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C.P.O.A.

Constitutionalist Party of America

American Constitution Society

November 2008 - Posts

  • Happy Thanksgiving

    Due to the Thanksgiving holiday, ACSBlog will not be updated over the next several days. Posting will resume next week. 

     

      

    Happy Thanksgiving!
  • Of footnotes, oil spills and punitive damages

    A recent footnote in the Supreme Court’s decision in Exxon v. Baker, the ruling last term limiting the punitive damages Exxon owed victims of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska, has sparked serious questions about the use of empirical evidence in  punitive damage cases, reports The New York Times.

    In his decision last June, Justice David H. Souter declined to rely on a study by University of California, Santa Barbara, Sociology professor William R. Freudenburg because it received funding during its early stages from the Exxon Mobil Corporation.   As the Justice wrote in the opinion’s now famous Footnote 17, “Because this research was funded in part by Exxon, we decline to rely on it.”

    Exxon commissioned Freudenburg to author a report that would assess the effects of punitive damages.  Exxon ceased funding for the study early in the course of Freudenburg’s research when his initial findings did not sufficiently bolster the company’s case.

    Since future Justice Louis Brandeis’s 1908 brief in Muller v. Oregon, the Supreme Court has regularly cited scientific studies to support its findings.  Justice Souter’s footnote may indicate that the Court is growing more reluctant to rely on such empirical studies, or at least those that are financed by parties to the case.

  • Second Fla. Judge Rules Against Gay Adoption Ban

    Another Florida judge has ruled that the state’s ban on gay adoption is unconstitutional. Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Cindy Lederman ruled earlier this week that there was “no rational basis” for barring gay men and lesbians from adopting children. Lederman’s ruling allows Frank Gill to adopt two boys he and his partner have been raising for four years, The Miami Herald reported. The newspaper noted that a state child abuse investigator had asked Gill to take temporary care of them.

    In her 53-page opinion, Lederman said the state ban on gay adoptions precludes “otherwise qualified” lesbians and gay men “from adopting available children,” and “does not promote the interests of children.” The newspaper reported that state officials had argued that gays are “disproportionately more likely to suffer from mental illness or a substance abuse problem than straight people, rendering them less fit to parent ….”

    Lederman cited extensive research supporting gay parents. “Based on evidence presented from experts from all over this country and abroad,” she wrote, “it is clear that sexual orientation is not a predictor of a person’s ability to parent. Sexual orientation no more leads to psychiatric disorders, alcohol and substance abuse, relationship instability, a lower life expectancy or sexual disorders than race, gender, socioeconomic class or any other demographic characteristic.”

     

    Earlier this year, Monroe Circuit Judge David J. Audlin Jr., ruled that the state’s gay adoption ban violated the Florida Constitution, which prohibits targeting groups of people for punishment. “Contrary to every child welfare principle, the gay adoption ban operates as a conclusive or irrebuttable presumption that … it is never in the best interest of any adoptee to be adopted by a homosexual.”

     

    The Miami Herald reported that the Florida Attorney General would appeal Lederman’s ruling.  

  • Arthur Bryant Sets Access to Justice Agenda

    Arthur H. Bryant, executive director of Public Justice, details the numerous tools being used by American companies to shutter the nation’s courthouse doors to challenges against their products and treatment of consumers and workers. In a column for The Times, Bryant maintains that the legal doctrine of preemption, which “wipes out state law,” mandatory arbitration, which forces consumers or employees into arbitration, and bans on class action lawsuits are all ways to shield companies from being held accountable in court. All three actions to shut off access to justice must be thwarted, Bryant asserts.

    Bryant writes:

     

    We must stop the abuse and expansion of federal preemption, mandatory arbitration, and class action bans. Over a century ago, the Supreme Court said, “The right to sue and defend in the courts is the alternative of force. In an organized society it is the right conservative of all other rights, and lies at the foundation of orderly government.” All Americans know this is true. In our country, the courts are the one place where even the poorest, most powerful person can hold the richest, most powerful person or corporation accountable. Extremely emotional and heated disputes are resolved non-violently in the courts every day. If they can’t be, they’ll be resolved in the streets – because our nation is violating the principles on which it’s based.

  • Pay For Federal Judges Remains Stagnant, With No Action In Congress

    It doesn’t appear that a bump in pay for federal judges is coming anytime soon. The Legal Times’ Tony Mauro reported that the just-ended congressional lame duck session saw no action on the bills for judicial pay raises. Both chambers’ judiciary committees have approved pay increases, but according to the Legal Times, the recent financial crisis has helped avert any action to pass them. H. Thomas Wells Jr., president of the American Bar Association lamented the situation, telling the Legal Times that, “While many Americans are struggling financially today, few of us have jobs where we are routinely skipped over for even a routine cost of living increase and get no clear guidance on what we will earn in the year ahead.” The legal periodical noted that judges have received no cost-of-living increase for seven of the last 14 years.

  • Newspaper Chronicles Sharp Uptick In Hate Incidents

    Has a rise in hate-crimes and incidents occurred since the decisive presidential election of Barack Obama? The Chicago Tribune reported that since Obama’s election “a spasm of noose hangings, racist graffiti, vandalism and death threats is convulsing dozens of towns across the country ….” The article continued that more than “200 hate-related incidents, including cross-burnings, assassination betting pools and effigies of President-elect Barack Obama, have been reported so far, according to law-enforcement authorities and the Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors hate groups.”

    The Tribune article also noted that the Ku Klux Klan is seemingly resurfacing, citing a recent fatal incident in Louisiana where a woman was allegedly shot by a Klan leader after attempting to back out of an initiation ceremony. The FBI and Secret Service are also reportedly investigating Klan and hate-related incidents. Brian Levin, director of Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University in San Bernardino, told the newspaper that, “The rhetoric right now is just about out of control. When you get this depth of hatred, it usually is the smoke before the fire.”

  • Va. Commission To Offer Immigration Overhaul Proposals

    A Virginia commission is set to advance proposals easing immigration policy in the state, The Washington Post reported. The Virginia Commission on Immigration will send within the coming weeks about a dozen recommendations, “most of which would help immigrants instead of penalizing them,” the newspaper reported. The commission, which was created by Gov. Timothy Kaine (D) and the General Assembly, will advance proposals for offering in-state tuition to immigrants, making it easier for immigrants to access Medicaid and opening and immigration assistance office.  

  • National Security Courts Are Unnecessary, Dangerous

    by Sharon Bradford Franklin, Senior Counsel, the Constitution Project

    As recent news reports demonstrate, the incoming presidential administration faces pressure to support the creation of specialized national security courts. These courts would oversee criminal prosecutions of terrorist suspects, review and supervise a system of preventive detention for terrorist suspects, or both. Yielding to that pressure would be a mistake.

     

    National security courts are unnecessary and pose a serious threat to constitutional rights. As the Constitution Project concluded in a white paper endorsed by a broad bipartisan group of experts, our traditional federal courts can meet the challenges posed by terrorism prosecutions.  Moreover, this consensus shows that the new administration and Congress should find broad support for resisting the pressure to establish national security courts.

     

    Criminal Prosecutions Are Best Handled by Our Traditional Federal Courts

    The call for specialized national security courts to handle criminal prosecutions of terrorist suspects is easy to reject. Traditional federal courts have withstood the tests of time and are fully competent to handle these prosecutions while protecting both national security and our constitutional safeguards.

     

    A recent Human Rights First report, which examined more than 120 international terrorism cases over the past fifteen years, concluded that traditional federal courts tried these cases without sacrificing either national security or the defendants’ rights to a fair trial. The courts safely handled classified evidence, enforced the government’s Brady obligations to share exculpatory evidence with the accused, and provided a means to establish a chain of custody for physical evidence.

    National security courts, by contrast, would erode the presumption of innocence and other constitutionally mandated criminal justice safeguards. Although some argue that lesser due process protections are acceptable because terrorists do not deserve full constitutional rights, what they fail to realize is that the very purpose of these trials is to determine whether or not these suspects are guilty of terrorist offenses.Specialized tribunals with lesser constitutional protections fundamentally undermine the presumption of innocence.

     

    Most procedural safeguards followed by our traditional federal courts are constitutionally mandated. For example, the Fifth Amendment prevents the use of a coerced confession, and the Sixth Amendment provides for the right to confront witnesses. Specialized courts cannot circumvent these requirements. To the extent that existing rules are not constitutionally required, they can be modified within our traditional criminal justice system. A separate and unequal criminal justice system for a particular class of suspects would lack the legitimacy necessary for effective trials.

    The only permissible exception to using federal courts for criminal prosecutions is for combatants captured on the battlefield and thus subject to traditional military jurisdiction. In this instance, our traditional military system — and not the Military Commissions Act — provides justice. National security courts have no role to play in criminal prosecutions.

     

    Preventive Detention

     

    The arguments in favor of national security courts to oversee a system of preventive detention for terrorism suspects are somewhat harder to refute, but only because of a mess of our own making. Here too, such courts are both unnecessary and dangerous.

     

    On a “going forward” basis, preventive detention is unnecessary and unjustifiable. In our efforts to combat terrorism, apart from detention under the laws of war, we should only detain an individual suspected of a terrorism offense if: (1) the government can make a probable cause showing to a judge, and (2) the government intends to prosecute that individual (or, if appropriate, carry out an immigration removal proceeding).

     

    Nor should we establish preventive detention for the “hard case”: a possibly non-existent group of highly dangerous Guantanamo detainees who cannot be prosecuted. The only evidence against these detainees is inadmissible because it was derived from coercive interrogations. 

     

    We know that evidence obtained through coercion is inherently unreliable. We also know that even for this very small (or non-existent) category of detainees, the solution is careful evaluation of all options for handling each specific case — including repatriation to other countries and developing admissible evidence. What we should not do is establish a system of national security courts and preventive detention for these potential hard cases that we would not even be facing had we not allowed the coercive interrogations in the first place. We should not compound one mistake with another.

     

    Our traditional federal courts have served us well for 230 years. We should not turn back the clock and abandon our fundamental rights.

     

    The Constitution Project’s white paper, “A Critique of National Security Courts,” is available here.

  • Ga. Supreme Court Gets Active On Marriage

    Talk about activist courts. The Supreme Court of Georgia is actively pushing a statewide campaign to promote marriage. Through its Commission on Children, Marriage and Family Law, the Georgia Supreme Court is hosting dozens of billboards with messages such as, “Get Married, Stay Married” and sponsoring conferences, Law.com reported. The 48-foot-wide, 14-foot-tall billboards are part of the state supreme court’s effort to confront rising crime rates and divorce rates, according to Georgia Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears. Sears said she thinks the billboards, which also include the message, “Children do better with parents together,” can do “some good.” The state supreme court also recently conducted a conference on marriage that drew lawyers, social workers, clergy and therapists. “It’s our job to say to the Legislature, and to the executive, ‘we see and notice this,’” Sears said. “We do more than just read cases. We see a lot of human devastation. It’s my job to speak out.”

  • Transition Team Focusing On Role Of Presidential Legal Advisers

    The Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) garnered a great deal of media attention and notoriety for its role in advising President George W. Bush on controversial counterterrorism methods, including the use of harsh interrogations by the CIA.  

    USA Today reports that President-elect Barack Obama’s Justice Department transition team includes key members who have previously worked in the OLC and have voiced strong concerns about the OLC’s legal advice to Bush, which many consider wobbly at best. For example, the newspaper reports that Indiana University law professor Dawn E. Johnsen, a leader on the Obama transition team, has been “among the most publicly critical of OLC’s backing of President Bush’s counterterrorism measures, particularly on interrogation techniques.”

     

    The newspaper also notes that Johnsen, a member the ACS Board of Directors, provided Congress with ideas for restoring the OLC, which is charged with providing legal advice to the president to ensure compliance with the Constitution and federal law.

     

    “Johnsen, joined by 18 other attorneys who had worked at OLC, offered Congress 10 principles for the office, including timely release of opinions that might conflict with federal law,” reports USA Today. “Three of the other attorneys, who signed the statement, including Harvard University’s David Barron, also are on Obama’s Justice and Civil Rights transition team.”  

     

    Earlier this year, Johnsen testified before a Senate Judiciary Committee panel about the OLC’s role in providing legal advice to the Bush administration on counterterrorism issues. “OLC has been widely and deservedly criticized for the substance of its legal interpretations, which at least at times have not reflected principled, accurate assessments of applicable legal constraints, but instead were tainted by the Administration’s desired policy ends and overriding objective of expanding presidential power,” Johnsen said.

     

    In an article that is part of a broad ACS package of proposals and ideas for reforming legal and justice policy in the new administration, Johnsen writes that the next administration must take steps to ensure that the OLC serves as check on presidential power, not as a rubberstamp.

     

    “OLC’s charge is to help the President achieve desired policies in conformity with the law, and that often involves actively devising alternatives to a legally flawed proposal. Because the President makes the final call and bears ultimate responsibility for legal determinations as well as policy choices, OLC’s advice should fully inform the President, as well as other readers, and address strong arguments counter to its conclusions,” maintains Johnsen.   

     

    See the ACS Law and Justice page for Johnsen’s entire article, “All the President’s Lawyers: How to Avoid Another ‘Torture Opinion’ Debacle,” along with the other articles in the ACS package, “A Fresh Start for a New Administration: Reforming Law and Justice Polices.”

  • Federal Judge Orders Release of Guantánamo Detainees

    A federal judge has ordered the release of five detainees from Guantánamo Bay. The ruling in the first habeas corpus proceeding involved six Algerians captured in Bosnia in 2001. At the time of their capture, the military maintained that the men were planning to go to Afghanistan to fight the U.S., and later President George W. Bush claimed they were plotting to bomb a U.S. embassy. Recently the Justice Department conceded the detainees could not be held on those accusations. Judge Richard J. Leon of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. ruled today that the reasons, which were disclosed in private proceedings, for holding the men were “inconsistent with this court’s obligation,” and ordered their release “forthwith.” The New York Times reported that "some lawyers" suggested that it was likely the administration would appeal ruling. The newspaper also noted that last week the Justice Department lodged legal motions to halt more than 100 other habeas corpus cases from proceeding.

     

  • Calif. High Court To Consider Legal Challenges To Same-Sex Marriage Ban

    The California Supreme Court will hear legal challenges to the anti-gay marriage ballot measure approved by voters on Election Day. The state’s top court in a 2-page order said it would determine whether the ballot measure, which bans same-sex marriage, is an improper revision of the state’s constitution.

    After the California Supreme Court ruled earlier this year that the state Constitution prohibits the state from banning gay and *** couples from marrying, a movement was sparked to place the anti-gay marriage ballot measure, Proposition 8, before voters. The Mormon church and socially conservative lobbying groups funneled large sums of money into promoting passage of Propisition 8. On Nov. 5, after its passage, the National Center for *** Rights (NCLR), the ACLU and Lambda Legal, representing six couples and Equality California, filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the ballot measure. A similar lawsuit was also lodged by several California cities.

     

    An NCLR press release states that the lawsuits “allege that, on its face, Proposition 8 is an improper revision rather than an amendment of the California Constitution because, in its very title, which was ‘Eliminates the right to marry for same-sex couples,’ the initiative eliminated an existing right only for a targeted minority. If permitted to stand, Proposition 8 would be the first time an initiative has successfully been used to change the California Constitution to take away an existing right only for a particular group. Such a change would defeat the very purpose of a constitution and fundamentally alter the role of the courts in protecting minority rights. According to the California Constitution, such a serious revision of our state Constitution cannot be enacted through a simple majority vote, but must first be approved by two-thirds of the Legislature.”

     

    More coverage of the battle over marriage equality in California is available here and here.

  • Media Outlets Say ACS Board Member Eric Holder Obama's Choice For AG

    Newsweek and CNN reported yesterday that President-elect Barack Obama has asked Eric Holder, a deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration, to be the attorney general. Holder, a member of the ACS Board of Directors, has been on Obama’s short list for the slot, according to the news weekly. Holder was a keynote speaker at this year’s ACS national convention. During his speech before the ACS gathering, Holder said he United States must reverse “the disastrous course” set by the Bush administration in fighting terrorism by shuttering the military prison at Guantanamo Bay.

    “Our needlessly abusive and unlawful practices in the ‘War on Terror’ have diminished our standing in the world community and made us less, rather than more safe,” Holder told the ACS audience on June 13. “For the sake or our safety and security, and because it is the right thing to do, the next president must move immediately to reclaim America’s standing in the world as a nation that cherishes and protects individual freedom and basic human rights.”

     

    Video of Holder’s address is available here.

     

    Newsweek reported that Holder “still has to undergo a formal ‘vetting’ review by the Obama transition team before the selection is final and is publicly announced ….”

  • Media Outlets Say Obama Taps ACS Board Member Eric Holder For AG

    Newsweek and CNN reported yesterday that President-elect Barack Obama has chosen Eric Holder, a deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration, to be the attorney general. Holder, a member of the ACS Board of Directors, has been on Obama’s short list for the slot, according to the news weekly. Holder was a keynote speaker at this year’s ACS national convention. During his speech before the ACS gathering, Holder said he United States must reverse “the disastrous course” set by the Bush administration in fighting terrorism by shuttering the military prison at Guantanamo Bay.

    “Our needlessly abusive and unlawful practices in the ‘War on Terror’ have diminished our standing in the world community and made us less, rather than more safe,” Holder told the ACS audience on June 13. “For the sake or our safety and security, and because it is the right thing to do, the next president must move immediately to reclaim America’s standing in the world as a nation that cherishes and protects individual freedom and basic human rights.”

     

    Video of Holder’s address is available here.

     

    Newsweek reported that Holder “still has to undergo a formal ‘vetting’ review by the Obama transition team before the selection is final and is publicly announced ….”

  • Taxpayers To Foot Bill For Gonzales' Private Representation In DOJ Lawsuit

    Former U.S. Attorney General Gonzales facing a lawsuit over politicization of the Department of Justice has turned to a private attorney for representation. The decision reported by TPMMuckraker and McClatchy Newspapers, was approved by the DOJ and is likely to cost the taxpayers a lot more than the use of a public defender. According to the reports, typically attorneys from the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division represent employees who are sued in connection with their official capacities. McClatchy reported that the DOJ, however, had approved Gonzales’ request for private representation.

    A report from the DOJ’s offices of Inspector General and Professional Responsibility said Gonzales’ DOJ set up a system that favored applicants with conservative ties over ones connected to progressive organizations, such as ACS, for internships and for the department’s honors program. A group of law students, represented by Dan Metcalfe, is suing Gonzales and other DOJ officials over the politicized hiring practices. Metcalfe, a former DOJ official, told McClatchy that the decision to provide private representation for Gonzales was “exceptional.”

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