How Appealing



Wednesday, March 15, 2006

“Souter’s home stays safe”: The Concord (N.H.) Monitor today contains an article that begins, “Somewhere in Washington, U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter may have breathed a sigh of relief last night. Voters in his hometown of Weare voted emphatically to direct town officials not to seize his house by eminent domain.”

Posted at 5:54 PM by Howard Bashman



“Ohio House OKs ban on pregnancy disputes”: The Columbus Dispatch today contains an article which reports that “Ten days after the Ohio Supreme Court ruled that parents of children with birth defects can sue doctors for failing to identify the abnormalities during pregnancy, the House approved a bill that would ban such lawsuits. The bill now goes to Gov. Bob Taft, who is expected to sign it.”

My earlier coverage of that ruling can be accessed here and here.

Posted at 5:45 PM by Howard Bashman



“Should campaign-finance laws apply to blogs? Congress votes this week on a bill that would exempt blogs from regulation; Critics see a soft-money loophole.” This article will appear Thursday in The Christian Science Monitor.

Posted at 5:44 PM by Howard Bashman



“Judiciary Asks Congress to Tread Carefully with Sentencing”: The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts issued this news release today. The prepared text of testimony that U.S. District Judge Paul G. Cassell of the District of Utah will deliver tomorrow to the House Judiciary Committee‘s Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security can be accessed here.

Judge Cassell’s “Statement of the Judicial Conference,” in footnote 13, calls Law Professor Doug Berman’s “Sentencing Law and Policy” blog an “excellent and indispensable website.”

Posted at 4:42 PM by Howard Bashman



Men wearing thong underwear (and nothing else) retain no civil rights: Shannon P. Duffy of The Legal Intelligencer provides a news update headlined “Thong-Wearing Protestors Lose Civil Suit Against State Troopers.”

You can access Monday’s ruling of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania at this link. The opinion begins, “In July, 2004, Plaintiffs — a small group of young men — protested against President Bush’s visit to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania by stripping down to thong underwear and climbing onto each other’s backs.”

Posted at 4:11 PM by Howard Bashman



“SJC says defense must share evidence; Some lawyers warn change is radical”: The Boston Globe today contains an article that begins, “A deeply divided Supreme Judicial Court ruled yesterday that prosecutors are entitled to know before trial what evidence criminal defense lawyers plan to use to cross-examine the state’s witnesses, a decision prosecutors say levels the playing field but defense lawyers argue subverts the judicial system.”

You can access yesterday’s 4-3 ruling of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts at this link.

Posted at 2:20 PM by Howard Bashman



“Justice Ginsburg Acknowledges Death Threat Against Her; Speech in South Africa Cites Her and Former Justice O’Connor as Targets”: law.com’s Tony Mauro provides this report. The text of the speech can be accessed here.

Posted at 2:15 PM by Howard Bashman



In news from South Dakota: The Argus Leader of Sioux Falls today contains an article headlined “Initiative may put abortion to vote; Wisconsin group opposed to ban launches campaign” that begins, “An out-of-state group that opposes South Dakota’s ban of most abortions filed paperwork Tuesday to begin collecting signatures for a referendum vote. If 16,728 signatures are collected by mid-June, South Dakotans would vote Nov. 7 to approve or reject the state abortion law.” You can view the referendum petition at this link.

The Argus Leader also provides a news update headlined “Poll: Most South Dakotans want a statewide vote on abortion ban” that begins, “Seven out of 10 South Dakotans want to vote on the state’s new abortion ban, and 57 percent would vote to overturn the law, according to a survey done for a group that has supported Democratic political candidates.”

And The Associated Press reports that “Group Tries to Delay S.D. Abortion Law.”

Posted at 1:58 PM by Howard Bashman



In news from Alabama: The Associated Press provides a report headlined “Justice says ACLU true culprit” that begins, “Supreme Court Justice Tom Parker on Tuesday blamed a civil liberties group for the judicial ethics complaint filed against him, calling it retaliation for his career-long stance against abortion, pornography, homosexuality and a proposed tax increase for schools.”

law.com’s Tony Mauro previously covered this matter in an article headlined “Alabama Judge Declares War on U.S. Supreme Court; State justice says colleagues should ‘actively resist’ juvenile death penalty ruling.”

Posted at 11:50 AM by Howard Bashman



“The Men’s Bill of Rights: No taxation without ejaculation.” Online at Slate, William Saletan has a human nature essay that begins, “A few days ago, the National Center for Men filed suit in Michigan to establish ‘a man’s right to make reproductive choice.'”

Posted at 11:44 AM by Howard Bashman



“Abortion on the Horizon: Although it won’t topple Roe v. Wade, Gonzales v. Carhart is this year’s abortion case to watch.” Daveed Gartenstein-Ross and Adam White have this essay today online at The Weekly Standard.

Posted at 11:25 AM by Howard Bashman



“Total Recall: Where’s My Free Lunch?” My “Upon Further Review” column published Monday in The Legal Intelligencer is freely available online at this link. The essay begins, “Now that several months have passed since Pennsylvania voters learned that a statewide judicial retention election actually can be used to remove from office Justices serving on the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, it is the perfect time to reflect on the lessons of what happened.” And the recent article from The Harrisburg Patriot-News that I discuss in the essay can be accessed here.

Posted at 10:54 AM by Howard Bashman



Happy birthday to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg: I won’t give away her age (as The AP does here), but Justice Ginsburg is nearly twice as old as “24” actress Kim Raver, who also celebrates a birthday today (and who is more than one-and-a-half times as old as her TV show’s title).

Posted at 10:40 AM by Howard Bashman



“Prosecutors Hamstrung in Moussaoui Trial”: The Associated Press provides a report that begins, “Prosecutors seeking the death penalty against confessed terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui told a federal judge that it would be a waste of time to continue the trial after key government witnesses were barred from testifying.”

Posted at 10:34 AM by Howard Bashman



“Google’s fate hangs on search ruling; The details of a judge’s order in its dispute with the government could determine the search giant’s growth prospects”: Business 2.0 Magazine provides this report.

Posted at 10:20 AM by Howard Bashman



“Allison Eid takes seat on state’s high court; Clarence Thomas makes introduction during swearing in”: This article appeared yesterday in The Rocky Mountain News. Additional photos from the event can be accessed via this link.

Posted at 9:18 AM by Howard Bashman



“Judge Penalizes Moussaoui Prosecutors by Barring Major Witnesses”: Neil A. Lewis has this article today in The New York Times, which also contains an article headlined “Lawyer Thrust Into Spotlight After Misstep in Terror Case.”

The Washington Post today contains articles headlined “Federal Witnesses Banned in 9/11 Trial; Judge Cites Misconduct By Lawyer; Prosecution Faces Major Setback” and “Government Lawyer’s Error Upsets Families of 9/11 Victims.”

The Los Angeles Times reports that “Judge Curbs Terror Trial; She won’t allow federal aviation officials to be witnesses in the case against Moussaoui, but will still let prosecutors seek the death penalty.”

USA Today reports that “Moussaoui case suffers deep cut; Prosecution loses key line of attack after lawyer’s apparent misconduct.”

The Washington Times reports that “Moussaoui judge allows option of death penalty.”

And The Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that “Judge bars testimony in Moussaoui death trial; She says instructions from TSA lawyer tainted potential witnesses.”

Posted at 7:30 AM by Howard Bashman



“Ex-Enron Officer Says He Warned of Shady Partnerships”: The New York Times contains this article today.

The Houston Chronicle today contains articles headlined “Watkins sheds light on saga today; Writer of memo that warned Lay of company’s doom will take the stand” and “3 different takes from 3 former employees.”

The Los Angeles Times reports that “Enron Witness Tells of Transfer; An ex-risk manager says he was taken out of a key job after he questioned an off-the-books deal.”

And USA Today reports that “Watkins set to take the stand today; Former exec wrote famous Enron memo.”

Posted at 7:25 AM by Howard Bashman



“Judge Says Google Must Hand Over Search Records; Firm Ordered to Comply With Narrower Subpoena”: This article appears today in The Washington Post.

The New York Times reports today that “U.S. Limits Demands on Google.”

The Los Angeles Times reports that “U.S. Cuts Back Request for Google Data; Privacy supporters worry as a judge says he may order some search queries be handed over.”

The Chicago Tribune reports that “Feds’ Google search limited; Judge raises concern over scope of request.”

USA Today reports that “Judge may force Google to give up info; Justice scales back request in quest to revive porn law.”

In The San Jose Mercury News, Howard Mintz has an article headlined “Google vs. government: Major dispute defused; Judge poised to require release of some date, not search queries.”

And The San Francisco Chronicle reports that “Google must reveal some secrets; Judge rules in case involving Internet privacy but has concerns over divulging too much.”

Posted at 7:20 AM by Howard Bashman