endure frivolous litigation. Tomorrow, in my third and final post, I will explain why courts should be cautious before accepting an apparently politically motivated confession of "error" from a prosecutor.

In Glossip, the underlying question before the Supreme Court concerns whether state prosecutors withheld evidence from Glossip's defense team before his 2004 trial. In that trial, Glossip was found guilty of commissioning his friend, Justin Sneed, to murder Barry Van Treese. Glossip was sentenced to death. Now, nearly two decades later, Glossip argues that newly released notes from the prosecutors show that they withheld information about Sneed's lithium usage and treatment by a psychiatrist. And, curiously, Oklahoma Attorney General Gertner Drummond agrees. Drummond has joined Glossip in asking the Supreme Court to overturn the conviction and capital sentence.

As I reviewed yesterday, Glossip's and General Drummond's argument rests primarily on four handwritten words in prosecutor Smothermon's notes:

According to Glossip and General Drummond, these few words "confirm" Smothermon's knowledge of Sneed's treatment for a psychiatric condition by lithium by a "Dr. Trumpet" (later claimed to be a Dr. Trombka). But stepping back and reading the notes in context reveals a much different interpetation. Here are Smothermon's notes surrounding the four words in question:

In yesterday's post, I explained that looking at all of her notes reveals that Sneed was merely recounting what the defense team was questioning him about—not what the prosecutors had discovered. The defense team interview is reflected in the reference to "2x" (two interviews), including one by "women" that was "b4 [the] appeal" who were an "invest[igator]" and a person involved in the "appeal."

To the extent any question remains, the corresponding notes from the other prosecutor  at the interview (Gary Ackley) show even more directly that Sneed was simply recounting a defense interview. The first line of Ackley's notes from the Sneed interview reads "W was visited by 2 women who said they rep[resented] Glossip—heavy—1 "inv" & 1 "Atty"  Appellate?" Read for yourself:

As I pointed out yesterday, if the prosecutors' notes record what happened during a defense interview, obviously no Brady violation could exist. Because the prosecutors were simply recording what a state's witness recounted about questions asked of him by the defense team, the notes cannot contain information withheld from the defense.

In today's post, I review Glossip's and General Drummond's failure to respond to these facts. As with yesterday's post, today's post summarizes my amicus brief and also additional factual material contained in an appendix to my brief (linked here as a single document).

Glossip and General Drummond contend that the four words in the notes mean that the prosecutors possessed information that they should have disclosed to the defense. My contrary interpretation prompts the obvious question of what do the prosecutors say their own notes mean. The authors' explanation of what their own handwriting means would seem to be at least relevant to the discussion.  But, surprisingly, General Drummond has not even asked the prosecutors what their notes mean.

Here's the story of behind Drummond's remarkable lack of curiosity: Read More

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