Advisory Opinions - Retire Universal Injunctions
Episode Date: April 18, 2024There’s not much worth discussing yet in Donald Trump’s criminal trial in New York, so Sarah and David focus on the Supreme Court and a case on Idaho’s law restricting gender-transition tr...eatment for minors. Plus: Murmurs about Clarence Thomas’ brief absence. The Agenda: —Election law crimes, tax crimes, and falsification of business records —Challenges of broad injunctions —Idaho’s Vulnerable Child Protection Act —SCOTUS exhausted with emergency docket applications —Justices call to retire universal injunctions —January 6 arguments before SCOTUS —SCOTUS declines to intervene in a police lawsuit against a Black Lives Matter activist —Obstructions in official proceedings —Legal issues in the Iran-Israel conflict Show Notes: —Labrador v. Poe —Counterman v. Colorado —18 U.S. Code § 1512 - Tampering with a witness, victim, or an informant Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You ready?
I was born ready.
Welcome to Advisory Opinions.
I'm Sarah Isker, that's David French.
It's an action-packed pod today.
So, David,
no real updates to give folks on the Trump case yet, right?
No, no, no real updates. I mean, we know a little bit more, but this has been for a while
about the legal theory now, the prosecution, because remember, I'm saying remember to something
we talked about a year ago. But if people don't remember the discussion a year ago,
basically the way it works is there's a misdemeanor
if you falsify business records.
Misdemeanor with a two-year statute of limitations,
that would have probably run
if you were gonna prosecute Trump only on the misdemeanor.
However, the falsification of business records
can become a felony if the falsification
is in connection with furthering
another crime or concealing another crime. So everyone was asking when the case was filed,
what is the other crime? What's the other crime that Trump was trying to conceal or carry out
through the falsification of business records? And now we know what we suspected.
It's mainly election campaign finance,
allegations of election campaign finance crimes,
state property, or I mean, I'm sorry, state tax crimes.
But it's an interesting case, Sarah,
because the only thing you have to prove
beyond a reasonable doubt
is the falsification of business records felony,
but it depends on the existence of another crime.
Well, wait, to be clear,
you have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that he falsified the business records
for the purpose of concealing the other crime.
You don't need to prove the other crime
beyond a reasonable doubt, obviously.
Right, exactly.
But you do have to prove the for the purpose
of concealing the other crime part beyond a reasonable doubt, obviously. Right. Exactly. But you do have to prove the for the purpose of concealing the other crime part beyond a reasonable doubt.
Right. It's an interesting, odd thing, which is one of the reasons why from the beginning,
I have had some side eye at this indictment. It feels very much like a case that the jury
could convict and then would be reversed on appeal. It has the McDonald case feel about it to me, Sarah.
Well, yeah, the jury, as I've said many times now,
what's going to the jury here is not particularly interesting.
The jury is a fact-finding body.
The interesting stuff here and the parts that make this
the weakest of the four indictments against Donald Trump
is the legal questions that the jury's not deciding. And the judge has already decided that this is fine.
And it's just going to have to make its way through appellate courts for that because,
and again, we covered this a year ago, but in short form, there's huge problems with the
underlying idea of a federal campaign finance violation here.
A, of course, the Department of Justice didn't charge Trump with it.
They did indict Michael Cohen and he pled out to it.
But you have the former FEC commissioner. You also have, you know, me, someone who practiced campaign finance law for some time saying,
but wait, this is just not what is not what we've ever understood to be against the
law and campaign finance world. It would really change a lot if on the one hand, you're not
allowed to use campaign funds to pay for the hush money because that's not a campaign expense.
Same as pantyhose, dry cleaning, buying a new house, painting your business. It may help the campaign,
but it is not a campaign expenditure. But then you, under this theory, you're saying you must
disclose it or else it's a campaign finance violation. So this is all a big mess. And the
fact that Michael Cohen pled guilty to it is certainly helpful for the
government, but not dispositive if the underlying theory of the case isn't right. It doesn't matter
that someone pled guilty to it. It gets weirder and I'm far less of an expert when you get to
the tax stuff. And it gets way more complicated when you get to the part where he's falsifying
business records for the purpose of concealing the falsification of other business records.
That's some fun turtles all the way down stuff. So yeah, that's all to say we haven't learned a whole lot in the Trump case yet. So stand by when we think there's something really
worth your time. We'll be doing deep dives into it. Don't worry. Yes, absolutely. Oh, and David,
before we hop into the meat of this podcast, you heard about the valedictorian at University of
Southern California. So the way that they pick their valedictorian speakers, according to the LA Times,
if you're above a certain GPA,
which I believe is like 3.98,
then you apply.
They got hundreds of applications.
They picked this student.
After announcing her,
several student groups on campus
say that she had liked and affiliated with
lots of pro-Palestinian
and arguably anti-Semitic causes and speakers, etc. And they
asked the university to not have her as the valedictorian speaker. The university has now
revoked her as the valedictorian speaker, not because of anything she said, but citing safety
concerns. I'm outraged by this because, first of all, the idea that they would have allowed a speaker who
had said like white supremacist stuff or something like we all know what the university would have
done with that. But you know what? I haven't actually seen anything she's posted that was
anti-Semitic. Nevertheless, if they wanted to revoke her speaking because of something she had
said, that would be consistent with what
universities have generally done in these situations. But simply allowing other students
and student groups to make them fear for her safety or that there would be hecklers or protests
is absolutely, wildly unacceptable for them to revoke her as the chosen valedictorian speaker for the class for graduation.
Completely agree, Sarah. This isn't heckler's veto. It's like anticipatory heckler's veto.
Yeah.
And so you have somebody who's been selected out of 100 or 200 students selected. And then,
you know, look, from what I understand,
I'm looking at the original statement in opposition.
In a social media bio,
the valedictorian has a link to a curated media page
which calls Zionism a racist settler colonial ideology
and advocates for the complete abolishment of Israel.
I think what they mean-
If that's the most you got, that ain't it, man.
And again, but I think it's more upsetting to me
That the school didn't even cite that
If they said look
Her views don't align
With the university's views
Or something or other
Like
I would be
Disappointed
But I wouldn't be outraged
The way that I am
By them just saying
That they're not willing
To
Deal with
The fallout
Protest concerns
Right the protest
Safety concerns Like Right No no. That's why
you exist is to platform people, regardless of whether other people like what they're going to
say. That's what a university's mission is. How dare you, University of Southern California?
And I hope is very clear that I don't agree with a single thing that she believes on this issue.
But I don't even know if she was going to talk about that at all, by the way. I don't know if she's going to talk about that at all either.
And if you really think about it like this, there are a lot of people who believe that if you say
that there is two biological sexes, that you're a bigot. If you believe that marriage is a man
for a man and a woman, then you're a bigot. You know, imagine a statement that says,
you know, after somebody is announced as a valedictorian,
that people have found out that they have said
that there's men and women,
and that trans women are not the same as biological women.
And so therefore, we're worried about safety,
you can't speak.
I mean, when you just go one step through through other
kinds of speech that you either may or may not agree with, but is part of our national debate
in a pretty dramatic way, and then say the person on one end of that cannot give the commencement
address because of unspecified safety concerns, that's a big nope in my book. And again, I totally 100% disagree. And I also,
by the way, disagree with somebody using a valedictorian platform to deliver some kind
of political screed. I have no idea if she was going to do that. No idea if she was going to
do that or not. But I disagree with doing that. But I'll tell you what I really disagree with
is the authority figure saying,
because somebody has said things
that make a lot of people angry,
we're not going to allow her to speak
because of unspecified safety concerns.
That's a big nope.
Yeah.
All right, on to the Supreme Court.
First, Clarence Thomas was not at argument on Monday
and there was a lot of just like whispering.
Why wasn't he there?
Is something really wrong? Is there about to be an opening on the Supreme Court a la Justice Ginsburg in the
final months and days of the Biden administration? He was back at argument today. We don't know why
he was gone. Justices have been gone in the past because they have the flu and don't want to get
their colleagues sick so they don't show up. Sometimes then they show up over the phone.
But like if you're feeling
really crummy, you call in sick to work. Or maybe you have a doctor's appointment that you couldn't
move or something else like we don't know. CT hasn't said we're not gonna know but no,
no opening on the court this week. Next up, David, we were really focused on the oral arguments over the January 6th defendants case.
Yes.
But we got some other really interesting stuff out this morning, including a case about Idaho's medical care for transgender youth law.
This was a law that was enjoined by the district court.
That injunction was upheld by the Ninth Circuit.
And then there was this emergency petition on the shadow docket, the emergency docket,
however you want to call it, to the Supreme Court.
And we got 34 pages of thoughts and feelings.
Amazing.
Many of the justices, much broader than anything to do with this specific law but just to go over
the details of this law a little bit it was called the vulnerable child protection act
went into effect in 2023 the law sought to regulate a number of practices upon a child
for the purpose of attempting to alter the child's sex. Those practices range from surgeries that sterilize or mutilate a child's genitals to the
supply of puberty-blocking medication. Idaho claimed that its law aimed to protect children
from treatment that can cause lasting harm and irreversible damage. So two children and their
parents sued, arguing that without access to puberty blockers and estrogen,
the two minor plaintiffs would likely suffer serious mental health problems. So the district
court granted the preliminary injunction. But because those two minors were anonymous,
the district court basically said the judge couldn't limit it to those two minors.
Therefore, it had to be a statewide injunction. And then we're off to the races about universal
injunctions, etc. So, David, we had a very 3-3-3 court vibe going on here. Yes. You had justices Gorsuch, Thomas and Alito explaining
why they voted to grant the stay of the injunction, meaning allow the law to go into effect,
except as applied to these two minors for the remainder of the litigation on the merits.
You then had justices Kavanaugh and Barrett writing their reasons why they granted the stay on the injunction. Then you had Justices Jackson and Sotomayor explaining why they would have denied, meaning not let the law go into effect while the litigation was pending.
saying that she would deny the application,
same as Sotomayor and Jackson,
but did not join their opinion,
which is becoming a bit of a trend thing that we're seeing on the,
a little split happening in that threesome.
And then we didn't hear from the chief justice at all.
And because his vote didn't matter to the outcome of this,
we're never gonna know where he fell on this.
Except in terms of the 3-3-3,
even odds would tell you he fell with Barrett
and Kavanaugh potentially.
Yes. And the case is really interesting. And I have not seen coverage focus on the part of this
that makes this such an interesting case that is and it's not really about the trans issue.
No, no, no. I've read everything that's about the actual issues
in the case in the 34 pages. I just read you all of it. Yeah. It's not about the trans issue.
Okay. So there's all this coverage about it as if the Supreme Court's decision was about the
trans issue itself. No, this was a very unusual case in this sense. So you had a district court granting an injunction that blocks
enforcement of the law for everybody. But then when the case goes up on appeal, the state does
not seek to enforce the law against the specific plaintiffs. So the plaintiffs are able to receive
the treatment that they want to receive. So the plaintiffs are able to receive the treatment that they want to receive.
So the plaintiffs are able to get what they want here.
The injunction applies to the state and everybody else other than the plaintiffs.
Including about things the plaintiffs didn't even say they wanted.
For instance, the plaintiffs were about medical, sorry, hormonal intervention, not surgery.
But the part of the law involving surgery was also enjoined. It's a big, big injunction. It is statewide. It applies to
everyone, not the two plaintiffs. Yeah. In addition to the two plaintiffs.
It was weird. I was trying to think of an analogy from my own practice, and I could not
think of a situation analogous from my own years of practice. And I had a lot of injunction practice.
analogous from my own years of practice. And I had a lot of injunction practice. But it would be a very weird, say, free speech case for me to sue over a speech code. And then the parties agree
that the speech code doesn't apply to the plaintiffs and then continue the litigation over
the speech code, which would be an interesting kind of construct. And so what this actually was about
was not about the trans issue at all.
What this actually was about was about the process
or the topic we've discussed a million times,
which is how broad can injunctions be?
And that was, and this was also a lot about the Supreme Court's emergency docket.
And so if I had to summarize the Gorsuch concurrence on removing the stay versus the
Kavanaugh-Barrett concurrence on removing the stay, the Gorsuch concurrence was,
you people get these injunctions under control pronto.
And the Kavanaugh-Barrack concurrence was,
you know, I'm going to take this opportunity
to tell you why all of this is really hard
and we actually have to decide some things
on emergency docket.
There's no way around it.
Injunction, dealing with injunctions is complicated.
It was a really interesting concurrence. Before we get to Gorsuch, Sarah, I'm super interested
in your thoughts on the Kavanaugh concurrence, because it really seemed to be like,
here, members of the public, I want to explain to you why all this is hard for us.
I loved it so much that I took notes on it.
Oh, outstanding, because I took notes on it. Oh, outstanding,
because I took notes on the Gorsuch. Yeah, no, I took notes on the Kavanaugh one, because exactly what you said, it actually has very little to do with this particular emergency petition and more
about how emergency petitions work at the court and why there's no one quick fix to make your
emergency petitions go away or
to take this off the court's plate. So first, he starts by explaining when an emergency application
comes to this court, we must decide it, grant or deny. The court has no authority to reject or
turn away emergency filings without deciding them. This goes directly to the shadow docket criticism,
this idea that people just want the court not to have an emergency docket.
It's like, well, I don't understand. When you have an injunction and you have a right to appeal,
you just don't want the Supreme Court to look at those anymore. But you do if they're on issues
that you care about, like the death penalty, but you don't if they're on other stuff. That's never
made a ton of sense to me. It not uh the court by either denying them or granting
them is making a decision so he's walking through now that the neat tricks so first some suggest
that this court when receiving an emergency application involving a new law should adopt
a default position of deference to the court of appeals ruling on a stay or injunction
and he's like, yeah,
that's a great idea, except some of these have huge national implications and that's actually
our job. So simply pushing this off to the lower courts, like, why don't we just do that with all
of our case docket? Like, we don't need to decide anything. Like, if the court of appeals is so
great at all of this, like, maybe we don't need to exist. So that doesn't really work. Second,
one might reasonably think that this court, when dealing with an emergency application, should simply try to, quote,
preserve the status quo. I feel attacked. And his point is, it's really hard to define what
the status quo is. And even if you were able to come up with a status quo, there's going to be
examples where it would be egregious
to allow the status quo to stay in effect
because if everyone were then operating under that,
a state could pass a obviously unconstitutional law,
but then that would be the status quo.
Right.
And so that stays in effect for a few years
while it gets litigated on the merits?
No, of course not.
And vice versa, a law that is duly passed by the representatives, it's clearly
constitutional, can't go into effect because of the status quo argument. He's like, so obviously
we have to do some analysis of something. You can't just have this rule on the status quo.
We can't even agree on what the status quo is. Third, he writes, Justice Barrett has emphasized
that the court can and should take care to focus on cert worthiness when considering emergency
applications, i.e. don't let folks who couldn't get their case actually heard at the court
on the merits later on down the road sort of sneak in on the emergency docket. So if we wouldn't take the case
and the issues presented by that case
on like a merit cert grant,
maybe we should defer to the lower courts
on this emergency docket stuff.
And he's like, yep, that's clearly a consideration.
But of course, it's really hard to know on various cases
whether something's going to be cert worthy, et cetera.
So that can't be
just the universal even if it's a good idea fourth some suggest that the court should prohibit so
called nationwide and statewide injunctions injunctions that prevent enforcement of a law
against persons other than the plaintiffs this is where he's attacking attacking is a harsh term
criticizing uh the gorsuch point because Gorsuch and his concurrence is sort
of acting like this would solve everything if everyone would just stop enjoining more than the
plaintiffs. He's like, yeah, again, great idea. People should really narrow these injunctions,
but it's not going to solve the problem for us, the nine justices here dealing with this,
because you could end up with dueling circuits with different rules where laws
are in effect. And imagine if you're a business with a business in two of those different circuits,
it's not going to fix everything, even to narrow these. And even if it would have fixed
this case, for instance. So he says, look, at the end of the day, this court cannot avoid
evaluation of the merits in at least some emergency applications involving consequential new laws.
If I'm correct about that basic reality, another important question concerns this court's processes.
What process should this court employ for assessing likelihood of success on the merits with respect to an emergency application, particularly in cases involving important new federal or state laws.
Because it's really,
this whole thing has been a long-winded way of saying,
I know no one's comfortable with acknowledging
that they're simply reviewing this
on the likelihood of success on the merits.
Yes, after you've looked at cert worthiness,
after you've looked at the irreparable harm,
the status quo,
all of those factors,
however you want to label them,
after you've looked at all those things, there's still going to be some that get through.
We're looking at the likelihood of success on the merits. We are trying to judge the merits of the
case as best we can at a preliminary stage. How do you want us to do it? And so he suggests that,
yes, having more briefing, oral arguments, amicus briefs, et cetera, is sometimes going to be
oral arguments, amicus briefs, et cetera,
is sometimes going to be smart.
And that frankly, this is the job, man.
If it's hard, suck it up. Yeah, I thought that was,
I thought it was so helpful to explain.
And I think this is helpful because what he did
was he introduced complexity to the debate.
And to me, this is something that is really helpful in a lot
of the arguments that we're having right now in Americans' life and society, whether it's from
diplomacy to military strategy to Supreme Court analysis, there's a lot of missing complexity.
And what Kavanaugh did was introduce and bring the complexity forward. And the way I kind of
and bring the complexity forward.
And the way I kind of harmonized Gorsuch and Kavanaugh was Kavanaugh shows all the complexity.
I still think of the standards that he talked about
for whether and when the Supreme Court
is gonna actually weigh in on the emergency docket.
The cert worthiness feels like the best formula
because otherwise you're in a situation
where people can essentially escape the
traditional way in which the Supreme Court kind of stands and hangs back and weighs in to resolve
legal conflicts, the conflict of laws, and sometimes, of course, weighs in on just true
issues of truly national importance. But if you don't have cert worthiness as a guide, then people can use this injunction practice to escape, to sort of get court review on a summary basis.
We have to take some of these, but we can't set up a system where you're able to game our rules to get review when you'd ordinarily not get review.
So it's really tough.
And I feel like the harmony between the Gorsuch and the Kavanaugh is, hey, our approach will
be cert worthiness.
Hey, lower courts, your approach should be, hey, how about limiting those injunctions?
That will actually be helpful.
Please and thank you.
I was expecting more fireworks also from the dissent
from Jackson and Sotomayor,
who voted against reversing the injunction.
And actually, I found their dissent also persuasive.
Like, I think everyone's actually
more or less on the same page.
We didn't hear from all nine,
but of the seven justices we heard from, their differences are minor, if there's even differences. So, yep, Jackson and Sotomayor
would not have granted the stay. But as they put it, we do not have to address every high-profile
case percolating in lower courts, and there are usually many good reasons not to do so.
Few applicants can meet our threshold requirement
of an exceptional need for immediate relief by showing that they will suffer not just substantial
harm, but an irreversible injury occurring during the appeals process that cannot be later redressed.
This case presents numerous reasons for exercising restraint. The state of Idaho's emergency
application asks us to override the decision of two lower courts based on an issue not clearly
implicated and under circumstances where the state does not contest that its law should remain enjoined. As described
in part two of this, even if today's application actually involved a universal injunction,
the emergency docket would not be the place to address the open and challenging questions that
that issue raises. So basically, they're all pretty exhausted with all this emergency docket stuff.
I think it's pretty clear that part of what Jackson and Sotomayor are saying is we wouldn't vote to grant cert on this.
Yeah.
So that's the difference, not the emergency docketiness.
Yeah.
They're all getting very frustrated.
They're all trying to find what the rules are going to be so that they can not have this clearly internal discussion every single time that these type of nationwide
universal injunctions are coming up to the court. Unfortunately, it does not appear that they
resolved it here. No, it was not resolved. Although I would say if I'm a district court
judge and I'm reading this and I've got a very broad injunction that I have typed up on my screen.
Before I hit print or publish or whatever,
I might wanna read this from Justice Gorsuch.
Lower courts would be wise to take heed.
So that's not subtle at all, Sarah.
Lower courts would be wise to take heed.
Retiring the universal injunction may not be the answer to everything that ails us,
but it will lead federal courts to become a little truer to the historic limits of their office,
promote more carefully reasoned judicial decisions attuned to the facts, parties,
and claims at hand, allow for the gradual accretion of thoughtful precedent at the
circuit level, and reduce the pressure on governments to seek interlocutory relief in this court.
As I wrote in our little slack, can you just inject that straight into my veins?
He's right.
I think he's right.
This is, you know, but there's also something that Justice Kavanaugh said that I think is
very insightful as to why and how the courts have become so prominent in our political
life, more so than they used to be.
And that is the combination of the fact
that universal injunctions are now broadly granted
with the reality that when you file a motion in a court,
unlike, you know, Congress does not have to pay
the slightest bit of attention to you.
You can call your congressman.
You can do anything you want in front of Congress.
You can walk into the hearing room, do jumping jacks while you're crying out for help, whatever,
to get attention. And they don't have to do one thing. They don't have to respond to you.
They don't have to answer you. They don't have to acknowledge the receipt of your email.
But when you file a motion in court, the court has to answer the motion. So you get a response. The court answers you.
And so when you combine universal injunctions
with this sort of mandatory legal process,
you can begin to see why people
who are very frustrated by politics,
where you don't have to get an answer at all,
will turn to law,
where you can get all the answers you want.
Sometimes at a national level, especially when combined with forum shopping, you can sometimes
feel pretty confident that you can get not just an answer, an answer you want for at least a period
of time that can frustrate the intention of the presidency that you oppose. And we, of course,
need to preserve right of judicial review
and right to challenge
unconstitutional actions.
But the system as it is now,
wow.
And you can see the strain on the court
from these three opinions.
And we'll take a quick break
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We got another little statement from the court, this time from Justice Sotomayor,
respecting the denial of Sir Shirari in the case
against D. Ray McKesson. He is the leader of Black Lives Matter, and he was giving a speech
in Baton Rouge. One of the people in attendance then threw something seriously injuring a police
officer. And the question is whether McKesson, the speaker, can be held liable under a negligence theory for those injuries.
The Fifth Circuit, well, this case has basically gone up and down and up and down a couple times at this point.
But David, this gets to a conversation that you and I haven't had in a while where we disagree about incitement under the first amendment after january 6th we had lots
of conversations in which you thought that donald trump could be held liable under an incitement
theory for his comments on the mall on january 6th for then the actions of the crowd at the
capitol on january 6th and i said no no how, you're not even in the ballpark.
So this is just this, you know,
a similar vibe on the other political side of this.
Now, there's huge differences.
One of which is that one person in the crowd
did something that seriously injured a police officer
versus large numbers of the crowd,
the sort of import of what happened
on January 6th in terms of certifying election. I'm not comparing them on any of those grounds,
but I am comparing them on the incitement grounds. So Judge Willett was in the dissent
in the Fifth Circuit below. The Fifth Circuit said, yes, this could proceed on a negligence
theory. And he wrote, negligent protest liability against a protest leader
for the violent act of a rogue assailant
clashes head on
with constitutional fundamentals.
And what was interesting to me
is that Justice Sotomayor,
and this is remember a statement
on the denial of cert.
Yeah.
She's just highlighting some things
for future courts
who are going to get this case
as it comes back down.
She's highlighting that Counterman decision, the true threats case in Colorado that we talked about last term.
And I'll just read a little bit from her statement here.
In Counterman, the court made clear that the First Amendment bars the use of an objective standard like negligence for punishing speech.
It demands a showing of intent.
The court explained that the First Amendment precludes
punishment for incitement, whether civil or criminal, unless the speaker's words were intended,
not just likely, to produce eminent disorder. Although the court determined that a less
demanding recklessness standard was sufficient to punish speech as a true threat, it emphasized
that an objective standard like negligence would violate the First Amendment. So, David, curious if you had any
additional thoughts on incitement and how you think this case should come out. Should McKesson,
will McKesson, I guess, be found liable? I don't think he should. I'm with Willett on this.
You know, the reason, the thing that tipped me over for Trump was when we began to get sworn testimony that
we began to get sworn testimony that he knew the crowd was armed and that they weren't
there to hurt him.
And he sent them to the Capitol.
So, you know, this crowd was armed.
And then when you put with all of the other all of the other facts and circumstances of
that day,
in my mind, it tipped it over to incitement.
In this case, I don't see anything like a similar
go there where you're not supposed to go
and I know you're armed while you're doing it.
And that, I don't see the same kind of action here.
I think the way in which Judge Willett framed it,
holding McKesson responsible for the violent acts of others
because he negligently led a protest
that carried the risk of potential violence,
I don't see how that squares with the incitement precedent. I really don't. Negligently
led. I liked Sotomayor. I liked her too, like likely to. That's negligence, right? You should
have known that what you were saying was likely to result in violence. And I think under that
standard, Trump and McKesson would be or should be found liable.
But that ain't the incitement standard.
That's not what the First Amendment requires.
It requires more than just you knowing that there's a likelihood of violence.
It requires that you intended it to be violent.
And that, to me, is the world of difference.
And I really liked Sotomayor's statement here.
I think there's no way, no how,
that McKesson will be found liable under that standard.
So it's weird.
The headlines on that case have been,
you know, Supreme Court refuses to take up BLM,
you know, protest liability.
And it's like, well, but it's fine.
Like it's going back down and it's going to be fine.
So, and certainly if he were found liable,
it would go back up
and they would reverse it on counterman grounds.
Yeah, no, I agree with that.
I don't, he should not be liable.
This case is wild to me.
All right, next up, we have the January 6th argument.
And I just want to remind people of the statute in question. And then we'll walk through how it went today. So for those who
have been following along with their US code at home, 18 USC is your criminal code, you're going
to want to flip to section 1512 C. And again, if you'll just sing along in your hymn books,
whoever corruptly alters, destroys,
mutilates, or conceals a record document or other object or attempts to do so with the intent
to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding or, and this is
the question, otherwise obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding or attempts to do
so shall be fined under this title or imprisoned for not more than 20 years or both.
So the January 6th defendants in this case, and these were the guys in the Capitol, and
they're the bad ones with assaulty stuff.
They're charged and found guilty under this otherwise obstructs influence or impedes any
official proceeding or attempts to do so.
influence, or impedes any official proceeding or attempts to do so. Now, if you take out the word otherwise and just include whoever corruptly obstructs or impedes any official proceeding,
got them dead to rights. Not a close call. The question in this case was, what work is the word
otherwise doing? Because it would seem to be referring to what just came before it.
The alters, destroys, mutilates records,
documents, or other objects
with the intent to impair the object's integrity
or availability or otherwise obstructs
or impedes any official proceeding.
So what's the plain reading?
So that was the argument today.
David, what were your reactions?
You know, it's funny
because this was one of the first times
that I read, listened to
the first half and read the second half of an argument before I, I'm sorry, this was one of
the first times that I read the coverage of an argument before I read the argument. Oh, can I
just tell you that once again, I listened to the argument, you read the argument, it provides us
both like sort of a different perspective. But I did a different thing while listening to the argument today. I was I flossed. For how long? I know my teeth are so clean right now. I just
want to suggest it to dentists around the country. If you're a dentist, you should be telling your
people to listen to Supreme Court oral arguments while flossing because you're going to run
yourself out of business. That's how clean my teeth are right now. But so the, when I listened or when I, when I read the coverage, it said the
justices are very skeptical of the prosecution position and which doesn't necessarily surprise
me. Um, but then when I read it, then I, it's appears that the justices really held both,
then it appears that the justices really held both sides' feet to the fire more than some of the coverage indicated.
So while I feel as if, after listening or reading the argument, that I think the defendants, if you made me guess, I would say the Supreme Court is likely to rule for the defense here,
that the otherwise relates to the record document or other object.
But I'm very nervous about that conclusion because it seemed to me that both sides were getting some very, very difficult questions and that both sides were being pressed pretty
hard.
The one thing, though,
when you're talking about the defense position,
Clarence Thomas asked some hard questions,
but still at the end of the day,
it struck me that he's going to be ultimately with the defense here.
But Sarah, this is, this is again,
connecting with the theme.
Can we please draft statutes well?
Because the one thing the court really seemed to agree on
is the statute is not very well drafted.
If you wanted to,
there's a very easy, simple way
to make this clear either direction, right?
To make it clear to whether this is a broad statute
that includes destroying, mutilating,
or altering a record,
or if it's a narrow statute that is confined
to records, documents, or other objects,
which either way you wanted to go on that,
you could have done it clearly.
And they didn't do it. And I think the best argument for
the prosecution was actually made by Justice Sotomayor when she said, well, wait a minute,
if I see if I read a rule that says you cannot record or photograph this performance or otherwise
disrupt it, if I stand up and yell, no one's gonna say, well, wait,
your disruption was not related
to photographing and recording,
therefore this doesn't apply to you.
But at the same time, at the same time, Sarah,
there's a very powerful structural argument.
Why are you burying the dragnet behind sort of the,
that's the difference between a carpet bombing
and a precision strike.
Why are you burying this big, broad
sort of carpet bombing provision
behind the very precision strike section?
And honestly, it's a hard,
this is a hard one to me.
So I went into this, for those who've listened to
this podcast you probably tell um believing that the defense had the better argument the otherwise
word there has to do some work it's tying the two provisions together about halfway through the
argument i had flipped sides i was now on team government believing that nope a textualist
reading of this um it says obstructs any official
proceeding. Like that's what it says. And yeah, like to the Sotomayor argument, right? And then
in terms of what the court is actually going to do, I got to this from the chief justice to
General Prelogger, the solicitor general who was arguing this. I'm sure you've had a chance to read
our opinion released Friday in the Bissonette case.
It was unanimous.
It was very short.
The room laughs.
But it explained how to apply one of the canons of interpretation that's in Latin that we're
not going to say out loud because I don't know how to pronounce it.
And what it said is that you had, when you have specific terms, a more general catchall,
if you will, a term at the end, it said that the general phrase
is controlled and defined by reference to the terms that precede it. The otherwise phrase is
more general, and the terms that precede it are alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record
and document. And applying the doctrine as was set forth in that opinion, again, from four days ago,
the specific terms alters, destroy, and mutilate carry forward into the terms record
document or other objects carry forward into as well. And it seems to me that they, as I said,
sort of control and define the more general term. So that was basically how I went into the case.
Right. But the big difference is this is the chief justice. And if he's on the side of the defendants, I think that's the ballgame. But I think it's going to be very thorny opinion, potentially.
The breadth argument, I thought, is really where the prosecution, where the government, Department of Justice and the Solicitor General were losing this. Because if you read it as this catch-all, basically, for anyone who obstructs an official proceeding, you ended up with the Gorsuch question, if I might. that mean for the breadth of the statute? Would a sit-in that disrupts a trial or access to a
federal courthouse qualify? Would a heckler in today's audience qualify or at the State of the
Union address? Would pulling a fire alarm before a vote qualify for 20 years in federal prison?
He kept asking more of those hypotheticals. Justice Alito picks that up on the Golden
Gate Bridge that was shut down last week by pro-Palestinian protesters.
You know, imagine doing something like that, but shutting down all the bridges into Virginia,
he said, knowing that members of Congress wouldn't be able to get to their vote,
or maybe that Supreme Court justices wouldn't be able to get to their arguments or whatever else,
that that would actually be your purpose in shutting down the bridge.
Doesn't this just allow a huge new scope of power for the
federal government? Gorsuch asking the question wasn't meaningful to me in the sense that Gorsuch
is always going to be on the side of criminal defendants. Anything that narrows federal criminal
law is going to find its way into Justice Gorsuch's heart. But he's highlighting a real problem,
which is that if you read the statute the way the government wants, you also kind of turn into surplusage the rest of the statute. So for
instance, right after the obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding or attempts to
do so, you also have whoever intentionally harasses another person and thereby hinders, delays, prevents,
or dissuades any person from testifying.
You have all these other statutory provisions
that are about hindering official proceedings.
So why would this catch-all be buried in C2
under something about documents and evidence?
So I don't know.
My guess is in the end,
the defendants are going to win in the sense
that this is going to get sent back down. I wonder whether it will get sent back down not as a sort
of pure win where there's no way for them to be indicted under this statute. I just wonder if
there'll be some sort of compromise where, you know, it is limited by Section 1. It is not just
this catch-all for like Justice Gorsuch was pointing
out. Why can't you charge someone who pulls the fire alarm or any protester? That would be a huge
sweeping new law for the federal government hidden in Sarbanes-Oxley. Right. And, you know, I think
the I thought you laid that out like just very well, how the ebb and flow of the argument went. And that's why I'm very shaky
in my prediction. The chief's comments, I think, are very, very interesting. But here's another
thing that makes me shaky in my prediction about overall outcome is Justice Barrett asked a very
interesting question and said, wait a minute, wasn't there a record document or other object at issue here? The quite literal certification of the election, the ability to
certify the election that's actually done via documents. And the provision says,
anyone who alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record document or other object or attempts to do so with the intent to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in official proceeding.
Her argument was, wait a minute, isn't that what they did?
other means to actually try to block,
impair the object's availability for use in official proceeding,
which is an interesting twist on the case,
but has not generally been the government's theory
that they're literally talking about the availability
of the documents in connection with the transfer of power.
But it was-
I think it's because you have to prove some intent, right?
It's the corruptly part.
But you would have to prove that they knew that that's what they were going in there
after, which there's no way that these guys were like looking for the state.
Look, the QAnon shaman, Sarah, was had a was aimed like a guided missile at the certification
documents.
But this actually brings me to another oral argument from this week.
Just the day before, on Monday, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments about whether a
different section of 18 U.S.C., in this case, section 666A1B, turn your handbook to that.
I know, isn't that weird?
Oh.
It criminalizes, whether, sorry,
it criminalizes gratuities.
This is a bribery statute for public officials.
I.e. payments in recognition of actions
a state or local official has already taken
or committed to take without any quid pro quo agreement
to take those actions.
And the word corruptly is going to appear in that
statutory language. There was a lot of time in that oral argument on what the word corruptly
was actually doing in terms of the intent requirement in mens rea. Fun facts in this
case, by the way, James Snyder was the former mayor of Portage, Indiana, and he was convicted
for accepting $13,000 from a trunk company after the company successfully won bids to sell garbage trucks to the city.
Mayor Snyder maintains that this payment was a valid transaction with his consulting business
as the truck company's owner testified at trial.
I'm sure he did.
Regardless, the government does not allege that Mayor Snyder agreed to rig the bidding process
in exchange for the $13,000.
The government instead alleged that Mayor Snyder agreed to rig the bidding process in exchange for the $13,000. The government instead alleged
that Mayor Snyder both approached the company
and received the payment after the bidding was complete,
i.e. that it was a gratuity.
Now, David, I think my predictions are worse,
like at their very worst
when it comes to public corruption cases,
because the court has been narrowing
those statutes so much. But like I read that and I'm
like, yeah, it doesn't rig the bidding process in the normal way where you get the money ahead of
time. But if everyone knows that the mayor's up for the gratuities after the fact, then yeah,
the mayor picks the winner of the bidding process based on who's going to be able more likely to shady enough
to pay him the gratuity. So like, yeah, it's still corruptly. By the way, there was one other case
that was argued Monday at the court that I just thought was a fun one, an interesting one. In
this case, it was whether a Fourth Amendment malicious prosecution claim needs to be charge specific or just any of the charges brought.
So it's a bit complicated, but basically a guy may or may not have received stolen jewelry and he's charged with a whole bunch of different crimes related to that.
One of the crimes was money laundering.
And basically the police,
according to his allegations,
and we take his allegations
in the most favorable light,
et cetera, et cetera,
they fabricated the evidence
to bring the money laundering charge.
They changed their report
days after the fact
to include a line
that would make him seem guilty
of money laundering.
But they have probable cause
for the other charges. So it's a circuit split. In some circuits, as long as you had probable cause
for one of the charges, then you can't bring a malicious prosecution claim on another charge,
even if they made up the evidence on that charge. And then in a bunch of the other circuits,
no, it's charge specific. So if you can prove that they fabricated evidence
for one of the charges, it doesn't matter whether you were guilty of or anything else. They had
probable cause on the other charges. I just think I always love those Fourth Amendment cases. It
seems pretty clear to me that the answer is it's charge specific. Otherwise, as long as you charge
someone with a misdemeanor,
as they pointed out at the oral argument, jaywalking, you can tack on felony murder
and fabricate evidence. All right, David, that concludes the Supreme Court side. But I wanted
to do just a couple updates from the pod. So first of all, if you remember, I was talking about
my teacher who first brought me a love of the Constitution.
It was my eighth grade teacher, Mrs. Healy.
She had us memorize the Constitution, the preamble, all the amendments, the years that they were ratified.
And lo and behold, David, it did not take 24 hours for one of you wonderful listeners to hear that.
for one of you wonderful listeners to hear that.
Guess which Miss Healy I was talking about who was in your friend orbit,
send her an email and help her track me down.
So I've been reunited with Mrs. Healy.
I'm so grateful.
She's of course, since retired from teaching,
but there are, I mean,
thousands of students who have benefited
from the great Mrs. Healy. And as I told her, you know, it's one thing when either the subject matter happens to be something that the person was going to be passionate about no matter what.
But it seems odd that I'm passionate about the Constitution, history, etymology and grammar.
Those are not necessarily related things, but they're all the things that she taught.
And second, I very much applaud teachers who can touch individual students' lives. You know,
they have a favorite student in the class and they really invest in that student.
That's not the story of Mrs. Healy. I was not Mrs. Healy's favorite student. I'll be surprised
if Mrs. Healy remembers a single thing I did or said that entire year in
class. I was a highly middling student, neither great nor so disruptive to remember on the other
end of the spectrum. But it takes an incredible, just pure teacher, I think, to be able to reach
every student in the class with your great teaching ability. So just a shout out to all you awesome teachers out there and awesome listeners who track down people that I mentioned
by last name. Yeah, that is I love that story so much. That's fantastic. I called David right away.
I was like, David, you won't believe what just happened. I love that story. I was having a full
on wonderful, wonderful moment there. Okay, David, I also thought we would do a little follow-up
on the Chemerinsky story.
Yes.
So first of all, I've never seen so many people
from across the political spectrum and legal spectrum
brought together in their universal analysis of this case.
Joe Patrice from Above the Law, who David Latt highlighted,
is about as far on the left as a legal writer can be.
And he wrote, sorry, David Latt wrote about Joe Patrice, up until now hasn't met a disruptive
protest he didn't like. Wrote, you don't have a First Amendment right to go into someone else's
house and hold a protest just because they work for a public university. I also got an email from a Supreme Court litigator who
said, one recent set of cases may help answer the question about First Amendment rights in
Gene Chemerinsky's house. The Linkey v. Freed decision on whether a member of the public has
a First Amendment right claim against a public official who blocks that citizen from their private Facebook page.
It was meant to help courts navigate the tricky question of when a public official's restriction of access to an otherwise private space constitutes state action.
See the similarities, David?
From the syllabus of the case, a public official who prevents someone from commenting on the official's social media page engages in state action under 1983 only if the official both
possessed actual authority to speak on the state's behalf and two, purported to exercise
that authority when speaking in the relevant social media posts.
On the first prong, this lawyer is pointing out the threshold inquiry to establish state
action is not whether making official
announcements could fit within a job description, but whether making such announcements is actually
part of the job that the state entrusted the official to do. I.e., before you even get to
all that form analysis, he's agreeing, David, with what we said that like, there's not even
state action here. Yes, he is a state official. That doesn't make everything he does state action
when he goes to the grocery store
and takes the parking spot that you wanted
or gets the ripe avocado.
Not everything is state action.
So you fail on state action,
you fail on the forum analysis,
pick your poison.
But as David Lapp pointed out,
most of the people defending the protest
aren't really defending it on first amendment
grounds they're defending it on the grounds that the chimerinsky's overreacted and david latt had a
great response to that uh the protester alleged that she was quote assaulted by dean chimerinsky's
wife professor fisk and yes fisk did make contact with her while trying to take away her
microphone. But I highly doubt any prosecutor would prosecute Fisk for battery, which is the
applicable offense under California law, not assault. I similarly don't expect any civil jury,
even in super progressive pro-Palestine Northern California, to find a 60-something woman liable
for briefly putting her hands on a robust young woman about half her
age. Having watched the video numerous times, I think Fisk has a decent, molitor menis impossuit
defense. She used reasonable force. Fisk's initial contact was putting her arm around the protester's
shoulder in what struck me as almost paternal fashion, and Fisk's subsequent actions seemed
primarily focused on
taking away the microphone, not inflicting harm. As Joe Patrice noted, folks, California still has
a frigging castle doctrine. So I don't think homeowner tried to wrestle the microphone from me
is going to get very far. Yeah. Yeah. And when somebody is in your home and you don't and you want them out of your home, you know what the responsibility of the person in your home is to leave immediately. If I do not want somebody in my home, they need to leave and to continue to stay and talk, to use some moderate physical force to try to stop what's happening and get them out the door,
I'm sorry, it's okay.
It's okay.
But yeah, the idea that
because you're a state official
that anything you do is state action,
like when you were at the DOJ, Sarah,
does that mean that it was state action
when you like fired a babysitter?
All of it is state action.
All of it is state action. Everything is state action. But no, I mean, that's
why I kept saying when we were talking about this, we're not just steel manning here. We're
adamantium manning here because there's just no way. There's no way this was appropriate.
All right, David, last thing. I've had some really remarkably dumb conversations about Iran's attack on Israel. But here's one that's real. What justified what allowed Israel under the laws of war to carry out an assassination against one of Iran's military leaders, which is what precipitated this? It's what Iran has cited as its reasons for then attacking Iran.
leaders, which is what precipitated this. It's what Iran has cited as its reasons for then attacking Iran. Yeah. Yeah. So this is a this is an issue that has come up because I'm seeing a lot of
people saying, why would you sanction Iran when Israel struck first now and when Israel violated
the sanctity of an Iranian diplomatic compound in Syria and that this is Israel's fault. Now, of course, we both
know that the conflict between Iran and Israel has been going on for a very long time, and the
Israeli attack on the diplomatic facility and the Iranian military commanders who are there
is not the first round of all of this. This is like round 17,372. I mean, this has been an ongoing
issue for decades. But let's just be, let's briefly talk about international law. So,
as a general matter, when you have a diplomatic facility, the entity, the nation that is the
receiving entity, this is the nation that is,
it's called the receiving state.
So the receiving state,
let's say it's America
and you have an Iranian embassy in America.
This is just a hypo.
So you have an embassy in America.
Even if that embassy is being used for improper purposes,
the receiving state cannot invade
the embassy.
The receiving state can certainly expel diplomats.
It can expel people from the country, but it cannot do what Israel did.
The receiving state's hands are tied.
But Israel was not the receiving state here.
This is the embassy in Syria.
So it's the embassy in Syria. The receiving state
responsibility is Syria's. But an embassy is still a civilian object. It's a civilian building. And
so therefore, it is hands off unless it is used for military purposes, just like the analysis
with hospitals, with schools, with mosques, diplomatic facilities,
if used for military purposes, lose that protection under the laws of war, except regarding
the receiving state. And so it's a real open question when I talk about diplomatic facility,
whether that facility that was hit was truly a diplomatic facility. But what was hit were a number
of Iranian military commanders in Syria,
allegedly to help coordinate military activities
against Israel.
That's the justification for the attack.
So if you're using that civilian object
for a military purpose, it becomes a fair target.
And so that's essentially,
Israel is not the receiving state
of the Iranian embassy in Syria.
It is still a civilian object,
even though Israel is not the receiving state
entitled to protection under the laws of war.
But if used for military purposes,
the civilian object loses that protection.
So that's the analysis surrounding the Israeli attack.
Now, one thing that is,
one last thing that is not legal.
I'm just very amused by the people who say
that the 300 drones, ballistic missiles,
and cruise missiles that were sent at Israel
was a symbol that Iran was not serious.
What planet are we living on, people?
I mean, a major-
Well, a seven-year-old girl who's in critical condition
would beg to differ.
Exactly.
But we, it's international news
when Putin sends a few dozen missiles into Ukraine.
Iran sent 300 missiles, 300 missiles, drones. That was a major
attack. It is only because of the incredible defensive capabilities of the American, British,
Israeli, even Jordanian militaries that we were able to, we along with our allies, able to largely defeat the attack. And by the way, Sarah,
do you remember when the Avengers, the first Avengers movie started and people called it
the greatest crossover event in movie history? No, but sure. But yeah, just trust me on this,
that people said that Avengers was the greatest crossover. Well, when you're talking about America, Britain, Israel, and Jordan defending,
that's one of the greatest crossover events in military history.
Because who would have thought Jordan would help defend Israel
when Jordan has invaded Israel in the past.
All right.
Next week, we've got three massive Supreme Court oral arguments.
We've got in order here.
The homeless encampments case does enforcement of generally applicable laws regulating camping
on public property constitute cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment.
Then we have Idaho's abortion law
and health of the mother does federal EMTALA, as it often is called, the Federal Emergency
Medical Treatment and Labor Act, preempt state abortion regulations and require hospitals to
provide an abortion as stabilizing care when a pregnant woman is suffering an emergency medical
condition. And then, drum roll, the Trump absolute immunity oral argument,
does a former president have absolute immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts
while in office? As they said in Jurassic Park, hold on to your butts. Here it comes.
And that will conclude oral arguments at the Supreme Court, barring some other
crazy emergency oral argument.
But from that point forward,
we're just going to be getting lots and lots of opinion hand downs.
So yeah, no, the hold onto your butt still applies.
We'll talk to you next episode. Bye.