How Appealing



Wednesday, July 5, 2006

“Enron Founder, Awaiting Prison, Dies in Colorado”: This article will appear Thursday in The New York Times, along with articles headlined “Lay’s Death Complicates Efforts to Seize Assets” and “A Quiet Influence in Aspen” and an obituary headlined “Kenneth L. Lay, 64, Enron Founder and Symbol of Corporate Excess, Dies.”

Thursday’s edition of The Deal will report that “Lay’s Death Clouds Legal Process, Attorneys Say.”

Thursday’s edition of The Washington Post will contain a front page article headlined “Enron’s Lay Dies Of Heart Attack; Convicted Founder Faced Life in Prison.” In addition, Henry Allen will have an essay headlined “Ken Lay’s Last Evasion; To Some, CEO Is Cheating Them One More Time,” while business columnist Steven Pearlstein will have an essay entitled “Ken Lay’s Optimism Was Outpaced by Reality.”

The Houston Chronicle provides a news update headlined “Preliminary report says Lay died of natural causes.”

And The Los Angeles Times provides a news update headlined “Enron Founder Ken Lay, 64, Dead of Heart Attack.”

Posted at 11:55 PM by Howard Bashman



Does massive fraud, followed by massive heart attack resulting in death, leave Kenneth Lay as though he had never been indicted or convicted? Both “White Collar Crime Prof Blog” and The Wall Street Journal’s “Law Blog” offer thoughts on that question.

Posted at 4:10 PM by Howard Bashman



“Because proportionality review and penalty review both determine whether a death sentence was properly imposed, votes in the two reviews must be combined. A combined vote in DiFrisco’s proportionality review and penalty review reveals that a majority of this Court concluded that DiFrisco should receive a life sentence.” The Supreme Court of New Jersey issued this interesting decision today. Although a death row inmate lost two separate challenges to his death sentence before that court, the combined effect of those two rulings against him — we learn in today’s opinion — is that the inmate must be released from death row. Thanks to “Capital Defense Weekly” for the pointer.

Posted at 4:03 PM by Howard Bashman



“In short, I don’t believe that it is appropriate or reasonable for a lawyer to pluck a few words from the middle of a sentence and pretend that they say something very different from what they mean in context. This is true of every lawyer who appears before us, but it goes doubly for lawyers who represent the government in criminal cases.” So writes Ninth Circuit Judge Alex Kozinski in a concurring opinion issued today.

Posted at 3:30 PM by Howard Bashman



“‘The Good Guys’ Won?! Why Americans don’t trust liberals on national-security issues.” Robert Alt has this essay today at National Review Online.

Posted at 3:15 PM by Howard Bashman



New York Court of Appeals may rule today in same-sex marriage cases, but then again perhaps it won’t: The New York Times today contains an article headlined “Top State Court’s Ruling on Gay and Lesbian Marriage Is Awaited” that begins, “New York’s highest court is expected to rule today on what one legal scholar called a contest between judicial hearts and minds, a parsing of legal texts and private sympathies: whether to permit gay and lesbian marriage.”

Although the day is far from over, the list of decided cases that the Court of Appeals of New York has posted to its web site today does not, as of this moment, include any ruling in the same-sex marriage cases.

Update: I am now reliably advised that the opinion will not issue today.

Posted at 10:40 AM by Howard Bashman



“Predicting Technology’s Impact on Appellate Oral Argument”: This week’s installment of my “On Appeal” column for law.com can be accessed here.

Posted at 9:04 AM by Howard Bashman



“Coincidentally, a few weeks ago I switched my default font to Century Schoolbook. In an upcoming post, I’ll tell you why I did that.” At “the (new) legal writer” blog, appellate lawyer Raymond P. Ward offers this suspenseful post.

Posted at 7:30 AM by Howard Bashman



“GOP Conundrum: Heed the High Court, or Play Politics?” Columnist Harold Meyerson has this op-ed today in The Washington Post.

Posted at 7:23 AM by Howard Bashman



“California Court Allows Defendant’s Sexual History Into HIV Case; California justices rule that those who don’t inform their partners of previous relationships can be liable for transmitting diseases”: Henry Weinstein has this article today in The Los Angeles Times. My earlier coverage appears here.

Posted at 7:15 AM by Howard Bashman



“The Kennedy Center: The Supreme Court’s Balance Is Precarious.” Columnist Ruth Marcus has this op-ed today in The Washington Post.

Posted at 7:05 AM by Howard Bashman



Retired judge’s conviction at penis-pump trial could give rise to penis-pump conviction appeal: The Associated Press reported this past weekend that “Thompson bonds out, attorneys weigh options.”

And yesterday’s edition of The Sapulpa (Okla.) Daily Herald contained an article headlined “Transcript: Brewster tried to influence testimony” that begins, “A defense lawyer for former judge Donald Thompson could be in deep trouble with the Oklahoma Bar Association.”

Posted at 6:54 AM by Howard Bashman



“The Flag Fetish: Better to burn a banner than to deface the Constitution.” Christopher Hitchens had this essay yesterday at OpinionJournal.

Posted at 6:45 AM by Howard Bashman



“Senators Kyl and Graham’s Hamdan v. Rumsfeld Scam: The Deceptive Amicus Brief They Filed in the Guantanamo Detainee Case.” John W. Dean has this essay online today at FindLaw.

Posted at 6:44 AM by Howard Bashman



“Top State Court’s Ruling on Gay and Lesbian Marriage Is Awaited”: The New York Times today contains an article that begins, “New York’s highest court is expected to rule today on what one legal scholar called a contest between judicial hearts and minds, a parsing of legal texts and private sympathies: whether to permit gay and lesbian marriage.”

Posted at 6:33 AM by Howard Bashman