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The Lower Court "Found that [Defense Lawyer's] Comments Played on Stereotypes About the 'Angry Black Woman'"
"and the 'victimhood' of white women." "In support of its decision, the court ... pointed to defense counsel's description of Henderson as 'quite combative' on the witness stand and her description of Thompson as 'intimidated and emotional about the process.'"
From Justice Alito's statement today respecting the denial of certiorari, joined by Justice Thomas, in Thompson v. Henderson (for the opinion this criticizes, see here):
I concur in the denial of certiorari because this case is in an interlocutory posture, and it is not clear whether it presents any "federal issue" that has been "finally decided by the" Washington Supreme Court. Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn (1975); see 28 U.S.C. §1257. But if the Washington courts understand the decision below to be as sweeping as it appears, review may eventually be required.
This case started as an ordinary tort suit over a car accident. The victim of the accident, plaintiff Janelle Henderson, is black, as was her trial counsel. Alicia Thompson, the defendant, is white, as was her trial counsel. Thompson admitted fault, so the suit was over damages. Henderson claimed that the whiplash she suffered from the accident "seriously exacerbated" her Tourette's syndrome, and she asked for $3.5 million in damages.
Defense counsel naturally tried to convince the jury that such a large award was not justified, and the jury, which awarded Henderson only $9,200, was apparently persuaded. Henderson moved for a new trial, claiming that the small award was based on racial bias, but the trial court denied the motion without a hearing.
In a remarkable decision, the Washington Supreme Court reversed due to the possibility that the jury's award was tainted by prejudice, and it remanded for a hearing that appears to have no precedent in American law. In support of its decision, the court cited several statements made by defense counsel in her closing argument. It pointed to defense counsel's description of Henderson as "quite combative" on the witness stand and her description of Thompson as "intimidated and emotional about the process." The court found that these comments played on stereotypes about the "'angry Black woman'" and the "victimhood" of white women.
The court also cited defense counsel's insinuation that Henderson was motivated by a desire for a financial windfall, as well as her suggestion that Henderson could not have suffered $3.5 million in damages since she had not even mentioned the accident when she saw her doctor a short time thereafter. The court thought that this argument "alluded to racist stereotypes"—that black women are "lazy, deceptive, and greedy" and are "untrustworthy and motivated by the desire to acquire an unearned financial windfall." The court also faulted defense counsel for suggesting that Henderson's lay witnesses, all of whom were black, had been prepared or coached because they all used the same phrase—"'life of the party'"—to describe Henderson's personality before the accident. The court viewed this tactic as inviting jurors to make decisions about these witnesses "as a group and … based on biases about race and truthfulness."
Because of these comments by defense counsel, the court found that an objective observer "could conclude that racism was a factor in the verdict," and it therefore held "that Henderson is entitled to an evidentiary hearing on her new trial motion." The court added that "[a]t that hearing, the [trial] court must presume racism was a factor in the verdict and Thompson bears the burden of proving it was not."
The Washington Supreme Court's decision raises serious and troubling issues of due process and equal protection. In some cases, it will have the practical effect of inhibiting an attorney from engaging in standard and long-accepted trial practices: attempting to undermine the credibility of adverse witnesses, seeking to bolster the credibility of the attorney's client, raising the possibility of a counterparty's pecuniary motives, and suggesting that witnesses may have been coached or coordinated their stories. Such tactics are common and have long been viewed as proper features of our adversarial system.
"'Due process requires that there be an opportunity to present every available defense,'" but the decision below attaches a high price to the use of these run-of-the-mill defenses in cases where parties are of particular races. The Washington Supreme Court endorsed an evidentiary hearing based on the mere "possibility" of bias, and its analysis appears to hold that such litigation strategies per se raise at least the "possibility" of such bias. Moreover, the State Supreme Court's rule requires the nonmoving party to prove at a hearing not that it did not intend to appeal to racial bias, but that racial bias (perhaps even subconscious bias) had no impact on the jurors. How the Washington Supreme Court thinks this can be done is unclear.
In sum, the opinion below, taken at face value, appears to mean that in any case between a white party and a black party, the attorney for the white party must either operate under special, crippling rules or expect to face an evidentiary hearing at which racism will be presumed and the attorney will bear the burden of somehow proving his or her innocence. It is possible that the Washington Supreme Court will subsequently interpret its brand-new decision more narrowly, but the procedures it appears to set out would raise serious due-process concerns.
The Washington Supreme Court's opinion is also on a collision course with the Equal Protection Clause, as our recent opinion in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College (2023)), demonstrates. The procedures the state court has imposed appear likely to have the effect of cordoning off otherwise-lawful areas of inquiry and argument solely because of race, violating the central constitutional command that the law must "be the same for the black as for the white; that all persons … shall stand equal before the laws of the States." The Washington Supreme Court justified its prophylactic rules in part by reasoning that "[r]acism is endemic" in our society, and that "implicit, institutional, and unconscious biases, in addition to purposeful discrimination, have influenced jury verdicts in Washington State." But as we reaffirmed in SFFA, the Fourteenth Amendment's equal-treatment principle yields only when necessary to remediate "specific, identified instances of … discrimination that violat[e] the Constitution or a statute," not generalized past or ongoing discrimination. The decision of the Washington Supreme Court, however, threatens "to inject racial considerations into every [litigation] decision" parties make. Texas Dept. of Housing and Community Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project, Inc. (2015).
Nothing in the papers before us suggests that defense counsel would have tried this case differently or that the jury award would have been larger if the races of the plaintiff and defendant had been different. As a result, the decision below, far from combating racism, institutionalizes a variation of that odious practice.
The decision below, like the decision in Roberts v. McDonald, in which I have filed a separate statement, illustrates the danger of departing from the foundational principle that in the United States all people are entitled to "equal justice under law," as the façade of our building proclaims. Every one of the 330 million inhabitants of our country is a unique individual and must be treated as such by the law. It is not an exaggeration to say that our extraordinarily diverse population will not be able to live and work together harmoniously and productively if we depart from that principle and succumb to the growing tendency in many quarters to divide Americans up by race or ancestry.
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The court thought that this argument "alluded to racist stereotypes"—that black women are "lazy, deceptive, and greedy" and are "untrustworthy and motivated by the desire to acquire an unearned financial windfall."
Pretty sure "the desire to acquire an unearned financial windfall" applies to most people.
Dark Brandon just pecker slapped the dumbass RepooplicKKKunt justices upside their heads with his new student loan repayment program…why do they even bother??
He's insurrecting against SCOTUS with a criminal legal theory in an attempted coup.
Says the guy that wants to treat me differently from my straight peers.
The conservatives have really been trying to hide behind "all created equal†" this past month, and really hoping that no one reads the footnote.
________
†"obviously we didn't mean people like you".
Says the special guy who wants the special right to dangle his bait and tackle in front of little kids.
What the hell are you talking about?
We definitely are not all equal.
Some lifestyle choices are clearly and empirically better for society.
Reason over childish superstition. Inclusiveness over multifaceted conservative bigotry. Education over ignorance (backwater religious schooling does not count). Modernity over Republican backwardness. Educated, successful, modern communities over desolate, gape-jawed, conservative backwaters. Strong, mainstream, reason- and science-based teaching and research institutions over nonsense-teaching, dogma-enforcing, fourth-tier conservative schools.
I assume you're referencing 303 Creative.
If so that ruling also means that a gay web site designer in Colorado can now refuse to create a web site for a Westboro Baptist Church member that is replete with "God Hates Fags" messages without fear that the designer's refusal would be construed as refusing service to the WBC member due to them being "straight" (sexual orientation) or being a NutCase Christian (religion). I would think that would be a relief but each to their own I suppose.
America's vestigial, deplorable bigots -- especially its old-timey racists and superstitious gay-bashers -- have no greater friend than Samuel Alito.
(Paul Singer and Robin Arkley deserve a shout-out for sponsoring and funding Justice Alito's Supreme Court position.)
Hey I saw a study that showed the bigoted culturally inferior South had grown in a massive $200B economic leap drawn from their cultural betters on the West and Northeastern coasts.
Doesn't sound like losing the culture war to me.
Whoops $100B
https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/100-billion-profound-economic-shift-has-reshaped-southern-us
Tranheiser Bush getting crushed makes up for my mistake.
Am I wrong in thinking that Justice's Alito & Thomas have just administered the MOA bench slaps to the WA Supreme Ct?
This sure read that way to me.
The WA SC is almost as bad as the People's Republic of NJ's SC.
A 2 Justice statement on denial of certiorari will never be a bench slap.
The facts as laid out look ridiculous, but I won't trust them by themselves to be a full characterization of the situation.
Read the opinion. If anything it’s worse than Alito lays out.
Is it as bad as the affidavit underlying the case involving the bigoted web designer from Colorado?
Is it too late for criminal charges involving the preparation and submission of that affidavit?
I dunno. I didn’t read the affidavit. What does it say?
When it comes to importing faddish left-wing sociology into the law, particularly its current pathological obsession with race, you can't beat the Washington Supreme Court. Some may recall last year's case of State v. Sum, in which it ruled whether someone has been "seized" might depend on their race. The unanimous opinion included the usual leftist claptrap about institutional bias and the cringeworthy, repeated use of the term "BIPOC" ("Black, Indigenous, and People of Color") as a plural noun. That case involved an Asian-American who was found asleep behind the wheel of his car and gave a false name to police. Despite the nonexistent history of police targeting Asians, to the Washington Supreme Court (and the Left in general), people fall into two categories: white or non-white (or BIPOC, if you prefer).
The Court’s opinion that Alito criticizes goes all-in on one of the most pernicious fallacies of our times: that there’s “no difference” between intentional racial bigotry and unconscious bias.
And it’s hard to think of anything more antithetical to our system of law than a court declaring that whether routine litigation tactics are allowed or not depends on the race of the litigants. The opinion really is shocking.
I just read the Washington decision, and it really is mind-blowing. I am a trial attorney, and the types of arguments by counsel quoted in the opinion are what I do in every trial. I argue a witness is biased, “combative,” or even lying. What was the defense attorney supposed to do in this case? Roll over and concede that the plaintiff and her witnesses were all credible? Honestly, this is a little bit horrifying to me, because I don’t know how an adversarial system can function if the most innocuous of arguments are labeled as racist dogwhistles.
You are right. It really is that bad.
Criticize a black female plaintiff’s demeanor? “Angry black woman” stereotype.
Say that she’s after an unearned payout? “Black women are lazy grifters” stereotype.
Say that your own client presented better? “White woman victim” stereotype.
Argue that the plaintiff’s witnesses who are her friends and family are biased in her favor and may have colluded? Racist “blacks are all in it together” narrative.
The defendant’s literally not allowed a defense. Unbelievable, gob-smacking nonsense.
What was the racial makeup of the jury? Was this an all-white panel subject to the insidious influence of racist stereotypes?
The panel was all-white, yes.
Well, from the other comments here, it seems the state Supreme Court was over-hasty to find white racism.
Because racism is so over...
I've been following this case for some time, and the Washington Supreme Court's ruling is doubly insane.
1) It's insane on the merits, claiming racism that no reasonable person could perceive.
2) It's insane on the ruling, requiring someone to prove something that they cannot possibly prove, both because it's a negative and because, well, see #1.
Wait until the Washington Supreme Court finds out about prosecutors, and how they play on negative stereotypes about black people by suggesting that some of them commit crimes!
Wow.
Yeah.
Also, an “objective observer” is someone who “understands that institutional racism impacts jury verdicts.”
And given that the current thinking on institutional racism is that it's not a question of whether racism affected the verdict, but of how racism affected the verdict, it's hard to see how any verdicts get finalized.
The black movement has decreed that any and all criticism of a black person’s behavior, no matter how justified by facts, is “racism.” In doing so, those people discredit themselves permanently on the topic of racism.
If courts like this one refuse to recognize that fact, then higher courts need to overrule them and enforce color-blind treatment, just as they did in Harvard.
This is why I would cut the Gordian knot by legalizing all discrimination by private parties. Discrimination claims by blacks with actual merit are as rare as hen’s teeth. And this is not one of them.