How Appealing



Friday, May 5, 2006

U.S. government advises the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit that ethnic Uighur Chinese nationals formerly detained at Guantanamo Bay have today been released to Albania for resettlement there as refugees: You can access the federal government’s filing, made late today, at this link. The case had been scheduled for oral argument Monday in the D.C. Circuit, and the federal government has now filed an emergency motion to dismiss the case as moot.

In early press coverage, The Associated Press reports that “Albania Takes 5 Ethnic Chinese From Gitmo.”

Posted at 8:10 PM by Howard Bashman



“Improving scotusblog”: You can join Linda Greenhouse in offering suggestions at this link. Meanwhile, readers of “How Appealing” are constantly offering me suggestions on how to improve my blog, which is why you don’t see me asking for even more suggestions of that nature.

Posted at 3:55 PM by Howard Bashman



“Gay couple can’t contest marriage definition”: Bob Egelko of The San Francisco Chronicle provides a news update that begins, “A federal appeals court today dismissed a challenge by two Orange County men to a law denying federal marriage benefits to same-sex couples, saying a couple that isn’t legally married under state law has no right to contest the federal definition of marriage.” My earlier coverage appears here.

Posted at 3:50 PM by Howard Bashman



“Now in foreground: jurors’ backgrounds; Attorneys split on need for checks.” This article (free access) will appear in next week’s issue of The National Law Journal.

Posted at 3:28 PM by Howard Bashman



“A federal appeals panel’s recent decision barring anti-gay T-shirts in public schools cited a famous case upholding student-speech rights — but focused on a phrase about ‘the rights of others’ to come down against a form of student expression.” So begins an essay by David L. Hudson Jr. posted online today at the First Amendment Center.

Posted at 3:15 PM by Howard Bashman



“Lay and Skilling miss their marks; As the Enron trial enters its final stretch, legal experts say the odds are stacked against Enron founder Ken Lay and former CEO Jeffrey Skilling”: CNNMoney.com provides this report.

Posted at 3:14 PM by Howard Bashman



“[U]nder the majority’s decision, no one from Colombia will be entitled to asylum.” Eleventh Circuit Judge Ed Carnes has today issued a stirring dissent from the denial of a petition for review in an asylum case. Circuit Judge William H. Pryor, Jr. wrote the majority opinion.

In dissent, Judge Carnes writes:

In determining whether the facts and circumstances in any case compel a conclusion, we ought to face up to the full force of them in their entirety. The majority’s approach, instead, is a virtuoso exercise in deconstructionism. It proceeds by disassembling the whole of the evidence and then explaining why each part by itself is insufficiently compelling. This is like a man who attempts to demonstrate that a bucket of water is not really that by emptying it cup by cup, asserting as he goes along that each cupful is not a full bucket’s worth until, having emptied the whole, he proclaims that there just wasn’t a bucket of water there.

The majority opinion responds as follows:

The dissent accuses the majority of deconstructing the evidence to reach its decision, but the dissent uses a vivid imagination to draw inferences in favor of Silva and ignore competing inferences that favor the findings of the Immigration Judge, contrary to our deferential standard of review. Because imaginative inferences are all that support its opinion, the dissent is left in the position of one who, trying to fill a leaky bucket with water, must first plug all the holes. Silva’s testimony is full of holes, and the dissent impermissibly draws inferences in Silva’s favor to plug those holes.

You can access the complete ruling at this link.

Posted at 3:00 PM by Howard Bashman



“Congress advised to reject Akaka bill”: The Honolulu Advertiser today contains an article that begins, “The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights recommended yesterday that Congress reject a bill granting federal recognition and self-government rights to Hawaiians.”

Posted at 2:48 PM by Howard Bashman



Three-judge Ninth Circuit panel in no hurry to legalize same-sex marriage in California: You can access today’s ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit at this link. Fans of obscure language will rate the opinion a triple-F based on passages such as “While a scry of the complaint might lead one to think that the issue here is not general, a true perscrutation leads to the opposite conclusion.” Senior Circuit Judge Jerome Farris, perhaps unwilling to imperil the trees necessary to produce an unabridged dictionary, merely concurs in the result without separate opinion.

Posted at 2:35 PM by Howard Bashman



“Supreme Court: Private party hosts not liable.” The Toronto Globe and Mail provides a news update that begins, “The Supreme Court of Canada ruled Friday that two hosts of a New Year’s Eve party were not responsible for the havoc caused by a guest who drunkenly drove away from their house and caused crippling injuries to an 18-year-old woman.” My earlier coverage is here.

Posted at 12:54 PM by Howard Bashman



“The Moussaoui Sentence: How the would-be terrorist avoided death.” Meghan O’Rourke has this essay online at Slate today.

Posted at 12:50 PM by Howard Bashman



“‘Gang of 14’ to Meet Tuesday”: Roll Call provides a news update (subscription required) that begins, “The bipartisan ‘Gang of 14’ will meet Tuesday evening in the office of Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) to discuss its part in the upcoming Senate fight over controversial judicial nominees, sources say.”

And today at National Review Online, Byron York has an essay entitled “What’s Behind the New Fight Over Judges: Republicans look to pick their battles–very carefully.”

Posted at 12:10 PM by Howard Bashman



“Court Challenges Internet Wiretap Rules”: The Associated Press provides a report that begins, “A U.S. appeals panel challenged the Bush administration Friday over new rules making it easier for police and the FBI to wiretap Internet phone calls.”

Posted at 11:58 AM by Howard Bashman



“If the district court then finds in favor of the plaintiffs, it shall develop a plan under which Native-Americans will have a reasonable opportunity to elect an Indian-preferred candidate.” This decision issued today by a divided three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit represents at least a temporary victory for a Native American voting rights claim under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 against the City of Martin, South Dakota.

Posted at 11:55 AM by Howard Bashman



“8th Circuit Sides with Easterbrook Over Posner: Post-Assessment Returns Are Valid Returns for Bankruptcy Tax Purposes.” This post appears today at “TaxProf Blog.”

Posted at 10:58 AM by Howard Bashman



“Top court to rule on party hosts’ responsibility”: CBC News provides a report that begins, “A decision expected this morning from the Supreme Court of Canada could affect anyone planning to have a house party.”

Posted at 9:55 AM by Howard Bashman



“Conflict puts vote on Boyle in doubt; Allegations spur opponents to fight judicial nomination”: The News & Observer of Raleigh, North Carolina today contains an article that begins, “Allegations that U.S. District Judge Terrence Boyle broke a conflict-of-interest law have strengthened Democrats’ resolve to fight his promotion and raise doubts about whether the North Carolina judge’s nomination will ever get a full vote in the U.S. Senate.”

Somewhat relatedly, the working title of next Monday’s installment of my “On Appeal” column for law.com (scheduled to debut online at around 10:30 p.m. eastern time tonight) is “Is the Statute Requiring a Federal Judge to Recuse Due to Stock Ownership in a Litigant Too Unforgiving?”

Posted at 9:54 AM by Howard Bashman



“One Last Appearance, and Outburst, From Moussaoui”: Neil A. Lewis has this article today in The New York Times.

The Washington Post today contains articles headlined “Some Saw Moussaoui As Bit Player, Juror Says; ‘You Will Die With a Whimper,’ Judge Tells Conspirator“; “New Home Is ‘Alcatraz of the Rockies’; Moussaoui to Join Many High-Profile Inmates at Federal Prison in Colorado“; and “Moussaoui’s Mother Blames Outcome on French Passivity; Officials Aided in Conviction To Appease U.S., She Says.” In addition, Law Professor David Cole has an op-ed entitled “How Not to Fight Terrorism.”

The Los Angeles Times contains articles headlined “With Judgment, Moussaoui Is Silenced at Last; His voice fades from the courtroom that served as a stage for his hateful rants; A jurist sends him ‘to die with a whimper’ in federal prison” and “The Slow Rot at Supermax; At Moussaoui’s future home in Florence, Colo., inmates are reportedly not merely punished, but incapacitated and broken down.”

The Richmond Times-Dispatch contains an article headlined “Life for Moussaoui.”

And USA Today reports that “Moussaoui to join worst of worst at Colo. prison; 9/11 conspirator will spend most of his time in solitary confinement.”

Posted at 7:28 AM by Howard Bashman



“Weighing all the evidence”: The Los Angeles Times today contains an editorial that begins, “In the first opinion from its newest justice, the U.S. Supreme Court has given criminal defendants something most Americans assumed they already possessed: the right to offer evidence that somebody else committed the crime.”

Posted at 7:08 AM by Howard Bashman