The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent | Est. 2002
First Amendment Challenge to Suspension from University of Texas for Pro-Palestinian Protest Can Go Forward
From today's opinion by Judge Robert Pitman (W.D. Tex.) in Qaddumi v. Hartzell:
Qaddumi challenges his suspension from the University of Texas at Austin ("UT"), where Defendants currently work or previously worked as administrators, as a violation of his constitutional rights. Qaddumi was involved in planning a protest, to include a "walk out of class," "guest speaker," and two "teach-in[s]", about ongoing violence in Gaza in April 2024 as a member of the Palestine Solidarity Committee ("PSC").
He alleges these planned protest activities were peaceful in nature, but university officials claimed that protests held by aligned groups at "Columbia, Rutgers, and Yale" were "creating campus encampments" (apparently referencing the Students for Justice in Palestine ("SJP") student group, a separate entity with groups on those campuses) and have disrupted university operations to such a degree that they foresaw this, too, would disrupt university activities. UT issued a directive to students ordering them not to hold the event, or to face discipline under the university rules. Qaddumi alleges the PSC responded to UT's directive and explained that the planned protest was peaceful and educational in nature, and that they had no plans for setting up an overnight "encampment."
Separately, in March 2024, the Governor of Texas issued an executive order defining PSC as a "radical" organization and defining as "antisemitic" phrases that PSC uses at protests, such as "from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free," and stating views many of its members hold, such as saying that Israel's current policies compare to those of Germany during World War II, are also antisemitic. The executive order instructed UT to "ensure that [its] policies are being enforced and that groups such as the [PSC] and [SJP] are disciplined for violating [UT] policies."
Qaddumi, along with other students, proceeded with the April 2024 protest despite the directive to cancel it. Members of the UT Police Department arrived at the protest and called for students to disperse their protest, and Qaddumi alleges he relayed their instructions to the crowd. On accusations of criminal trespass, UT police officers subsequently arrested Qaddumi among other students. After his arrest, Qaddumi alleges he and his fellow protesters were released and charged with no crimes.
At the protest, Qaddumi alleges that counter-protesters were present holding Israeli flags and signs criticizing Palestine, who were not arrested. Qaddumi also alleges that students have held similar protests in the past who were not arrested or subject to a police response, such as an August 2020 demonstration in response to the murder of George Floyd; an April 2023 demonstration about compensation for graduate student work; and an April 2024 protest about the university firing staff members focused on advancing diversity and inclusion.
Short Circuit: An inexhaustive weekly compendium of rulings from the federal courts of appeal
Discretionary lawn care, Agent Orange, and banished from South Georgia.
Please enjoy the latest edition of Short Circuit, a weekly feature written by a bunch of people at the Institute for Justice.
Victory! Yesterday, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled in favor of an innocent Atlanta family, represented by IJ, whose home was mistakenly raided by an FBI SWAT team. The Court undismissed all five of the family's claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act and rejected a novel and atextual rule that the Eleventh Circuit had invented to ding worthy cases. Click here to learn more.
New on the Short Circuit podcast: A whodunit with a serial-fabulist detective.
- Sesquipedalian federal judge Bruce Selya may be gone, but his influence lives on in First Circuit citations like this one: See Cohen v. Brown Univ., 16 F.4th 935, 944 (1st Cir. 2021) (concluding that an argument was preserved where "we have no reason to doubt that the district court grasped the gist of the [party's] argument" even though it was not made "with lapidary precision"). In other news, the First Circuit grants a new trial to a Puerto Rican man convicted of possessing a machine gun, whose objection to the conditions under which the jurors examined the weapon was just lapidarian enough to get the job done.
- In the latest as-applied attempt by a nonviolent convicted felon to get back his right to keep and bear arms, we have a New York man who in 2015 was convicted for defrauding a bank of tens of millions of dollars and cheating on over $1 mil in taxes. Second Circuit: We used to hang felons like you. That's why there "are no twins of the modern felon-in-possession laws" from the Founding. At least you've got your health. Read More
Sealing, COVID, and the Fed (Well, the Minneapolis Branch)
From Judge Eric Tostrud (D. Minn.) last week in Maki v. Fed. Reserve Bank of Minneapolis:
On May 21, 2025, the Court docketed an Opinion and Order resolving motions to exclude expert testimony and for summary judgment. [It's available here. -EV] On May 27, Defendant Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis moved to seal the Opinion and Order. The Bank "seeks to keep confidential three narrow categories of information: (1) details regarding law enforcement shifts and staffing at the Bank, (2) references to staffing of security posts at the Bank, and (3) discussion of modifications to the Bank's security protocols during the COVID-19 pandemic."
In the Bank's view, "there are compelling national security and safety reasons" that justify preventing public "disclosure of information that could provide insights and impressions about the Bank's security, regardless of whether the information is about currently-in-force protocols." If its motion is granted, the Bank proposes to "submit a confidential copy of the Order with the confidential portions marked for the Court's review." If the Court approves of the proposed redactions, then the Bank proposes that the Opinion and Order be republished with the redactions….
"[T]he courts of this country recognize a general right to inspect and copy public records and documents, including judicial records and documents." "This right of access bolsters public confidence in the judicial system by allowing citizens to evaluate the reasonableness and fairness of judicial proceedings, and to keep a watchful eye on the workings of public agencies." "It also provides a measure of accountability to the public at large, which pays for the courts." … When it attaches, a court must decide "whether there [are] sufficient grounds to override the common-law right of access" that justify sealing the judicial record ….
The Bank's motion will be denied. (1) The information subject to the Bank's motion was material and important to the decision denying the parties' competing summary-judgment motions. It figured centrally in deciding whether the Bank could accommodate Mr. Maki's religious objections to the Bank's COVID-19 vaccination policy without incurring undue hardship. Put another way, the rationale underlying the accommodation and undue-hardship analysis cannot realistically be understood without accessing this information.
$1.85M Dentist-on-Dentist Defamation Verdict Upheld
An interesting illustration of how big-dollar defamation verdicts can stem not from mass media publications or influencer social media posts, but from employment disputes.
From Brown v. Grundy, decided June 3 by Virginia Court of Appeals Judge Clifford Athey, joined by Judges Randolph Beales and Dominique Callins:
Dr. Brown and Dr. Grundy met while attending dental school together in the 1990s. In 2013, Dr. Brown hired Dr. Grundy to work for Charles H. Brown, III, D.D.S., P.C. as a licensed dentist. Over the course of Dr. Grundy's employment with the dental practice, the professional relationship between the dentists became strained due to, inter alia, disputes over access to "patient personal financial and account data." Eventually, in the fall of 2018, Dr. Brown and Dr. Grundy filed formal complaints against each other with the Virginia Department of Health Professions. On December 6, 2018, Dr. Brown subsequently terminated Dr. Grundy's employment with Charles H. Brown, III, D.D.S., P.C. When Dr. Grundy was terminated, the dental practice employed "7-9 full time associates," and Dr. Grundy estimated that he was the primary dentist for approximately 750 patients.
Dr. Brown drafted and published a December 4, 2018 letter, which was mailed to the patients of the dental practice, outlining his alleged reasons for terminating Dr. Grundy. In addition, the December 4th letter apologized "for the situation," committed to providing "additional information," and offered to review any past treatment provided by Dr. Grundy.
Grundy sued, and the court concluded that his claim could go forward based on these statements:
Judge Grants TRO Against President Trump's Federalizing California National Guard [FURTHER UPDATE: Ninth Circuit Grants Stay]
The order is stayed until noon tomorrow (June 13), and I expect the federal government will ask the Ninth Circuit and, if necessary, the Supreme Court for a further emergency stay.
FURTHER UPDATE 6/13/2025 10:32 am: The Ninth Circuit has temporarily stayed the order (Judges Mark Bennett, Eric Miller, and Jennifer Sung):
The court has received the government's emergency motion for stay pending appeal. Dkt. No. 5. The request for an administrative stay is GRANTED. The district court's June 12, 2025 temporary restraining order is temporarily stayed pending further order. See Doe #1 v. Trump, 944 F.3d 1222, 1223 (9th Cir. 2019). The response to the emergency motion is due June 15, 2025 at 9:00 AM PDT. The optional reply in support of the emergency motion is due June 16, 2025 at 9:00 AM PDT. The panel will hold a remote hearing by Zoom on June 17, 2025 at 12:00 PM PDT.
[Originally posted on 6/12/2025 at 8:58 pm, bumped up to note stay materials and later to note the stay itself.]
From Judge Charles Breyer (N.D. Cal.) just now in Newsom v. Trump:
On June 6, 2025, the federal government initiated immigration raids across the City of Los Angeles. Protests swiftly followed, and some individuals involved in those protests were unruly and even violent. State and local law enforcement responded. The following day, President Trump ordered that members of the California National Guard be federalized, and thereupon assumed control of those forces.
At this early stage of the proceedings, the Court must determine whether the President followed the congressionally mandated procedure for his actions. He did not. His actions were illegal—both exceeding the scope of his statutory authority and violating the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. He must therefore return control of the California National Guard to the Governor of the State of California forthwith.
The judge's order:
- Defendants are temporarily ENJOINED from deploying members of the California National Guard in Los Angeles.
- Defendants are DIRECTED to return control of the California National Guard to Governor Newsom.
- The Court further STAYS this order until noon on June 13, 2025.
UPDATE 6/12/2025 9:08 pm: A notice of appeal to the Ninth Circuit has already been filed, though I also expect an emergency stay motion to come as well.
UPDATE 6/12/2025 10:04 pm: The emergency motion for a stay has been filed in the Ninth Circuit; the Introduction:
Police Shootings Data
A very interesting new site, PoliceShootingsData.com, put up to provide the data discussed by political science professors Tom S. Clark (Chicago, formerly Emory), Adam N. Glynn (Emory), and Michael Leo Owens (Emory) in their Deadly Force: Police Shootings in Urban America. There's lots of raw data there, searchable in many ways, though you might start by looking at the key findings. Looks very useful; here's the quick summary:
Sometimes police officers use their guns during encounters with the public. When police shoot, they may strike or miss. Police shootings may wound or kill. They may be justified or unjustified.
But knowing exactly how often, when, where, and whom police shoot in the U.S.A. is unreasonably hard. It's true for cities, suburbs, and rural areas.
PoliceShootingsData.com lets you explore, download, share and use police shootings data for mid-to-large cities. These data are from open records requests of 300 police departments for records from every time a police officer discharged a firearm in all cities with 100,000 or more residents as of 2010.
Our site is intended to inform perspectives on police shootings in U.S. cities. It also provides access to replication materials to reproduce and evaluate the analyses for and findings from the new book Deadly Force: Police Shootings in Urban America. Plus, it exhibits original sequential art to help make police shootings, especially data about them, more public.
My New Verfassungsblog Article On "The Nondelegation Case Against Trump's New Travel Ban"
It explains why a nondelegation challenge could work and deserves to win, despite Trump v. Hawaii.
Verfassungsblog just published my article "The Nondelegation Case Against Trump's New Travel Ban." This site is a prominent German academic forum devoted to analysis of public law issues. Here is an excerpt from the article:
Last week, President Donald Trump imposed a massive travel ban, barring nearly all immigration and other entry into the United States by citizens of twelve nations, and imposing severe restrictions on seven more. The twelve nations subjected to near-total bans are Afghanistan, Burma, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen. The other seven are Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, and Venezuela.
As the American Immigration Council explains, barring nearly all migrants from these countries will significantly damage the US economy, and have negative humanitarian effects, as well. Migrants from many of these countries – including Afghanistan, Cuba, Iran, and Venezuela – are fleeing horrific poverty and oppression by communist, radical Islamist, and other authoritarian regimes. If Trump and the Republican Party truly cared about combating communism and radical Islamism, as they like to claim, they would not shut America's doors to their victims.
The security rationales for the travel ban – reducing crime and terrorism – are extremely flimsy. Immigrants from the countries in question have extremely low rates of terrorism and much lower crime rates than native-born Americans.
Despite the enormous harm likely to be caused by the travel ban, many assume there is no effective way to challenge it in court. The Supreme Court's badly flawed ruling in Trump v. Hawaii (2018) – addressing Trump's first-term "Muslim ban" – probably precludes challenges based on discriminatory intent. Other factors may block that sort of challenge, as well. Nonetheless, there is an alternative path to striking down the new travel ban: the nondelegation doctrine. That path remains open because Trump v. Hawaii did not consider nondelegation issues; indeed, the word "nondelegation" is not even mentioned in any of the five majority, concurring, and dissenting opinions in that ruling. So, while it may not be easy to mount a successful legal challenge to the ban, the combination of its enormous scope and the weaknesses of its ostensible rationales could open the door to a successful nondelegation claim.
The rest of the article explains the basis for a nondelegation claim, and addresses potential objections, including the idea that the power to restrict immigration is actually an executive authority, rather than a congressional one.
No Sealing in Multi-Billionaire Leon Black's Attempt to Enforce Arbitration Subpoena
"Federal judges and their court staff are not legal pawns to be deployed in secret by wealthy disputants trying to get private answers to their problems."
From Monday's decision by Magistrate Judge Reid Neureiter (D. Colo.) in Black v. Emerson:
This case involves a Petition to Compel Compliance with an Arbitral Subpoena …, filed March 31, 2025. In connection with that filing, Petitioner Leon Black also filed a motion to seal (restrict from public access) the entire proceeding—including the petition itself….
According to the Petition, this matter concerns Mr. Emerson's alleged failure to comply with a subpoena for the production of documentary evidence that was duly signed and issued by a JAMS arbitration panel (the "Panel") pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"). The Panel is presiding over an arbitration currently pending in New York County, New York, entitled Leon Black v. Joshua Harris (the "Arbitration"). The arbitration clause of the relevant agreement provides that discovery issues are to be "guided generally by … the United States Federal Rules of Civil Procedure," and specifically authorizes the Panel to issue third-party subpoenas ….
As justification for the restriction, Mr. Black argues that the Arbitration is a dispute over a contract which is subject to a mandatory confidentiality provision. Discovery in the Arbitration is, as required by the contract, subject to a confidentiality order which restricts the use of confidential or proprietary documents or information produced by any party or nonparty, including Mr. Emerson. And, Mr. Black, as a party to the Arbitration, is subject to the jurisdiction of the Panel, which has further ordered Mr. Black to use reasonable efforts to file all confidential information under seal….
"Although courts have discretion, sealing litigation documents, to say nothing of entire cases, is disfavored in the United States." … The public has a fundamental interest in understanding the disputes presented to and decided by our courts, so as to assure that they are run fairly and that judges act honestly. Sealing an entire case prevents critical public monitoring of the judge and judicial process:
Plaintiff Alleges Tax Code "Establishes a Religion of 'Taxism' and a 'Systematic Theology of THEIRS'"
From Wednesday's decision by Judge Audrey Fleissig (E.D. Mo.) in Hinds v. Trump:
Self-represented Plaintiff Terry Lee Hinds filed a complaint in this matter titled "Petition For [Judicial] Review, Judgment or Decree and for all Writs Necessary or Appropriate to this Case as well Issue Writs Agreeable to Usages & Principles of Law." The complaint comprises 249 pages and 1,226 paragraphs, and it is substantially similar to a lawsuit he previously filed, which this Court dismissed in 2017. In this lawsuit, like the last one, Plaintiff generally alleges that the Internal Revenue Code (the "Code") establishes a religion and, as such, violates the First Amendment's Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses….
In his current complaint, Plaintiff reiterates many of the same allegations raised in Hinds I. Specifically, he alleges that the Code establishes a religion of "taxism" and a "Systematic Theology of THEIRS," and that Internal Revenue System ("IRS") functions such as auditing, issuing refunds, and approving credits all create a religious relationship between the taxpayer and the government. Plaintiff believes that these facts demonstrate Defendants acting in their official capacities violated Plaintiff's religious freedom rights under the First Amendment….
The court unsurprisingly rejected the claim, mostly on sovereign immunity grounds and statutory grounds, but it also noted:
50 Years Ago Today, My Parents Brought Sasha and Me out of the USSR
What a long, lovely trip it's been!
Today in Supreme Court History: June 13, 1977
6/13/1977: Justice Tom C. Clark dies.
Federal Court Rightly Invalidates Trump's Illegal Federalization of California National Guard Troops
Trump's policy here is yet another example of abusive invocation of emergency powers.
Earlier tonight, in Newsom v. Trump, Federal District Court Judge Charles Breyer issued a ruling against President Donald Trump's federalization of some 4000 California National Guard troops for the ostensible purpose of quelling violent protests against ICE deportations in Los Angeles. Judge Breyer's opinion strikes me as impressive and compelling, especially considering how quickly it was produced. The issue raised here is an important one, and part of a broader pattern of abuse of emergency powers by the Trump Administration.
As Judge Breyer explains, National Guard troops are normally under the control of their state governments, and can only be federalized in narrowly specified emergency circumstances. The statute Trump relied on to federalize California National Guard troops, 10 U.S.C. Section 12406, can only be used in one of the following situations:
1) the United States, or any of the Commonwealths or possessions, is invaded or is in danger of invasion by a foreign nation;
(2) there is a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States; or
(3) the President is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States
There is obviously no "invasion" of LA by a foreign nation. Trump relies mainly on the claim that there is a "rebellion." Judge Breyer effectively rebuts it. Utilizing definitions from the period around 1903 (when this law was enacted), he conclude a "rebellion" must have 4 characteristics:
First, a rebellion must not only be violent but also be armed. Second, a rebellion must be organized. Third, a rebellion must be open and avowed. Fourth, a rebellion must be against the government as a whole—often with an aim of overthrowing the government—rather than in opposition to a single law or issue.
In addition to fitting contemporary understandings at the time of enactment, this definition has the virtue of ensuring that a "rebellion" is an unusual emergency situation, not an everyday occurrence. If "rebellion" is defined as any violent resistance to law enforcement, then rebellions are occurring in virtually every city virtually every day; for example, any time suspects forcibly resist arrest by police.
By this standard, events in LA obviously do not qualify as a "rebellion":
The protests in Los Angeles fall far short of "rebellion." Defendants refer repeatedly to "violent rioters," and "mobs," see, e.g., Opp. at 1, and so the Court pauses to state that there can be no debate that most protesters demonstrated peacefully. Nonetheless, it is also beyond debate that some individuals used the protests as an excuse for violence and destruction. Some bad actors on June 6 threw "concrete chunks, bottles of liquid, and other objects at … officers," Santacruz Decl. ¶ 11, and used "chairs, dumpsters, and other items as weapons," id. ¶ 14. Others threw rocks and other objects, including a Molotov cocktail, on June 7….
Violence is necessary for a rebellion, but it is not sufficient. Even accepting the
questionable premise that people armed with fireworks, rocks, mangoes, concrete, chairs, or bottles of liquid are "armed" in a 1903 sense—the Court is aware of no evidence in the record of actual firearms—there is little evidence of whether the violent protesters' actions were "open or avowed…"Nor is there evidence that any of the violent protesters were attempting to overthrow the government as a whole; the evidence is overwhelming that protesters gathered to protest a single issue—the immigration raids…..
While Defendants have pointed to several instances of violence, they have not identified a violent, armed, organized, open and avowed uprising against the government as a whole. The definition of rebellion is unmet. Moreover, the Court is troubled by the implication inherent in Defendants' argument that protest against the federal government, a core civil liberty protected by the First Amendment, can justify a finding of rebellion…..
The Administration's advocacy of an ultra-broad definition of "rebellion" here is similar to its promotion of an ultra-broad definition of "invasion" to invoke the Alien Enemies Act and the Invasion Clause of the Constitution. Courts have uniformly rejected the view that illegal migration and drug smuggling qualify as an "invasion" (see overview of relevant precedent and original meaning in my recent Fifth Circuit amicus brief) and Judge Breyer was right to reject a similarly overbroad definition of "rebellion." Interestingly, he cites recent Alien Enemies Act decisions by various federal courts in support of his position. Both the AEA rulings and Breyer also rightly reject the notion that presidential determinations of whether an "invasion" or a "rebellion" exists are unreviewable political questions.
There are also parallels to Trump's claims, in the tariff cases, that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 gives him unconstrained authority to declare anything he wants a "national emergency" and an "unusual and extraordinary threat," thereby authorizing him to start a massive trade war. Two federal courts have rightly rejected that position as well (including in a case where I am co-counsel for the plaintiffs).
Previous presidents have also tried to abuse emergency powers, including Joe Biden, with his attempt to exploit the Covid emergency to forgive over $400 billion in student loan debt (for those keeping score, I condemned it at the time, and praised the Supreme Court decision ruling against Biden). But Trump is distinctive for the enormous scale of his abuses and the magnitude of the threat they pose to civil liberties and the constitutional separation of powers.
Longtime readers may wonder whether my defense of Breyer's narrow definition of "rebellion" is consistent with my earlier arguments that the January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol qualifies as an "insurrection" ("insurrection" and "rebellion" are synonyms). The answer is "yes"! In my article criticizing the Supreme Court's ruling in Trump v. Anderson, I specifically rejected a broad definition of "insurrection" encompassing any and all violent resistance to enforcement of federal laws. I instead advocated a narrower definition "that covers only violent attempts to illegally seize control of the powers
of government." By that definition, which is similar to Judge Breyer's definition of "rebellion," January 6 was clearly an "insurrection" (and also a "rebellion"), while current events in Los Angeles are not.
Judge Breyer also rightly rejects the notion that events in LA qualify as a situation where "the President is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States." He correctly concludes that this phrase refers to a largely complete breakdown of law enforcement, not merely a state of affairs where laws cannot be enforced fully. I would add that, like Trump's broad definitions of "invasion" and "rebellion," a broad definition of inability to "execute the laws" would lead to a perpetual state of emergency that exists at all times. In virtually every community, there are substantial numbers of people who get away with violating various federal laws, and the authorities are unable to catch most of them. For example, almost half of adult Americans have used marijuana at some point in their lives - in violation of federal criminal law - and the vast majority have never been caught or punished.
Judge Breyer also finds that Trump's federalization of the National Guard violated the Tenth Amendment, and the statutory requirement that federalization orders must be issued "through the governor of the respective State … from which State … such troops may be called." I won't go through the details here. But I think his analysis is compelling on these points, as well.
Much more can be said about this case and the important issues it raises. And I hope to do so in future writings.
The litigation over this issue will surely continue. An appellate court (the Ninth Circuit) has already issued an "administrative stay" briefly blocking implementation of Judge Breyer's ruling. The stay order outlines an accelerated briefing and hearing schedule.
I do not know how this litigation will turn out. But I hope that, as in the Alien Enemies Act cases, courts will reject the administration's bogus invocations of emergency powers. Judge Breyer's powerful opinion is an excellent start.
NOTE: Judge Breyer is the brother of retired Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer.
UPDATE: I should have noted Judge Breyer's important point that "the federal government cannot be permitted to exceed its bounds and in doing so create the very emergency conditions that it then relies on to justify federal intervention." This refers to the dynamic by which federal intervention here has actually exacerbated the very problems that supposedly justified it.
Second Amendment Roundup: Removing Silencers from the NFA
The NFA is a revenue measure and deleting silencers would not violate the Byrd Rule.
As passed by the House, the FY25 reconciliation bill, H.R. 1, § 112029, would amend the National Firearms Act (NFA), by striking "any silencer" from the definition of "firearm." It also provides that "there shall be levied, collected, and paid on firearms" transferred or made a tax of certain amounts on various firearms, including "$0 for each firearm … in the case of a silencer." The effect would remove silencers from taxation and registration under the NFA, which is chapter 53 of the Internal Revenue Code. The bill is now pending in the Senate.
Opponents wrote a letter on June 5 to Mike Crapo, Chairman, Senate Committee on Finance, and Chuck Grassley, Chairman, Senate Committee on Judiciary, seeking to strike the amendment, which would "eliminate excise taxes on firearm silencers and remove their regulatory structure under the National Firearms Act (NFA)…." It asserts that the amendment violates the Congressional Budget Act – know as the "Byrd Rule" – under which "non-budgetary provisions cannot be included in reconciliation legislation." It also makes policy arguments not relevant to that issue.
The pertinent provision of the Byrd Rule provides that a reconciliation bill "shall be considered extraneous if such provision does not produce a change in outlays or revenues…." 2 U.S.C. § 644(b)(1)(A). Yet the only effect of the amendment would be to produce a change in revenues, by lowering revenues. The current NFA tax on transfer or making of a silencer of $200 would be stricken.
As noted, the June 5 letter opposing the amendment also makes policy arguments. It suggests that silencers were include in the NFA as passed in 1934 because Congress determined they did not have "a legitimate lawful use." It identifies three instances in which silencers have been used "in crimes across the country." And it claims that in 2023 numerous silencers were "recovered and traced from violent crime scenes." According to Axios, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is leading opposition in the Senate.
As a factual matter, silencers were barely mentioned in the 1934 Hearings of the House Ways and Means Committee which reported the bill that was enacted as the NFA. Moreover, studies show that silencers are rarely used in violent crimes. This is documented in my article The Power to Tax, The Second Amendment, and the Search for Which "'Gangster' Weapons" To Tax, 25 Wyoming Law Review 149 (2025).
Moreover, removing silencers from the NFA in no way deregulates them. In the Gun Control Act (GCA), the term "firearm" is defined to include a silencer or muffler, rendering them subject to all of the GCA restrictions, including checks under the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) and a prohibition on possession by felons.
But the only issue here is whether the amendment would violate the Byrd Rule. That it does not is verified by Supreme Court precedent on the NFA itself. In Sonzinsky v. United States, 300 U.S. 506 (1937), the Court found the NFA on its face to be a revenue measure and nothing more, explaining that it contained no "regulatory provisions related to a purported tax" constituting a "penalty resorted to as a means of enforcing the regulations," "nor is the subject of the tax described or treated as criminal by the taxing statute…." It "contains no regulations other than the mere registration provisions, which are obviously supportable as in aid of a revenue purpose. On its face it is only a taxing measure."
Moreover, Sonzinsky refused to speculate on any reasons why Congress might have taxed certain firearms: "Inquiry into the hidden motives which may move Congress to exercise a power constitutionally conferred upon it is beyond the competency of the courts…. They will not undertake, by collateral inquiry as to the measure of the regulatory effect of a tax, to ascribe to Congress an attempt, under the guise of taxation, to exercise another power denied by the Federal Constitution."
Sonzinsky was reaffirmed as a valid precedent as late as National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, 567 U.S. 519, 573 (2012). Quoting Sonzinsky, Chief Justice Roberts added that the fact that Obamacare "seeks to shape decisions about whether to buy health insurance does not mean that it cannot be a valid exercise of the taxing power."
The bottom line: the NFA is a pure taxing measure, currently a silencer is taxed as a "firearm" in the NFA, the amendment would remove a silencer from the definition of a firearm, and that would remove it from being taxed under the NFA. Nothing more. The amendment would thus not be "extraneous" under the Byrd Rule because it would "produce a change in … revenues."
Federal Court in Colorado Explains TRO Against Immediate Deportation of Mohamed Soliman's Family, Transfers Case to Western District of Texas
Soliman is the man "charged with a horrific June 1, 2025 antisemitic fire-bombing attack 'against a peaceful gathering of individuals commemorating Israeli hostages.'"
From today's decision by Judge Gordon Gallagher (D. Colo.) in Dvortsin v. Noem:
Ms. El Gamal is the spouse of Mohamed Soliman, a man accused of and charged with a horrific June 1, 2025 antisemitic fire-bombing attack "against a peaceful gathering of individuals commemorating Israeli hostages." This Court is aware that Mr. Soliman was taken into custody on June 1, 2025, at the scene of the attack. At some point on June 3, 2025, immigration authorities detained Ms. El Gamal and her children….
On June 3, 2025, at 2:12 p.m. MDT, the official Twitter/X account for the White House posted an update on the family's detention:
Then, at 2:42 p.m. MDT, the official Twitter/X account for the White House posted a further update:
The Petition alleges that "Ms. El Gamal and her five children—E.S., A.S., H.S., O.S., H.S.—entered the United States with B-1 visitor visas in 2022, have resided continuously in the United States for more than two years, and are therefore not subject to expedited removal.
And the Petition, which attaches a copy of the relevant visa application (D. 2-3 at 2), goes on to state that "Ms. El Gamal is a network engineer with a pending EB-2 visa, available to professionals with advanced degrees. Mr. Soliman filed an asylum application, and Ms. El Gamal and all five children are dependents on that application. The application is still pending." …
Prof. Michael McConnell on the Constitution and the President's Calling out the National Guard
Prof. Michael McConnell at the Stanford Law School, a leading constitutional law scholar (and former Tenth Circuit judge), passed this along, and I'm delighted to be able to post it; note that this is about the constitutional objection to the President's actions, not about the particular statutory scheme that's involved or about the wisdom of the actions:
Critics claim that President Trump's use of National Guard troops to quell the violence in Los Angeles over the opposition of the governor is contrary to the Constitution's principles of federalism. This particular line of criticism is mistaken.
This issue was debated at the Constitutional Convention in 1787. The National Guard is the modern form of what the Constitution calls the "militia." The delegates voted to empower Congress to "provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress insurrections, and repel invasions," in which case the President would be their Commander in Chief. (Article I, Section 8, Clause 15; Article II, Section 2, Clause 1.) Consent of the state governor is not required. To be sure, Article IV, Section 4 imposes a duty on the United States to protect the States against "domestic Violence" only on application of the state legislature or governor, but the power, as opposed to the duty, of the federal government to use the militia to enforce federal law was not made subject to the will of state authorities.
Some delegates—led by Elbridge Gerry and Luther Martin, both of whom later opposed ratification of the Constitution—took the opposite position, the one now espoused by some critics of President Trump. Luther Martin urged that states be left "to suppress Rebellions themselves." II Farrand 48. Elbridge Gerry, sounding much like Governor Newsom, stated that he was "against letting loose the myrmidons of the U. States on a State without its own consent." Referring to Shay's Rebellion, which was suppressed without federal help, he averred that "[m]ore blood would have been spilt in Massts in the late insurrection, if the Genl. authority had intermeddled." II Farrand 317.
That position was rejected by the majority of the Convention, who adopted instead the provisions quoted above allowing deployment of the militia to enforce federal law and suppress rebellion. Nathaniel Gorham of Massachusetts (who may be little known today but was Chairman of the Convention's Committee of the Whole), best expressed the majority view: "With regard to different parties in a State; as long as they confine their disputes to words they will be harmless to the Genl. Govt. & to each other. If they appeal to the sword it will then be necessary for the Genl. Govt., however difficult it may be to decide on the merits of their contest, to interpose & put an end to it." In other words, peaceful protest is permitted, but when protest spills over into violence, the national government is entitled to intervene. That is the rule today.
Whether President Trump's actions are justified as a matter of prudence may well be debated, but the notion that the Constitution's rules of "federalism" are offended by federal intervention absent gubernatorial request is contradicted by the words and history of the Constitution.
Divorcing Real Housewife's Posting About Impotence Can Be Seen as Implying Her Husband Is Impotent
So concludes Guobadia v. Williams, decided Mar. 31 by Judge Mark Cohen (N.D. Ga.):
Plaintiff is an entrepreneur and philanthropist who currently resides in the United Arab Emirates, and is the founder and CEO of SIMCOL Group, an investment company involved in various industries, including energy and hospitality…. Defendant is known for her role on the Real Housewives of Atlanta and large social media presence, which includes 7.7 million followers on Instagram.
Plaintiff and Defendant were married on November 26, 2022, in a widely publicized ceremony. In February 2024, "news broke" that Plaintiff and Defendant "were splitting," an announcement that came after news that Defendant would return to RHOA. On or about July 9, 2024, Defendant published a series of statements about erectile dysfunction ("ED") on her Instagram account.
The first statement was a black background with "ED" written in bold white letters. Defendant's posts continued and provided definitions of ED and details about its symptoms and treatments, including statements such as, "ED can cause stress, affect self-confidence, and contribute to relationship problems," and "it is common for men with ED to feel anger, frustration, sadness, or lack confidence." These statements included the hashtag #MensHealthAwareness.
Today in Supreme Court History: June 12, 1967
6/12/1967: Loving v. Virginia decided.
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