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Supreme Court Denies Leave To File Amicus Brief in Hemphill v. New York
The government opposed the brief, which was filed by Hemphill's prosecutor.
Under Supreme Court Rule 37.2(b), amici must seek consent from the parties to file a brief. Often, after cert is granted, the parties provide blanket consent for all amici. And even when blanket consent is withheld, parties will usually grant consent if asked. Sometimes, parties will simply take "no position" on whether a merit-stage amicus brief can be filed. This non-answer amounts to consent, but the amici will have to file a motion for leave. And in rare cases, a party will deny consent. And in even rarer cases, the Supreme Court denies leave.
Attorney Adam Oustacher met this final fate. Today the Court issued its order list from the so-called "long conference." The first entry was unusual.
20-637 HEMPHILL, DARRELL V. NEW YORK
The motion of Adam Oustatcher for leave to file a brief as amicus curiae is denied.
Oustacher had tried Hemphill for the murder of David Pacheco, Jr. He sought leave to file the brief at "at the request of Joanna Sanabria, the mother of David Pacheco, Jr." Oustacher charged that the Joint Appendix omitted important records, and the parties did not address certain threshold issues.
As one of the attorneys involved in petitioner's trial and as demonstrated by the accompanying amicus brief, amicus is familiar with evidence not presented to the Court by petitioner or respondent and raises material legal issues the parties failed to address bearing upon the issue at bar. As to the former, the Joint Appendix and briefs submitted by the parties omit extensive and significant portions of petitioner's trial to such a degree as to not provide a fair and accurate record of the underlying proceedings. Regarding the latter, the parties to the appeal do not address the threshold issue of whether the statement at issue constitutes evidence against petitioner within the meaning of the Sixth Amendment, do not apply the primary purpose test, and do not address the doctrine of forfeiture by wrongdoing. Amicus thus submits that the accompanying amicus brief can offer a helpful and valuable perspective distinct from both petitioner and respondent. For these reasons, amicus seeks leave of the Court to file the accompanying brief as amicus curiae.
Hemphill--the person Oustacher tried!--consented to the brief. But New York opposed the brief. Oustacher explains:
The consent of petitioner has been obtained. Respondent withheld consent by email dated June 24, 2021, which stated: "On behalf of this Office, I write to inform you that we do not consent to your request to submit an amicus brief." Bronx County District Attorney Darcel Clark and her office, who consented to eight amicus briefs submitted on behalf of petitioner, provided no explanation in their email as to why they wish to deny Ms. Sanabria's request that the trial attorney who successfully prosecuted petitioner submit an amicus brief in the instant matter. In a July 6, 2021 teleconference, Assistant District Attorney Gina Mignola indicated that respondent withheld its consent because New York's Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.11(a)(2) provides that a former government lawyer may not represent a client in connection with a matter in which the lawyer participated personally and substantially when employed by the government. After amicus informed respondent that Rule 1.11(a)(2) is inapplicable because no attorney-client relationship exists between amicus and Ms. Sanabria, respondent continued to withhold its consent without further explanation.
I have no insights about the applicability of Rule 1.11(a)(2). Perhaps the Court simply denied the brief because it was untimely. In any event, these denials are very, very rare. I searched Westlaw for "leave #to file a brief #as amic! curiae is denied." Before today, the last denial came in 1993. And that was a cert-stage brief.
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I'm perpetually amazed that someone so incompetent at basic legal research can actually call himself a law professor (even if it's significantly qualified by the ensuing "at South Texas College of Law").
https://reason.com/volokh/2018/04/28/should-us-supreme-court-litigants-declin/
On the other hand, it's Blackman, so is it really all that surprising?
In that 1018 post, Prof. VOlokh said “So, as best I can tell the Court has never—not once—in the last 14 years refused a normal, professionally prepared, rules-compliant amicus brief (one that was filed in time, by a nondisbarred lawyer independent of any party, and with normal, substantive legal argument). ”
It is much less convenient to file US Supreme Court briefs than briefs elsewhere. Lower federal courts and the Indiana Supreme Court do not require special printing, etc. That means, however, that the US Supreme Court gets many many fewer crank briefs than it would otherwise. No crank bothers to send an amicus brief to the 3rd Circuit.
Would the refusals show up in Westlaw? I don't use it. PACER might be the place to look.
These days you'll find plenty of prosecutors who're only too eager to not prosecute anyone* and to release anyone* who's been successfully prosecuted before.
* Or is it only certain people? Hmmm...
What an odd comment.
The district attorney's office is arguing that the conviction in this case should be affirmed, and is doing so is arguing for the constitutionality of a state evidence rule that will make it easier for prosecutors to continue convicting criminal defendants in other cases.
Noscitur a sociis, have you ever seen both Ed Grinburg and Dr. Ed in the same room?
"The district attorney’s office is arguing that the conviction in this case should be affirmed"
Then why are the opposing a amicus brief filed in support of their side?
Well, the would-be-amicus posted their response to him.
In addition, the argument in his brief is both fairly obviously wrong, and also (baselessly, as far as I can tell) disparages the district attorney's office in the process. Since W.B.A. was the trial prosecutor, and the challenge here is to how the prosecution tried the case, I can see why they would think that reading his brief would make them less likely to win.
One or maybe two petitions to file amicus briefs were denied in the Flynn case before the DC Circuit last summer. I noticed because my brief was accepted. The denied petitioners were individuals who were, we might say, eccentric, if I remember rightly.
Eric B. Rasmusen, "Brief Amicus Curiae of Professor Eric Rasmusen in Support of Petitioner, In re Flynn." An amicus brief on criminal procedure, applying principal-agent theory to whether an appellate court can require a trial court to approve dimissal of charges when both defendant and government agree. http://rasmusen.org/published/Rasmusen-2020-InReFlynn-Rasmusen-amicus.pdf.
Let me guess, is Bronx County District Attorney Darcel Clark one of the commie anti-prosecutors backed by Soros?
Her wiki page doesn't sound like it:
"Clark was later revealed to have suppressed evidence and kept an innocent teenager in jail for over one year on attempted murder charges until, on the eve of trial, Clark was forced to dismiss the case in the wake of a public outcry"
"Clark opposed affording immigrants the right to jury trials, only to have the New York State Court of Appeals rule against her, holding the Constitution guarantees immigrants and citizens alike the right to a speedy trial for serious offenses."
etc, etc.
I didn't dig deeper.