
Happy Yuri Gagarin Day!
Gagarin was the first man in space, 65 years ago today.

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent | Est. 2002
Gagarin was the first man in space, 65 years ago today.

Another example of the risks of relying upon AI tools to assist in legal research.
Joseph Maldonado, aka Joe Exotic, may be in prison (for charges of animal abuse and attempted murder), but he continues to make legal news.
In 2025, the former reality-TV star sued the Black Pine Animal Sanctuary alleging it mistreated four of the Tiger King's former tigers in violation of the Endangered Species Act (ESA). On April 1, a district court in Indiana dismissed Maldonado's suit for lack of Article III standing. It also sanctioned Maldonado's attorney (Roger Roots) for filing a complaint and other documents containing imaginary citations and misrepresentations of authorities, likely as a consequence of using AI. While the sanctions were not large ($1,500), the court also referred Roots to the Rhode Island disciplinary authorities.
The court's opinion in Maldonado v. Professional Animal Retirement Center begins:
"Are the animals happy? Who the hell knows?" Certainly not Plaintiff Joseph Maldonado, who uttered those words in a 2020 Netflix documentary1 and who is now suing the wildlife park housing some of his former tigers under the citizen suit provision of the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1540(g) ("ESA"). But Maldonado has no connection to these big cats beyond his personal history with them, nor has he ever visited the park. And though he claims he has had "agents" visit the tigers on his behalf, he himself is federally incarcerated and cannot view them in person until his release.
Maldonado filed his Complaint on August 29, 2025, alleging that Defendant Professional Animal Retirement Center ("PARC" or "Black Pine"), a/k/a Black Pine Animal Sanctuary, has "wounded," "harmed," and "harassed" four tigers formerly owned by Maldonado by (1) having them spayed or neutered; (2) forcing them into public observation; and (3) confining them in "woefully inadequate enclosures," all of which Maldonado alleges violate the ESA's prohibition against "taking." (ECF No. 1). Now before the Court is PARC's Motion to Dismiss, in which it argues Maldonado has no Article III standing to sue under the ESA and thus the Court has no subject matter jurisdiction. (ECF No. 11, 12).2 PARC's Motion is now fully briefed (ECF Nos. 17, 18, 19)3 and thus ripe for ruling.
Additionally, the Court issued a Show Cause Order on February 27, 2026 (ECF No. 23) ordering Maldonado's counsel to show good cause, if there be any, for inaccuracies and legal misrepresentations presented in Maldonado's Complaint and briefing. Maldonado's counsel submitted his response on March 27, 2026 (ECF No. 24), accepting responsibility for the misrepresentations but emphasizing that these errors were not made in bad faith. This issue is also ripe for ruling.
The standing ruling is interesting because while Maldonado clearly has a connection to these specific tigers, he has no ability to visit or interact with them. Given his lengthy prison sentence, he cannot even allege any actual or imminent plans to interact with the tigers. According to the court, this is fatal to his standing claim; "The only thing clear at this point is that Maldonado has strong feelings about these cats— but those strong feelings and his hope to work with them in the future are not enough to give this Court subject matter jurisdiction over his claims."
As for the sanctions, this is yet another example of an attorney (or his paralegal) relying upon AI for legal research and then failing to conduct so much as a rudimentary check of its accuracy. As so often occurs in these cases, the attorney claims extenuating circumstances (a "medical emergency" that resulted in relying on a paralegal's work) and dissembles unconvincingly.
From the opinion:
Over three months passed before the Court pointed out these blatant errors, during which time Roots filed a surreply not only discounting as inapplicable the very cases he had cited in his response but also defending the extraordinary length of that brief. And that defense leads the Court to question the veracity of his assertion that the ten-page "Corrected Response" was the version Roots originally intended to file. Indeed, if Roots intended only to file a short brief, he should have caught on that the wrong version was filed when PARC's reply noted an objection to pages 26–37 of Maldonado's response brief as violative of Local Rule 7-1(e)(1) (ECF No. 18 at 1 n.1). At that time, Roots should have notified the Court and PARC of his mistake. Instead, he doubled down to defend the lengthy brief as indicative of "[t]he complexity and importance of the issues here—including questions of ESA standing, jurisdiction, and citizen-suit enforcement…." (ECF No. 19 at 15). So, which is the Court to believe: that the extraordinarily long brief was intentional and should be considered despite its violation of the Local Rules, or that the same brief, riddled with errors, was inadvertently filed instead of a shortened, seemingly more correct brief? . . .
It is abundantly clear that Roots did not make the requisite reasonable inquiry into the law in crafting both the Complaint and the response to PARC's Motion to Dismiss. Had he done his due diligence for either filing, he would have discovered that the opinions and citations he provided were woefully mispresented or else nonexistent. Whether these incorrect filings are the work of generative AI or counsel's own sloppiness, the resulting errors and legal misrepresentations are glaring. And while the Court appreciates Roots' acceptance of some responsibility, these issues nevertheless warrant sanctions.
A final note: Releasing this opinion on April 1 was a nice touch.
4/12/1945: President Harry Truman's inauguration. He would make four appointments to the Supreme Court: Chief Justice Vinson, and Justices Burton, Clark, and Minton.
What’s on your mind?
Petitioner's new-found "public figure" status, and concerns that records are "impeding his employment, professional credibility, and personal safety," don't justify sealing, either.
From Thursday's decision by California Court of Appeal Justice Natalie Stone, joined by Justice John Segal and L.A. Superior Court Judge Alexander Giza, in J.E. v. A.C.:
In April 2016 J.E. filed a petition for a domestic violence restraining order against his then-ex-girlfriend, A.C., and a temporary restraining order was granted pending the hearing on a permanent restraining order. J.E. did not appear at the hearing, and the court dissolved the temporary restraining order and dismissed the case without prejudice for lack of prosecution.
More than eight years after filing the petition, in November 2024, J.E. filed a motion to "seal or destroy" the record of the restraining order proceeding. He cited the "sensitive nature of this matter and the parties' current relationship" and argued "[p]ublic dissemination of this motion and the underlying records could cause irreparable harm to the parties' reputations and privacy," as well as "professional challenges[ ] and emotional distress." …
J.E. supported his motion with a declaration stating he and A.C. had reconciled and were now life partners. He explained he requested the restraining order when the parties "were navigating a complex and emotionally charged dynamic, which led to misunderstandings and impulsive actions on my part." J.E. stated A.C.'s attempts to contact him were "not motivated by malice or harm but rather by her deep affection and immaturity at the time."
He stated the continued existence of the records had drawn "unwanted scrutiny" in his personal and professional life and undermined the couple's efforts to "build a positive future together." He concluded, "I deeply regret filing the restraining order petition in 2016 and have since come to understand the situation in its proper context. [A.C.] had no harmful intentions, and my actions were a reaction to misunderstanding and emotional distress. Destroying these records would bring closure and allow us to continue building our lives together." …
The ruling holds the law exceeds Congress' authority under the tax power and the Necessary and Proper Clause. But it does not consider the Commerce Clause.

Yesterday, in McNutt v. US Department of Justice, the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit struck down an 1868 federal law banning home alcohol distilleries. The court ruled that the law exceeded Congress' authority under the taxing power, and also under the Necessary and Proper Clause. It's an important win for constitutional federalism - as well as for home alcohol distillers! But it's significance is limited by the fact that the court did not consider the possibility that the law is authorized by Congress' power to regulate interstate commerce.
The decision was written by prominent conservative Judge Edith Jones. But the unanimous ruling was joined by liberal Obama appointee Judge James Graves. It's an impressive, and somewhat unusual, cross-ideological agreement on the type of federalism issue that often splits jurists along ideological lines.
Judge Jones is, I think, undeniably right to argue that the tax power cannot justify this law:
[T]he power to "lay and collect Taxes" means Congress can charge or demand money from taxpayers. It is also obvious that the purpose of a tax is to raise revenue for the
government. Indeed, "the essential feature of any tax" is that "[i]t producesat least some revenue for the Government."NFIB v. Sebelius, 567 U.S. 519, 564 (2012)… (emphasis added)….Section 5178(a)(1)(B) and Section 5601(a)(6) exceed these constitutional limits. Primarily, neither provision raises revenue. Not only do they prohibit at-home distilleries, but in so doing, they amount to an anti-revenue provision that prevents distilled spirits from coming into existence. Cf. 26 U.S.C. § 5001(b) (taxation begins "as soon as [the spirit] is in existence"). The provisions operate to reduce revenue instead of raising it. This violates the Supreme Court's explanation of how the federal power of taxation works: "[I]mposition of a tax nonetheless leaves an individual with a lawful choice to do or not do a certain act, so long as he is willing to pay a tax levied on that choice." NFIB, 567 U.S. at 574, 132 S. Ct. at 2600 (emphasis added). These plaintiffs have only the choice not to do as they wish or risk fines and imprisonment.
Exactly so.
The Fifth Circuit also concludes that the law in question exceeds Congress' authority under the Necessary and Proper Clause, which grants the power to makes laws "necessary and proper" for carrying into execution other federal powers. I think the court is right that the law in question is not "proper." The Supreme Court, in NFIB v. Sebelius (2012), ruled that a "proper" power permissible under the Clause is one that is "ancillary" to the implementation of an enumerated power. It cannot be a "great, substantive and independent" power. See my analysis in this article. The power claimed here is clearly "great and independent." As Judge Jones notes, "[u]nder the government's logic, Congress may criminalize nearly any at-home conduct only because it has the possibility of concealing taxable activity."
I am much less persuaded by the court's conclusion that the law here is not "necessary." In McCulloch v. Maryland (1819), Chief Justice John Marshall famously ruled that "necessary" includes any measures that may be "useful" or "convenient" for implementing an enumerated power. I am no fan of this formulation, and tend to believe Thomas Jefferson and James Madison were right to argue that "necessary" means something like "essential." But Marshall's approach is longstanding precedent, unlikely to be overturned. This formulation is so permissive that I cannot think of any other modern precedent that struck down a federal law on the grounds that it isn't "necessary."
Judge Jones instead relies on another passage from McCulloch, which defines "necessary" as "plainly adapted," and thus is potentially more restrictive. But "useful" and "convenient" are the standard formulations embodied in in numerous precedents. And, on that approach, the home distillery ban probably does qualify as "necessary." For example, it might be "useful" or "convenient" to advancing the government's goal of increasing tax revenue, by incentivizing people to engage in activities subject to taxation, rather than home distilling.
Even if the home distillery ban is "necessary," it still isn't "proper." The Fifth Circuit therefore got the bottom line right.
But I would not celebrate too much, just yet. Though this law is not authorized under the tax power or the Necessary and Proper Clause, it could pass muster under Congress' power to regulate interstate commerce, which the Fifth Circuit did not consider, because the government chose not to argue this issue on appeal.
In Gonzales v. Raich (2005), the Supreme Court held that Congress' power to "regulate commerce… among the several states" gives it the authority to forbid the possession and distribution of medical marijuana that had never crossed state lines or even been sold in any market within a state. I believe Raich is one of the Supreme Court's worst-ever federalism decisions. I laid out the reasons why in a 2006 article written soon after the ruling came down. But the Supreme Court doesn't seem inclined to overrule Raich, and indeed refused to hear a case that offered a good opportunity to reconsider it, just a few months ago.
Raich held that the Commerce Clause gives Congress almost unlimited power to regulate any "economic activity" defined as any activity involving the "production, distribution, and consumption of commodities." Alcoholic beverages are pretty obviously commodities, and home distilling involves their production and distribution.
Thus, if the federal government is so inclined, it could potentially try to continue to enforce this law and - if challenged again - defend it under the Commerce Clause. When and if that happens, I hope the Supreme Court will take the opportunity to overrule or at least limit Raich. But I am not optimistic it will happen, at least not in the near future.
As the Fifth Circuit notes, there is at least one other case challenging this law, currently before the Sixth Circuit (the district court in that case had dismissed it on procedural grounds). We shall see what happens with it.
"Market Erasure," "Three Plinths," "The March 2nd Transformation," "Karen" "branding," and "The Commercially Savvy Lawyer."
On March 2, I posted about a court opinion related to a lawsuit brought by lawyer Sonya Shaykhoun. Shaykhoun had sent out a Tweet that proved controversial; sued news outlets for (among other things) copyright infringement based on their including the Tweet in their stories about the controversy; and lost on fair use grounds. She has now filed a Third Amended Complaint in that case (Shaykhoun v. Al Jazeera Media Network (S.D.N.Y.)), and the post makes a cameo appearance. There's a lot more in the 34-page Complaint, but I thought I'd pass along some excerpts:
Plaintiff expands this [Third Amended Complaint] to address a coordinated campaign of professional retaliation—a "Market Erasure"—executed by a Transnational Criminal Organization ("TCO") Plaintiff discovered while auditing Al Jazeera Media Network ("AJMN") in Doha (2011–2014). The TCO operates globally through an institutional network of elite law firms and media proxies to shield its operations and suppress Plaintiff's forensic findings.
This is not a "defamation" case, nor is it a repackaging of defamation claims. Plaintiff brings this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Civil RICO to recover for a coordinated Market Erasure via a seven-year-long continual press assault triggered by Plaintiff's 2019 attempt to expose Osama Abu Dehay's ("Osama") lack of Jordanian law license. Lord Holt recognized in 1698, the "plinths" of law are reputation, personal security, and property ("Three Plinths") are compensable interests….
The Enterprise used "unlawful means" e.g., wire fraud and witness tampering, to interfere with Plaintiff's Three Plinths (Reputation, Personal Security, and Property). This coordinated interference seeks to protect the $Trillion extraction and achieve witness neutralization. The Enterprise launched these attacks to suppress Plaintiff's documented evidence of the licensure void and the professional omissions of the "institutional shield" provided by Pillsbury (FARA No. 5198) and media proxies….
Plaintiff Sonya Hashim Shaykhoun, Esq. is an eighteen-year veteran of the New York Bar (2008, Atty. Reg. # 4633293) with more than 22 years of experience in transactional, commercial, and regulatory matters, including senior in-house roles at major media and aviation entitles in the Arabian Gulf region (Exhibit A). She holds a Masters in English (St Andrews), a BA in Arabic and Law (SOAS), an LL.M. in Corporate and Commercial Law (SOAS), and a specialized LL.M. in Corruption, Law and Governance (Sussex/ROLACC.) …
Pillsbury (FARA No. 5198) used its "award-winning lobbyists" through its Government Law & Strategies Practice to execute a "silver-bullet" solution: branding Plaintiff a "Karen" to reduce the legal and regulatory risk of employing an unlicensed operative for fourteen years.
The March 2nd Transformation: This [institutional] shield facilitated the March 2, 2026, strike on Reason.com, published 96 hours after the Order (Exhibit H.) Citing defense counsel Sullivan and Vaishampayan exclusively, this act masqueraded as "legal commentary" on a case that never hit the press but functioned as a Predicate Act of Witness Tampering to ensure the $Trillion extraction remains buried ("it makes me question the Twitter account title, "The Commercially Savvy Lawyer," which is Plaintiff's online moniker and professional brand.)
4/11/1862: Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes's birthday.

What’s on your mind?
The outcome is unclear. But the judges seemed skeptical of the Trump Administration's claims that Section 122 grants them sweeping tariff powers.

Earlier today, a three-judge panel of the US Court of International Trade (CIT) heard oral arguments in two cases challenging Donald Trump's massive new Section 122 tariffs - one filed by the Liberty Justice Center (LJC) on behalf of two small businesses harmed by the tariffs, and another filed by 24 state governments. After Trump's previous International Emergency Economic Powers Act tariffs were invalidated by the Supreme Court, in a case I helped litigate, along with LJC, Trump tried to use Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act to impose sweeping 10% tariffs on almost all imports (administration officials say they will raise them to 15%).
Section 122 only permits tariffs for up to 150 days in response to "fundamental international payments problems" that cause "large and serious United States balance-of-payments deficits" or "an imminent and significant depreciation of the dollar," or create a need to cooperate with other countries in addressing an "international balance-of-payments disequilibrium." As explained in an amicus brief I filed on behalf of the Cato Institute and myself, and another filed by numerous prominent economists from across the political spectrum, these problems can only occur in a fixed-exchange rate regime of the kind that existed prior to the collapse of the Bretton Woods system in 1973.
In today's oral argument, the three judges asked tough questions of both sides, and I am not sure what the outcome is going to be. But several of the issues raised by the judges are potentially devastating for the Trump Administration.
First, in response to questions from Judge Timothy Stanceu, Trump Justice Department lawyer Brett Shumate repeatedly admitted he cannot say what the balance of payment deficit is right now. He could not even give an estimate. If the Administration does not know what the deficit is, then they have no proof that it is "large and serious," as required to use Section 122. Second, at least two of the judges suggested that the government's theory of Section 122 "proves too much" - meaning that under their interpretation of Section 122, the president can invoke Section 122 virtually any time he wants, because there will always be "fundamental international payments problems" that cause "large and serious United States balance-of-payments deficits." If so, the administration has to lose. As explained in our amicus brief, such a claim to virtually unlimited authority to impose tariffs under Section 122 (subject only to the 15% limit) runs afoul of the major questions doctrine (which requires Congress to speak clearly when delegating vast powers to the executive) and the constitutional nondelegation doctrine, which limits transfer of legislative power to the executive.
At the very least, the major questions doctrine requires a decision against the executive when the latter claims a sweeping delegation of power and there is substantial ambiguity about whether the text of the law actually grants that much authority. And, if there is one thing that today's nearly three-hour long oral argument proved, it's that it's far from clear that Section 122 grants the administration the power it claims. This is another example of the executive claiming that emergency powers intended to be used only in extreme situations are a blank check the President can invoke anytime he wants.
These problems are exacerbated by the Administration's repeated claims in oral argument that courts are not allowed to review the President's claims that the requisite "fundamental international payments problems" and "large and serious United States balance-of-payments deficits" actually exist. If all the President has to do to invoke Section 122 is just claim these things exist, whether or not they actually do, then there is virtually no effective limit on his power. For reasons explained in our brief, he could then easily get around the 150-day time limit simply by asserting that a new balance-of-payments problem exists anytime the original time limit expires.
The judges were also rightly skeptical of the government's claim that trade deficits are enough to trigger Section 122. As one put it in a question to Shumate, "[a]re you really saying that a large trade deficit alone is sufficient?… I don't think it is, and I think Congress didn't think it is."
Shumate also erred in claiming that President Richard Nixon's 1971 tariffs, which likely helped influence the development of Section 122, were enacted in response to a trade deficit. As Phil Magness of the Independent Institute points out, the US actually had a trade surplus when those tariffs were imposed. Ironically, in the earlier IEEPA litigation, the Trump Administration rightly noted that trade deficits "are conceptually distinct from balance-of-payments deficits," and thus that Section 122 has no "obvious application" to the President's efforts to use IEEPA in response to trade deficits.
It is true that, in its ruling against the IEEPA tariffs in the case I helped bring last year, the Court of International Trade indicated that Section 122 can be used to counter trade deficits in at least some circumstances. But, as at least two judges noted today, that statement was dictum, not necessary to the Court's holding. We made the same point in our amicus brief (pg. 8). Thus, it isn't any kind of binding precedent. Significantly, neither the Federal Circuit nor the Supreme Court relied on Section 122 when they upheld the CIT's ruling against the tariffs.
Finally, today's oral argument featured considerable discussion about the issue of why the Section 122 was enacted in 1974-75, given that the fixed exchange rate regime ended in 1973. The answer - discussed more fully in our amicus brief and that of the economists - is that many thought the fixed exchange regime might be brought back in some form. The uncertainty over that issue did not end until the Jamaica Agreement of 1976. Today we know that Section 122 was obsolete from the day it was enacted. But Congress and the President could not be sure of that at the time.
In sum, we cannot know with any certainty what the CIT will decide. And, whatever decision they make will almost certainly be appealed, perhaps even all the way to the Supreme Court. But I am hopeful both the CIT judges and appellate judges who review their decision will realize that, at the very least, Section 122 does not clearly grant Trump the sweeping tariff authority he claims. In that crucial respect, the Section 122 tariffs are a massive power grab similar to that which courts rejected in the IEEPA litigation.
Some excerpts from the 88 pages of opinions in AFSCME v. Social Security Admin., decided today by the Fourth Circuit en banc, in an opinion by Judge Toby Heytens:
Three organizations sued to stop the Social Security Administration from giving U.S. DOGE Service personnel access to sensitive personal information about millions of Americans. The district court granted a preliminary injunction, which the Supreme Court stayed pending this appeal and any further Supreme Court review. We now vacate the current preliminary injunction and return the case to the district court for further proceedings….
On January 20, 2025, the President signed an executive order creating the U.S. DOGE Service and charging it with making government technology more efficient. DOGE personnel quickly made their way to the Social Security Administration and sought "unprecedented" access to agency systems, including non-anonymized personally identifiable information. A standoff ensued, and career officials resigned. A new acting administrator was installed and granted DOGE the sweeping access it sought.
Three organizations representing a combined seven million Americans sued to prevent DOGE from accessing their members' personally identifiable information. When the case was filed and in the original preliminary injunction proceedings, plaintiffs' theory of the case was not that DOGE had misused the information or disclosed it (accidentally or otherwise) to malicious actors. Instead, plaintiffs argued that handing over non-anonymized and highly sensitive information to DOGE was itself unlawful.
After hours of hearings and hundreds of pages of analysis, the district court issued the preliminary injunction we review here. The Supreme Court stayed that preliminary injunction and directed that the stay would remain in effect until the completion of all appellate review—including by the Supreme Court—of the district court's order. We have jurisdiction to review the district court's order ….
The court concluded that the plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged injury, for purposes of standing:
Phony checks, a twinkling of an eye, and sparkling sports gambling.
Please enjoy the latest edition of Short Circuit, a weekly feature written by a bunch of people at the Institute for Justice.
New cert petition! In 2022, a SWAT team blew up IJ client Carlos Pena's print shop in Los Angeles while trying to apprehend a fugitive—and the city stuck Carlos with the tab. But the Fifth Amendment requires just compensation when the gov't intentionally damages or destroys an innocent person's property, so we're asking the Supreme Court to take up the case and remind lower courts that that's been the law for a long time. (Click here for a lovingly crafted podcast on the history.)
This week on the Short Circuit podcast: We dive into the Byzantine flowchart that is civil forfeiture, as detailed in IJ's new report Policing for Profit 4.
The kids climate cases continue to have standing problems in federal court.
Today the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court's dismissal of the G. B. v. U.S. EPA kids climate suit. The court seemingly had no trouble resolving this case, as it was only argued on March 5.
In this suit the plaintiffs argued, among other things, that the practice of discounting in assessing the threat of climate change is unconstitutional as it discriminates against younger people and future generations. The court did not reach the substance of this claim, concluding the plaintiffs lacked standing. Specifically, the panel found that the plaintiffs could not satisfy any of standing's three elements.
Of note, the Ninth Circuit dismissed the case without leave to amend the complaint. While the plaintiffs are likely to seek further review, such as through a petition for rehearing en banc or a petition for certiorari, this should effectively end this case
Judge Milan Smith wrote for the panel, joined by Judges Nelson and Gould. His opinion for the panel begins:
Plaintiffs-Appellants are eighteen minors who sue the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and other federal entities and officials (collectively, the Government) to challenge an economic tool that the EPA sometimes consults in its rulemaking process. Plaintiffs allege that the Government has a policy and practice of promulgating rules regulating greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in reliance on cost-benefit analyses that "discount" the value of future costs and benefits. Discounting allows agencies like the EPA to translate the future value of money into present-day value, so they can compute the projected effects of a proposed regulation over time. Rooted in the "time value of money," discounting seeks to account for the economic observation that a dollar today is generally more valuable than a dollar tomorrow.
According to Plaintiffs, the EPA's use of discounting discriminates against children like them in violation of their constitutional rights because it favors present-day consumption over future consumption, which, Plaintiffs say, advantages adults at the expense of minors. Plaintiffs further allege that GHG regulations predicated on discounted future costs and benefits harm the environment because they allow greater GHG emissions (when compared against hypothetical regulations lacking this predicate), which in turn leads to increased atmospheric temperatures and extreme weather events, ultimately causing Plaintiffs to suffer a litany of downstream harms, such as damage to their homes, respiratory ailments, and anxiety over climate change.
The district court held that Plaintiffs lacked standing to pursue these claims. Rather than satisfying the familiar requirements of injury, causation, and redressability, the district court determined that Plaintiffs' lawsuit stumbled on all three. In particular, the court concluded that Plaintiffs' discrimination theory did not assert a cognizable injury-infact; that Plaintiffs' alleged environmental injuries are not fairly traceable to the Government's use of discounting; and that Plaintiffs' request for declaratory relief is unlikely to redress their asserted harms. Because of these deficiencies, the district court declined to grant Plaintiffs a third opportunity to plead their claims. We agree with the district court and now affirm.
A different panel of the Ninth Circuit (Owens, Van Dyke, and Sung) will hear oral argument in yet another kids climate case, Trump v. Lighthiser, on Monday.
The court doesn't decide whether Meta actually violated state law, or whether it may have a First Amendment defense; those decisions will be made later in the case.
From today's opinion in Commonwealth v. Meta Platforms, Inc., written by Justice Dalila Argaez Wendlandt, for a unanimous court:
The Commonwealth alleges that Meta Platforms, Inc., and Instagram, LLC (collectively, Meta), engaged in unfair business practices by designing the Instagram platform to induce compulsive use by children, engaged in deceptive business practices by deliberately misleading the public about the safety of the platform, and created a public nuisance by engaging in these unfair and deceptive practices.
The court concluded that § 230 doesn't bar Massachusetts' claims (note that no First Amendment claims were discussed in the opinion). It began by offering the following interpretation of § 230(c)(1) immunity:
Section 230(c)(1) provides: "No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as [1] the publisher or speaker of any information [2] provided by another information content provider." …
[A] claim treats a defendant as a publisher of information at common law [and therefore under § 230(c)(1)] where the claim (a) makes the defendant liable for intentionally or negligently publishing information to someone other than the subject of the information (dissemination element) and (b) seeks to impose liability based on the content of the information published (content element)…. Indeed, in each case relied on by Meta where the court determined that § 230 immunity applied, save one {In re Social Media Adolescent Addiction/Personal Injury Prods. Liab. Litig. (N.D. Cal. 2024), appeal pending}, the harm alleged was traceable to the content of the information published….
The next requirement of § 230(c)(1) immunity is that the relevant "information [was] provided by another information content provider." … [Section] 230(c)(1) does not provide immunity where liability is based on the provider's own speech….
Applying this test, the court concluded that Massachusetts' addiction-of-minors claims weren't preempted by § 230(c)(1), because they focused on Meta's content-neutral design features:
"In essence, the plaintiffs argue that every time a Jew or Jewish organization contributes to (in this instance) a public university and that university, acting under established policy, disciplines a student who advocates for, in this instance, 'particularly Palestinian" policies, the simultaneous presence of the contribution and the discipline creates a plausible inference of a conspiracy between the contributor and the university to punish the "particularly Palestinian' advocate."
Yesterday's opinion by Judge Steven Merryday (M.D. Fla.) in Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society rejects various First Amendment claims stemming from the group's expulsion by the University, largely for the reasons given in a decision I posted about in January. But it adds the following, responding to the plaintiffs' conspiracy claims:
The plaintiffs allege in the conspiracy claim (and without factual support) (1) that each defendant acted "outside the course and scope of … employment," (2) that "[e]ach individual defendant knew or should have known that their actions were in violation of Plaintiffs' constitutional rights," and "[i]n the alternative" (3) that "each Defendant acted with callous or reckless indifference [to] the Plaintiffs' rights." … In support of their conspiracy claim (or, absent sufficiently particularized facts, their conspiracy theory), the plaintiffs allege:
On May 5, 2024, the Tampa Jewish Community Centers & Federation (JCC) published a letter commending the USF administration for its zero-tolerance approach to Palestinian and allied student organizing against Israel's actions in Gaza since October 2023, and thanking [President] Law for meeting with them on multiple occasions and "work[ing]" with them to address "anti-Israel activity on campus" by what it called "anti-Israel students and agitators."
The JCC stated that the USF administration met with the Tampa Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC) on multiple occasions since October 7, 2023, had been in 'ongoing contact' (outside the sunshine) with 'several key stakeholder groups,' had met with the Deputy Consul General of Israel for Florida, had watched a 42-minute propaganda film about Hamas, and had been paying for around-the-clock police presence at … Hillel [another Jewish Organization].
4/10/1967: Loving v. Virginia argued.
What’s on your mind?
She blames her colleagues for the emergency docket situation, and faults Justice Kavanaugh for not knowing people who earn an hourly wage.
Justice Sotomayor is on a speaking tour. In a series of public remarks, she has offered some striking comments about her colleagues.
On Wednesday, she spoke in Lawrence, Kansas about Justice Kavanaugh's concurrence in Noem v. Vasquez Perdomo.
"I had a colleague in that case who wrote, you know, these are only temporary stops," Sotomayor said, referencing a concurrence written by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, during an event Tuesday hosted by the University of Kansas School of Law. "This is from a man whose parents were professionals. And probably doesn't really know any person who works by the hour." . . .
"Those hours that they took you away, nobody's paying that person," she said. "And that makes a difference between a meal for him and his kids that night and maybe just cold supper." . . .
Why on earth would she drag Justice Kavanaugh's parents into this? President Trump was recently castigated for saying that Justices Gorsuch's and Barrett's families should be ashamed of them. Here, Justice Sotomayor is shaming Justice Kavanaugh because his parents were "professionals." Has Justice Sotomayor ever googled "Martha Kavanaugh"? Mrs. Kavanaugh taught history at a public school. I suppose being a teacher is a "professional." Both of Justice Kavanaugh's parents attended law school while raising their son. That should be admirable, right? But Justice Sotomayor just assumes they have white privilege.
As for the claim that Justice Kavanaugh "doesn't really know any person who works by the hour," that claim is demonstrably false. Many of the employees at the Supreme Court earn an hourly wage. Does Kavanaugh know none of them? We know from the confirmation process that at one of his high school friends worked at a grocery store. Moreover, Justice Kavanaugh has long volunteered to hand out meals to homeless people in the District of Columbia. These individuals likely earn an hourly wage, if that. But why make this claim at all? This was certainly on Justice Sotomayor's mind for some time, and she felt compelled to say it aloud.
Sotomayor continued:
"Life experiences teach you to think more broadly and to see things others may not," Sotomayor said. "And when I have a moment where I can express that on behalf of people who have no other voice, then I'm being given a very rare privilege."
This comment about "life experiences" harkens back to her "Wise Latina" speech. I would encourage you to read Ed Whelan's recent Confirmation Tales post on the topic. Sotomayor gave this speech many times, and certainly believes it. I suppose a "Wise Latina," with the richness of her experiences, gains insights on the meaning of the Fourth Amendment that the son of two white lawyers lacks.
Justice Kavanaugh's parents routinely attend Court sessions. I hope Justice Sotomayor apologizes for this remark.
Why would Justice Sotomayor say something like this to publicly shame her colleague? The answer, I think, would be revealed during remarks on Thursday at the University of Alabama.
"I dare say that with virtually all of them, I certainly have a civil relationship. And with many of them, I think I dare say that I have a friendship,"
Virtually? That means less than all. There are apparently some Justices that she does not have a "civil relationship" with. There are only eight other Justices. How many is "virtually all"? Seven? Six? She is friends with many. That would seem to be a majority, so perhaps five? So she is friends with five, and has a civil relationship with six or seven? Is that where are? The fact that Justice Sotomayor is taking public shots at Justice Kavanaugh suggests their relationship is not on the "sunrise side of the mountain."
Who else doesn't make the cut? I think back to the kerfuffle from 2022 when Justice Gorsuch refused to wear a mask and Justice Sotomayor was apparently troubled. Gorsuch and Sotomayor issued a joint statement saying "While we may sometimes disagree about the law, we are warm colleagues and friends." Is that no longer true? Are they no longer friends? With the benefit of hindsight, that statement seems as sincere as hostages reading a script with a gun pointed to their head.
Justice Sotomayor also blamed her conservative colleagues for the shadow docket emergency:
The Supreme Court has itself to blame for the flood of emergency appeals it's now receiving, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said Thursday.
"We've done it to ourselves," Sotomayor said during an appearance at the University of Alabama Law School. "The newspapers are filled with reports about how many emergency motions we are receiving. It's unprecedented in the court's history."
Is Justice Sotomayor okay? I follow the Supreme Court very closely. Too closely, maybe. But this level of obsession allows me to notice when things change. And my spider senses are tingling with Justice Sotomayor. Something seems very off this term, much more than usual. There was a recent red flag during oral argument in Trump v. Barbara.
Justice Sotomayor asked Cecilia Wang, counsel for the ACLU, about an apparently non-existent case:
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: Ms. Wang, on the earlier answer you gave to Justice Gorsuch on the temporary sojourners' cases, those were distinct cases, correct, where the parents had come to the U.S. and didn't want to give citizenship to their kids, took them out immediately, correct?
MS. WANG: I'm sorry, Justice Sotomayor, I'm not sure which cases you're referring to.
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: All right. I'll --I'll --that, we can look it up.
And in at least three recent cases, Justice Sotomayor forgot her spot during the round-robin questioning and jumped in when it wasn't her turn: Watson v. RNC, Enbridge Energy v. Nessel, and Wolford v. Lopez.
I suspect at some point, people will look at Justice Sotomayor, who did not step down during the Biden Administration, the same way that people look at Justice Ginsburg, who did not step down during the Obama Administration.
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