The Volokh Conspiracy

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

The Volokh Conspiracy

Free Speech

FBI Director Kash Patel Loses Defamation Lawsuit Over Morning Joe Statements

The wild things are in the nightclubs.

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From today's by Judge George C. Hanks, Jr. (S.D. Tex.) in Patel v. Figliuzzi, which stemmed from his exchange on MSNC's Morning Joe with defendant Cesare Frank Figliuzzi, Jr., "the former assistant director for counterintelligence at the FBI":

Host: "So, Frank, let's turn to FBI Director Kash Patel, who has sort of taken a surprisingly backseat role—at least to this point, in the first 102 or 103 days, wherever we are right now. What do you make of that, that he's just been a little less visible than I think a lot of people and Trump observers expected him to be?"

Figliuzzi: "Yeah, well, reportedly, he's been visible at nightclubs far more than he has been on the seventh floor of the Hoover building. And there are reports that daily briefings to him have been changed from every day to maybe twice weekly. So this is both a blessing and a curse, because if he's really trying to run things without any experience level, things could be bad. If he's not plugged in, things could be bad, but he's allowing agents to run things. So we don't know where this is going."

Patel claimed the "been visible at nightclubs far more than he has been on the seventh floor of the Hoover building" was actionable defamation, but the court found that it was nonactionable rhetorical hyperbole instead:

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AI in Court

AI Hallucinations in Filing by a Top Law Firm

Remember: It could happen at your firm, too.

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The pale-throated sloth, from Marshall, Annales du Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, via Wikipedia.

David Lat (Original Jurisdiction), whose newsletter I very much recommend, writes about this:

Tonight brings huge news out of Sullivan & Cromwell. We can add now add S&C, truly one of the world's most prestigious and profitable firms, to the AI "Hall of Shame": the list of law firms that have submitted court filings containing AI-generated "hallucinations." …

[Ironically], as noted by Joe Patrice of Above the Law, Sullivan & Cromwell is the law firm that … advises OpenAI on the "safe and ethical deployment" of artificial intelligence (a representation S&C touts on its website). Physician, heal thyself?

[And] the AI errors were called to [Dietderich's] attention by… Boies Schiller Flexner. Why is it ironic that BSF, one of the nation's leading litigation firms, caught these mistakes? Because until now, Boies Schiller was the reigning champion of "Elite Law Firms Guilty of AI Fails." (In addition to the AI snafu chronicled in that story, which took place last year, BSF subsequently failed to catch AI-generated errors in a filing by co-counsel in a different case.) …

When I covered BSF's AI error last year, I gave props to then-partner John Kucera: he "fully and freely admitted the errors, and he didn't throw any colleagues under the bus." I'll the same here about Andy Dietderich. He's a senior partner at S&C, having joined the firm almost 30 years ago; he leads its restructuring practice, which he fonded; and he's a giant of the bankruptcy bar, Chambers Band 1. Nobody was paying him $2,500 an hour to do legal research; this screw-up was clearly the handiwork of an associate (or perhaps I should say former associate). But Dietderich signed the letter solo, and he didn't point the finger at anyone else.

Here's the substance of Dietderich's letter:

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Does A Shadow Docket Ruling Create "Clearly Established" Law For Purposes of Qualified Immunity

Would a school district that violated Mirabelli still have QI?

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The Supreme Court's emergency docket ruling in Mirabelli and denial of certiorari in Foote will send conflicting signals. On the one hand, the Court blocked California's policy on the shadow docket. On the other hand, the Court allowed a similar policy from Massachusetts to go into effect.

I received an email from a lawyer indicating that his school district was maintaining their "secret transition" policy, notwithstanding Mirabelli.

A question arises. Would this school district retain qualified immunity? Does Mirabelli, as an emergency docket ruling, create "clearly established" law? I know the Supreme Court has told us that emergency docket rulings are precedential. But is the law "clearly established"? Would this sort of ruling be clearly established by the Supreme Court for purposes of AEDPA?

Perhaps it can be argued that Mirabelli did not actually establish any new law. The decision merely reaffirmed century-old precedents, Pierce v. Society of Sisters and Meyer v. Nebraska. But other emergency docket precedents arguably do establish new law. Just yesterday the Court GVR'd Smith v. Scott, fittingly enough a QI case, based on a recent per curiam opinion.

This might be a way for lower court to push back on the shadow docket--by holding these rulings do not establish clear law for purposes of QI. The Supreme Court, I suspect, would say that any ruling of the Supreme Court would suffice.

Free Speech

No Constitutional Problem with Compelling AI Disclosures in Court Filings

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From Friday's decision by Judge Nina Wang (D. Colo.) in Hessert v. Street Dog Coalition:

Plaintiff asks the Court to "[v]acate the reference to the standing order on AI as … not applicable and unconstitutional." Plaintiff argues that the Court's Standing Order improperly compels speech in violation of the First Amendment, violates his due process and equal protection rights, "encroaches upon" work product, and amounts to legislating from the bench. These arguments are without merit. This request is DENIED.

The challenged standing order on AI appears to be this one; it requires that,

Every filing shall contain an AI Certification regarding the use, or non-use, of generative AI (such as ChatGPT, Harvey.AI, or Google Gemini) in preparing the filing, signed by all individuals who contributed to the drafting of the filing. To the extent that generative AI was used in any drafting of the filing, each individual must certify that any language drafted by AI (even if later edited by a human) was personally reviewed by the filer or another human for accuracy and that all legal citations reference actual non-fictitious cases or cited authority.

Court rules of course routinely compel certain statements in briefs (e.g., certificates of service, word count certificates, disclosures of funding for amicus briefs, tables of contents, and so on) and routinely restrict statements in briefs or in trial (e.g., attempts to use inadmissible evidence, personal insults of opponents and of judges, and more). These rules are generally not subject to First Amendment scrutiny.

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Elizabeth Prelogar's Unexpected and Unusual Argument

The former Solicitor General did not sign any briefs but somehow popped up on the docket and argued the case.

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Whenever a new petition is granted, I always check the counsel of record. I keep a running tally of how many cases leading members of the bar argue. When the Court granted cert in T.M. v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation, I took note. The Counsel of Record for the Petitioner was Kannon Shanmugam of Paul Weiss. This was (likely) a pro bono case, as T.M. sued the hospital system for medical malpractice. The Counsel of Record for the Respondent was Lisa Blatt of Williams & Connolly. I remember looking forward to seeing Shanmugam and Blatt argue. These two are titans of the Supreme Court bar.

Except it wasn't meant to be. For reasons that are not clear, Elizabeth Prelogar of Cooley LLP argued the case today. Prelogar's name was not on the Petitioner's opening brief or the reply brief.

Shanmugam is still listed as counsel of record, but Prelogar's name now appears on the docket page.

It is common enough for a veteran SCOTUS litigator to give a case to a fellow partner or an associate, to give them experience at the high court. It also happens that when two big SCOTUS firms are on a case, there is some process to decide which firm gets to argue. Sometimes the client chooses. When there is more than one client, it can get messy. When all else fails, a coin toss can resolve the conflict. But I can't recall a situation like this: where a veteran SCOTUS litigator in a pro bono case files all of the cert-stage and merit-stage briefs, and then hands the case off to a SCOTUS litigator at another firm. Indeed, the fact that this case is pro bono is significant. There was only one client, who is a person, rather than a institution. I don't think there was a General Counsel department advising T.M. about who would be the best attorney to argue the case. Here, Shanmugam was on the cert petition, so he has had the case for some time.

For whatever it is worth, this is Prelogar's first Supreme Court argument since returning to private practice. She has had cert denials in Stroble v. Oklahoma Tax Commission and Tuopeh v. South Dakota and Little v. Llano County.

Why did Prelogar swoop in at the last minute? I don't know. Perhaps there is a conflict? I checked the docket, and Shanmugan is on the brief for next week's case of Cisco Systems v. Doe, though Chris Michel at Quinn Emanuel is counsel of record. Mere mortals may have trouble arguing two SCOTUS cases back to back, but Shanmugam has super advocacy skills. In 2024, he argued a case in February and another case in March. In 2021, he argued a case on November 10 and on November 30. In 2020, he argued a case on November 3 and on December 8 and on January 19. In 2018, he argued a case on October 29 and on November 7. And even if it was too much for Shanmugam to argue back-to-back, certainly there is someone else at Paul Weiss who could have picked up the case. There must be more to the story.

The change in counsel may affect the outcome of the case. There are often problems when an attorney argues a case, but did not brief it. I think this may have happened today.

The petition did not ask for the Court to overrule the Rooker-Feldman doctrine.Yet, as Justice Alito pointed out, Prelogar seems to want to overrule Rooker-Feldman.

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Free Speech

FBI Director Kash Patel Sues Atlantic Over Friday's Article

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Some excerpts from the Complaint in Patel v. Atlantic Monthly Group LLC (D.D.C.), filed today:

Kashyap P. Patel, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, brings this lawsuit to hold Defendants The Atlantic Monthly Group LLC and its staff writer, Sarah Fitzpatrick, accountable for a sweeping, malicious, and defamatory hit piece published on April 17, 2026 {"Kash Patel's Erratic Behavior Could Cost Him His Job"}. Defendants are of course free to criticize the leadership of the FBI, but they crossed the legal line by publishing an article replete with false and obviously fabricated allegations designed to destroy Director Patel's reputation and drive him from office.

Indeed, Fitzpatrick could not get a single person to go on the record in defense of these outrageous allegations, instead relying entirely on anonymous sources she knew to be both highly partisan with an ax to grind and also not in a position to know the facts. Defendants published the Article with actual malice, despite being expressly warned, hours before publication, that the central allegations were categorically false; despite having abundant publicly available information contradicting those allegations; despite obvious and fatal defects in their own sourcing; despite The Atlantic's well-documented, long-running editorial animus toward Director Patel; despite a request for additional time to respond that Defendants refused to honor; and despite deliberately structuring the pre-publication process to avoid receiving information that would refute their narrative. Defendants cannot evade responsibility for their malicious lies by hiding behind sham sources….

The Article's assertions that Director Patel drinks to the point of obvious intoxication at Ned's in Washington, D.C. and to excess at the Poodle Room in Las Vegas, and that his drinking "has been a recurring source of concern across the government," are false. Director Patel does not drink to excess at these establishments or anywhere else, and this has not, and has never been, a source of concern across the government. Prior to publication, the FBI expressly informed Defendants that each of these allegations was "totally false." The FBI further warned Defendants that these allegations echoed a similar fabrication previously aired by MSNBC's Frank Figliuzzi on Morning Joe—anonymously sourced reporting that was later retracted by MSNBC and that is the subject of pending defamation litigation—yet Defendants published it anyway.

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Journalistic and Legal Ethics for SCOTUS Reporters

What happens when there is a conflict between the two standards?

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Steve Sachs writes that Adam Liptak, a member of the New York Bar, may have transgressed certain rules of professional conduct by publicizing the leaked SCOTUS documents. Steve raises the broader concern of how journalistic ethics interact with legal ethics. A lawyer-journalist can easily resolve this tension by resigning from the bar, but there are professional reasons for maintaining that license.

The Supreme Court publishes a list of about two dozen "Hard Pass Holders." A good number of them are attorneys.

One of those names is none other than Joan Biskupic, who has been an inactive member of the D.C. bar since 1997. (Inactive members are still subject to all the rules.) Joan made her career on publishing leaked Supreme Court documents.

Perhaps Liptak and Biskupic and others have squared their duties to journalism and their duties as officers of the Court. That would be worth explaining.

There is a related issue. Some reporters have taken to publishing "anonymous" quotations from judges. Many of those statements, I think, can be seen as bringing the judiciary into disrepute. Why else would the judges make the statements anonymously, unless they feared some consequence for speaking. Journalists who are not attorneys have nothing to fear from state bars, but they should be fully aware that distributing surveys may be inducing judges to violate their own legal duties.

So much effort is focused on scrutinizing the ethics of the Supreme Court. Similar efforts should focus on scrutinizing the ethics of the media. I've found as a general rule that reporters far prefer asking questions to answering them. Who will watch the watchmen?

Update: For whatever it is worth, Adam Liptak was admitted to the Supreme Court Bar on June 15, 1992.

After Mirabelli, The Other Foote Did Not Drop

Why was there no grant? Or at least a GVR to the First Circuit?

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On March 2, 2026, the Supreme Court decided Mirabelli v. Bonta. This emergency docket case ruled against California's policy of secretly transitioning children without their parents' consent. This ruling follows naturally from Pierce v. Society of Sisters and Meyer v. Nebraska.

Justice Kagan complained (though not loudly enough to shake the walls) that the Court should have decided this issue on the merits docket. She pointed to a specific cert petition that had been pending since November 2025: Foote v. Ludlow School Commitee from the First Circuit. Kagan wrote:

And still, there is worse: The Court resolves the issues raised through shortcut procedures on the emergency docket even though it has had—for months now—the option of doing so the regular way, on our merits docket. Since November of last year, a petition for certiorari has been pending in a case that, in critical respects, is a carbon copy of this one. In Foote v. Ludlow School Comm., 128 F. 4th 336 (CA1 2025) (per curiam), cert. pending, No. 25–77, as here, a public school adopted a policy, conforming to a state agency's guidance, about students who identify as transgender. There, as here, the policy requires school employees to use only a student's preferred name and pronouns, while barring employees from disclosing the student's at-school gender identity to parents. And there, as here, parents challenge that policy as a violation of their right to substantive due process. See id., at 340–344.1 Why not, then, just grant certiorari in Foote, and decide it this coming fall? Or if there is some reason that Foote is not suitable, the Court could take one of the many cases linedup behind it. By recent count, almost 40 cases raising due process and/or free exercise objections to similar school policies are currently in the judicial system (with several recently decided by appellate courts), so this Court would not have to wait long. See Pet. for Cert. in Foote, O. T. 2025, No. 25–77, p. 32. By granting certiorari on one (or more) of those cases, the Court could ensure that the issues raised by such policies receive the careful, disciplined consideration they merit, rather than the inevitably truncated review the Court affords emergency applications.

When Justice Kagan wrote this, she surely would have known if there were enough votes for cert or not. With the benefit of hindsight, there were not enough votes. Why then, would she spend so much time talking about a case she knew was destined for denial.

Us mere mortals on the outside, however, had no clue what was going on. At the time, I wrote that the Court might GVR Foote in light of Mirabelli:

What happens now to Foote? Can the Court GVR in light of Mirabelli? Heads will explode if the Court remands on the shadow docket based on a shadow docket ruling.

Well that didn't happen. Today the Court denied Foote without any noted dissents. And this was after many relists--five following Mirabelli.

What happened? Well just today, in Smith v. Scott, the Court GVR'd a case based on an emergency docket precedent. So the Court apparently is not afraid of that path. I suppose heads rolled, as Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson took the rare dissent of dissenting from a GVR.

Why was there no GVR here? Certainly the First Circuit could take another look in light of Mirabelli.

If there were six votes to grant a stay in Mirabelli, why were there not four votes to grant cert in Foote?

Are there some vehicle problems? Or does the Court just want to keep another gender transition case off the docket?

The relationship between Foote and Mirabelli is tricky. If any law clerks in ten years want to release the cert pool memos here, I'll be waiting. (I'm kidding, I'm kidding.)

Supreme Court

Court Leaks and Attorney-Journalists

The professional-ethics implications of making court confidences public.

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The recent leak of internal Supreme Court memoranda to the New York Times, discussed earlier by Jonathan Adler and Josh Blackman—as well as by Will Baude and Jack Goldsmith elsewhere—was plainly a serious violation of the Court's confidentiality obligations. But it may also reflect serious legal-ethics violations by one of the Times article's coauthors, Adam Liptak, whom I understand to be a licensed attorney in New York and subject to that state's Rules of Professional Conduct.

* * *

There are at least two theories under which Liptak may have violated the ethics rules.

First, Liptak may have violated Rule 8.4(f) of Professional Conduct, which provides that a "lawyer or law firm shall not * * * knowingly assist a judge or judicial officer in conduct that is a violation of applicable rules of judicial conduct or other law." If a Supreme Court employee provided memoranda to the Times in the hope of making them public, and if Liptak assisted in that effort—both questions of fact, which would have to be answered through a careful inquiry—he may have violated this provision. Section 320, Canon 3.D.3, of the Judicial Conference's Code of Conduct for Judicial Employees provides that a current or former judicial employee "should never disclose any confidential information received in the course of official duties except as required in the performance of such duties." That Code doesn't apply to "employees of the United States Supreme Court," id. § 310.10(a), but it's widely known that the Court has adopted similar rules that do.

Or, if the memoranda had been provided to the Times by one of the Justices themselves, Liptak's assistance with that effort might have violated Rule 8.4(f), which extends to rules violations by "a judge." Canon 2.A of the Code of Conduct for Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States provides that "[a] Justice should respect and comply with the law and act at all times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary." And Canon 4.D.4, though placed in a section devoted to financial activities, states generally that "[a] Justice should not disclose or use nonpublic information acquired in a judicial capacity for any purpose unrelated to the Justice's official duties"—which disclosing internal memoranda to the Times would plainly be.

Or, if Liptak didn't play any role in obtaining the memos directly, he might still have assisted the leaker's violation by taking part in the process of making them public—aiding and abetting that effort, and violating the Rules "through the acts of another" per Rule 8.4(a). Commenting on now-public memos, the way that Adler, Blackman, Baude, and Goldsmith have, is very different from playing a role in making them public—akin to the difference between an attorney's advising a defendant who has already committed a crime and an attorney advising a client on how to commit a crime without detection. An attorney who coauthored Closed Chambers with the infamous ex-Supreme-Court-clerk Edward Lazarus could hardly claim that the nonpublic information printed in the book was all Lazarus's fault, and that all he did was help write it. According to Jodi Kantor, the article's coauthor, she and Liptak "spent many weeks anticipating your reactions to these memos, which allow us to hear what the justices sound like in private"—suggesting active participation in the publication process on Liptak's part. In any case, this is something a disciplinary investigation could clear up.

(Note: Last night I sent a draft version of this post to Liptak for his comments or corrections, asking for any "facts about your role that would cast the analysis below in a different light." Today I received the following statement from a Times spokesperson: "The New York Times's reporting on the Supreme Court, including the recent article by Jodi Kantor and Adam Liptak on the court's 'shadow docket' rulings on presidential power, brings to light vital information for the public to understand how the court carries out its duties in governing the lives of millions of Americans. We are confident that Adam Liptak acted consistently with his professional obligations both as a lawyer and a journalist.")

Second, regardless of how the Times obtained the memos, Liptak may also have violated Rule 8.4(d), which forbids a lawyer to "engage in conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice." Courts may act in public—releasing their judgments and opinions as a matter of routine—but judges have to think in private. And multimember courts can't deliberate effectively, much less administer justice effectively, if their judges can't write anything down for fear of seeing it in the next day's Times. As a 2022 discussion in the New York State Bar Journal suggested, releasing nonpublic information—in that case, a draft opinion—"is prejudicial to the administration of justice, as it compromises and disrupts the deliberative process, the most essential function of the court. The sanctity of the deliberative process is the cornerstone of the judicial system and such a violation can lead to a host of problems." If the administration of justice is prejudiced by an attorney's refusing to cooperate in individual discipline proceedings (as per Rule 8.4 cmt. 3), how much more so would it be prejudiced by the public release of judges' nonpublic deliberations?

* * *

Nothing about this analysis is changed by Liptak's role at the Times.

Claims about there being a public interest in the memos, for example, don't make their publication any less prejudicial to the administration of justice. Judges don't run for reelection, and they're supposed to operate without outside political pressure, so the argument that "the public needs to know" is at its minimum. If the public interest really requires disclosure of internal memoranda from the Supreme Court (or, for that matter, internal memoranda from the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Judicial Department), then those courts can revise their rules, officially releasing their internal memoranda for public review. But if those courts choose instead to keep some of their confidential deliberations confidential—as indeed they have, and as the proper functioning of a court usually requires—then no individual employee or officer of the court, whether the leaker or Liptak, can claim the power to overrule that decision on his or her own. The public interest isn't advanced by releasing only those memoranda that individual leakers choose to release for their own purposes.

Nor does it matter that Liptak is a journalist as well as an attorney. For example, if a Times journalist were also a licensed New York social worker, he might be required to act as a mandatory reporter and to inform the Office of Children and Family Services of suspected child abuse discovered in his professional capacity—even if he might prefer to keep that information confidential and to develop a source for news articles about the abuse instead. The additional role carries with it additional duties (even conflicting duties), whether they involve communicating information or keeping it confidential.

Nor does Liptak necessarily have any First Amendment right to violate the Rules of Professional Conduct. If, for example, the nonpublic material described in the article had arrived at the Times unsolicited, it's possible that the First Amendment (as construed in Bartnicki v. Vopper) would restrict state interference with its publication. But attorneys are often under confidentiality obligations that the First Amendment doesn't impose on others. (A lawyer who receives unsolicited material accidentally produced by the other side sometimes has to give it back.) And were an investigation to show that Liptak solicited or took part in soliciting a violation of court-imposed confidentiality rules, that solicitation wouldn't be protected by the First Amendment, any more than any other speech that serves as an "integral part of conduct in violation of a valid" legal-ethics rule. Either way, a First Amendment defense on Liptak's part requires a fact-intensive inquiry, which the First Department's Attorney Grievance Committee could conduct.

More importantly, the First Amendment isn't reserved for professional journalists—applying equally to the "lone pamphleteer[] or street corner orator[] in the Tom Paine mold" or to "someone who spends substantial amounts of money in order to communicate [his] political ideas through sophisticated means." If an attorney were to hand out sealed filings on the street corner, if a current law clerk were to publish draft opinions on Instagram, or if I were to post smuggled memoranda on this blog or on my personal X account, each of us would be no less entitled to First Amendment protection—and no less subject to professional discipline—than those attorneys fortunate enough to have jobs at the New York Times. Either the professional conduct rules restrict the violation of court-imposed confidentiality requirements or they don't.

* * *

Enforcing state rules of professional conduct against attorney-journalists won't end leaks like this. Maybe some attorneys in Liptak's position would rather just be journalists, giving up their licenses to practice law; and maybe other journalists who aren't attorneys (perhaps including Kantor) will end up being the ones to publish such leaks instead. Courts don't have the same tools to regulate the conduct of those who don't claim a right to practice before them. But publications like the Times use licensed attorneys as journalists for a reason, namely to have the benefit of their practical expertise. You don't have to be a lawyer to work for the Times; but those who want to keep the right to practice law—and to keep the status of an officer of the court—have to shoulder its responsibilities too.

Regardless of what one thinks of the "emergency docket" or the Clean Power Plan, leaking confidential court materials poses a real danger to the integrity of the justice system. That's why licensed attorneys usually fear to touch such leaks with a ten-foot pole. The leak of a draft opinion in Dobbs, for example, led directly to an assassination attempt on Justice Brett Kavanaugh, aimed at preventing that draft opinion from obtaining his vote for the necessary majority. It's only a longstanding culture of respect, fidelity, and trust among attorneys and court personnel that prevents these leaks from becoming a daily occurrence—and that allows courts to deliberate effectively on the law. It can only undermine that culture further for the disciplinary system to overlook a decision by a licensed attorney and officer of the court to make these leaks more effective weapons against any judge with whom the leaker disagrees.

For all I know, Liptak is otherwise an upstanding guy, and he's well thought of by people I trust. But we don't want a world where every internal judicial memo serves as a potential weapon in a political fight, one available to whoever's willing to violate the ethics rules first. And one way to help forestall that world is for the discipline system to treat with seriousness the lawyers and judicial employees whose actions would otherwise speed its arrival.

(Cross-posted at Divided Argument.)

Free Speech

Procedural Twist in Kash Patel's Libel Suit Against Substacker Jim Stewartson (Filed in 2023)

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From today's decision by Chief Judge Andrew Gordon (D. Nev.) in Patel v. Stewartson (for more on the $100K compensatory damages + $100K punitives default judgment, see this post):

Kashyap Patel and the Kash Foundation, Inc. sued Jim Stewartson for allegedly defamatory statements Stewartson made on Twitter (now, X) and Substack between June 2021 and May 2023…. Stewartson did not defend against the suit, and I entered default judgment against him. Stewartson now moves to set aside the default judgment … and to dismiss the case for lack of personal jurisdiction …. He argues that he was not properly served and that he does not have minimum contacts with Nevada.

The court concluded that Stewartson "has not met his burden to show strong and convincing evidence that he was not served as a result of the plaintiffs' substantial compliance with [the service rule] and his actual notice of the suit." But the court noted uncertainty about who bears the burden of proof as to personal jurisdiction in a default judgment case, and ordered supplemental briefing:

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Free Speech

Megan Thee Stallion's Request for Anti-"Cyberstalking" Injunction Against Online Defamer Denied as Prior Restraint

"Plaintiff is allegedly the target of hurtful, angry, offensive, humiliating, racial, and gender-based hate made in online posts by Defendant's followers. As tempting as it might be to force some civility into the matter by staunching Defendant's speech against Plaintiff through an injunction, doing so would ignore the protections of the First Amendment."

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Some excerpts from Judge Cecilia Altonaga (S.D. Fla.) long opinion today in Pete v. Cooper (for more on the earlier phases of the case, see this post):

This case arises out of defamation per se and related state-law claims, brought by Plaintiff, a Grammy-winning hip-hop artist known professionally as Megan Thee Stallion, against Defendant, an online personality who goes by Milagro Gramz or Mobz World. Plaintiff alleges that Defendant orchestrated a retaliatory smear campaign against her because of her role in the 2022 conviction of Daystar Peterson, a Canadian rapper and singer known as Tory Lanez, who, after a widely publicized trial, was found guilty of assaulting Plaintiff with a firearm…

A jury awarded plaintiff $75K for defamation, "promotion of an altered sexual depiction" in violation of a Florida statute, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. But plaintiff also asked the judge for a permanent injunction based on defendant's alleged "cyberstalking"

(1) barring Defendant from any direct, indirect, or third-party contact with Plaintiff; (2) requiring Defendant to remain at least 500 feet from Plaintiff, her home, and any location she is expected to be, and 1,000 feet from her musical performances; (3) prohibiting disclosure of Plaintiff's private personal identifying information; (4) forbidding the promotion, distribution, or transmission of the Deepfake Video or any other altered sexual depictions of Plaintiff; (5) barring defamatory statements regarding Plaintiff's testimony at Daystar Peterson's criminal trial, her mental and emotional state, alcohol use, or family; (6) prohibiting communications intended to incite third parties to threaten or harm Plaintiff, her team, or her family; (7) enjoining harassment, threats, assault, stalking, cyberstalking, impersonation, or other disturbing conduct; and (8) requiring removal of all statements and postings about the jury's Verdict.

No, the court said, partly on the grounds that the requested injunction would be an impermissible prior restraint:

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The Court Has No Interest In Overruling Smith

Fulton was the closest we'll get.

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This morning the Court granted cert in St. Mary Catholic Parish v. Roy. The petition presented three questions:

1. Whether proving a lack of general applicability under Employment Division v. Smith requires showing unfettered discretion or categorical exemptions for identical secular conduct.

2. Whether Carson v. Makin displaces the rule of Employment Division v. Smith only when the government explicitly excludes religious people and institutions.

3. Whether Employment Division v. Smith should be overruled.

The Court, however, only granted on Questions #1 and #2. This will likely be yet another repudiation of Colorado's hostility to religious liberty. Has any other state lost so many cases in a single area of constitutional law?

Yet, the Court denied cert on the third question presented. This is the latest in a string of cert petitions that have asked the Court to overrule Smith. And in each case, the Court declines to go down that road.

It appears that Fulton was the closest we will get to overruling Smith. Justices Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch were prepared to overrule Smith. But that only counts to three.

Justice Kavanaugh has intimated that in light of Roman Catholic Diocese and Tandon, there is no need to overrule Smith. He might be right about that at the Supreme Court, but the lower courts can still distort Smith to rule against religious liberty. Indeed, lower courts are somehow still relying on Lemon, if not by name, to find Establishment Clause violations.

What about Justice Barrett? I suspect she thinks Smith was correctly decided, or at least the decision was correct enough that it should stay in place. That is the received wisdom at Notre Dame Law School. Professor Rick Garnett, her close friend, former colleague, steadfastly defends Smith.

In September 2025, Liz Foley and Mark Pinkert wrote a lengthy op-ed in the Wall Street Journal about how lower court judges were resisting the Supreme Court. The piece had one side reference to Smith:

Although the court has shored up Free Exercise Clause rights over the past five years, it has yet to overrule Employment Division v. Smith (1990), a disastrous decision that gives government officials and courts far too much flexibility to burden religion.

From this single sentence, Garnett felt compelled to write a letter to the editor to defend Smith.

As Ms. Foley and Mr. Pinkert remind us, religious liberty is more vulnerable when government power expands. Those who cherish our "first freedom" should support and advocate policies and laws that respect religious institutions' autonomy and believers' consciences. But when it comes to exemptions from nondiscriminatory government action, the original meaning of the First and Fourteenth Amendments, and the better understanding of the judicial role in our democracy, point toward political solutions, not judicial micromanagement.

Lori Windham from the Becket Fund (counsel in St. Mary) wrote a sur-reply to the WSJ:

Prof. Richard Garnett is a stalwart friend of religious liberty, but he's mistaken that judges would become micromanagers if the Supreme Court overturned Employment Division v. Smith (Letters, Sept. 16).

That 1990 decision was universally unpopular when Justice Antonin Scalia wrote it, and it remains so today. It's why the federal government and more than half the states have passed legislation to ensure that when a law burdens religious practice, believers get their day in court. Instead of the "anarchy" that Justice Scalia and Prof. Garnett envisioned, this has yielded carefully considered judicial decisions in which religious claimants sometimes win and sometimes lose.

Between Garnett and the Becket Fund, Justice Barrett seems to agree with the former.

Litigants can and should keep preserving the question of whether Smith should be overruled, but I do not see a prospect to five, or even four votes.

Supreme Court

Jack Goldsmith on the NYT and the Leaked Supreme Court "Shadow Papers"

A critique of the New York Times "unfortunately tendentious reporting about the memoranda."

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Over at Executive Functions, Jack Goldsmith offers a sharp critique of the way that the New York Times presented and spun the content of the leaked Supreme Court memos concerning whether to stay the Obama Administration's Clean Power Plan.

From the beginning of his post:

The CPP order was unusual, but not because the Court temporarily decided a very important issue via an interim order with no explanation. That had happened quite a lot, even outside the death penalty and election contexts. See for example these two interim orders from 2014 on abortion and same-sex marriage.

The CPP order was novel at the time, I believe, because it temporarily shut down a presidential program even before the court below had a chance to rule on the issue. (The Court did something similar last year in enjoining President Trump's Alien Enemies Act deportations.) Viewed from the perspective of 2026, this order fairly marks the beginning of the Court's modern active engagement with presidential initiatives via interim orders, as Kantor and Liptak suggest.

The CPP memoranda implicate lots of meaty legal and institutional issues which I will analyze in due course. But for now I simply want to flag what I view as unfortunately tendentious reporting about the memoranda, especially but not exclusively about the Chief Justice.

In the remainder of the post, Goldsmith flags some of the many ways in which the NYT's reports spin or frame the memos in a manner that seems to align as much, if not more, with the reporters' priors than with the evidence at hand. Several of his points aligned made by Will Baude. Fortunately, the stories included copies of the memos themselves and much of the other relevant material (such as the briefs submitted to the Court) is a matter of public record so people can judge for themselves.

AI in Court

"It Will Be Your Name and License on the Line, Not ChatGPT's"

A lawyer's duties "do not disappear solely because an attorney chooses to outsource his labor to AI."

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From Judge Kai Scott (E.D. Pa.) today in Bunce v. Visual Tech. Innovations, Inc.:

… Plaintiff … sought reasonable travel costs for a cancelled deposition. In response, Mr. Rajan filed an omnibus motion seeking sanctions and objecting to the Plaintiff's travel costs. Plaintiff responded accordingly, highlighting that although Mr. Rajan was sanctioned previously "for his use of made-up cases and other authorities that did not support his propositions[… ] Rajan has once again used a made-up case and cited to other authorities that don't support his propositions[.]" In his Reply, Mr. Rajan only briefly addressed this issue in a footnote.

On March 11, 2026, this Court Ordered Mr. Rajan to pay Plaintiff all reasonable travel costs, denying his omnibus motion and ordering him to show cause as to why his citations in his omnibus motion did not violate Rule 11(b) or this Court's Standing Order Re: Artificial Intelligence ("AI"). Mr. Rajan filed a response to the Court's Order to Show Cause in which he again responded to the claims of improperly using AI….

Contrary to his assertions, it was patently unreasonable for Mr. Rajan to file his omnibus motion with erroneous citations, at least one of which was made up. In his Response to the Court's Order to Show Cause, Mr. Rajan asserts that "[t]he question is whether a reasonable attorney, under the particular circumstances, would have acted similarly." He answers his own question in the affirmative, stating that a reasonable attorney would have filed the motion with the erroneous citations because the opposing party refused to confer with him on the matter of travel fees.

This is incorrect, both as a characterization of the governing law and what a reasonable attorney would do. As discussed above, the proper question is whether Mr. Rajan should have known that the citations in his filing were incorrect. He should have. As Rule 11 discusses, every attorney and pro se litigant must verify the veracity of their filings before submitting them to this Court. Full stop. It was not enough that Mr. Rajan felt like he had no other choice because opposing counsel refused to meet with him to discuss a matter that the Court already resolved.

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Supreme Court

"The Biggest Scandal Here Is In Fact the Leaks Themselves"

The leak of internal Supreme Court memos could affect how the Court operates.

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Over at Divided Argument, Will Baude comments on the NYT release of internal Supreme Court memos concerning whether to stay the Obama EPA's Clean Power Plan. I largely concur with Baude's assessment.

One point he makes is worth expanding upon. As I noted Saturday, the documents largely confirm what educated observers already suspected about the Court's decision.  Baude writes:

the biggest scandal here is in fact the leaks themselves. Supreme Court leaks like these — including copies of confidential work product — are becoming more common. In my view, this is a bad thing. It will damage the institutional culture of the Court and do little good. But Jodi Kantor is a super-powered investigative reporter, determined to break through some of the Court's norms of confidentiality, and I would bet on her succeeding. If so, we will have to become skilled at figuring out what these documents really tell us, and what they do not.

As Baude notes, leaks of internal documents will affect the Court's institutional culture, and perhaps in ways that those who cheer the leaks might not like.

The fact of the leak indicates to the justices that what they put down on paper and share with each other may not remain confidential. A memo to the other justices may end up in the newspaper (and, as Baude notes, be presented as more scandalous than the content justifies). This cannot help but make justices less likely to put their thoughts on paper--paper that will be seen (and potentially retained) not just by their colleagues, but by law clerks who may be less concerned about maintaining the sort of institutional culture necessary for careful deliberation. [Note in this regard that, as Josh Blackman flagged here, the NYT's Jodi Kantor previously reported that some clerks apparently retain "still-secret older case files," which suggests a possible source for the most recent leak.]

As the justices become increasingly concerned that committing their preliminary thoughts to paper creates the potential for leaks, they are likely to become less willing to commit their thoughts to paper. They may substitute less formal modes of communication, or share thoughts less widely. In short, they are likely to deliberate less amongst themselves and, as a consequence, more likely to rely more upon their jurisprudential instincts and priors in making decisions. If I am right, this could have the inevitable (and perhaps undesirable) effect of more decisions in which the justices divide along predictable ideological lines. Thus insofar as the source(s) of these leaks do not like the Court's orientation, their leaks might help produce a Court even less to their liking.

An Unusual GVR With Three Dissenting Votes

I've seen votes to grant instead of GVR, but I can't recall votes to deny instead of a GVR.

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Today the Supreme Court issued an order in Smith v. Scott, a qualified immunity case.

The petition for a writ of certiorari is granted. The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit for further consideration in light of Zorn v. Linton, 607 U. S. ___ (2026) (per curiam). Justice Sotomayor, Justice Kagan, and Justice Jackson would deny the petition for a writ of certiorari.

Smith had been floating around for a long time. It was first distributed to conference back in September 2025. Zorn, the case that caused the GVR, was first distributed to conference in November 2025, and was decided on March 23, 2026. Justice Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson dissented from that per curiam order.

The ordering here is unusual. Smith was in docket purgatory before Zorn, held while Zorn was being decided, and then about a month later, the Court GVR'd Smith with three dissents. The GVR did not happen right away, as per usual. The GVR took some time. There were some deliberations to be had. It is really unusual for a Justice to dissent from a GVR after an intervening precedent had been issued. Why shouldn't the lower court have an opportunity to apply the new precedent in the first instance? Isn't the usual criticism that the Supreme Court decides too much without giving the lower courts a shot? Perhaps it is even more unusual for the Court to GVR a case based on an un-argued per curiam decision--what some might call the "shadow docket."

I searched Westlaw for a case where one or more Justices would have denied the writ, following a GVR, but could not find anything. (Update: A few colleagues pointed out some cases that I had missed, though the practice is fairly rare.) It is common for Justices to vote to grant the writ to oppose a GVR. This split happened in Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany. But I can't recall a GVR accompanied by three Justices voting to deny. The GVR, by itself, does not settle the case. In theory at least, the matter could come back to the Court. But Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson wanted to end this QI case right away. Or maybe this was some quiet protest of setting precedent on the emergency docket.

Not the most important news of the day, but I found it curious. Rest assured, no resignations are compelled by this order.

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