How Appealing



Thursday, September 5, 2013

“’22 Lewd Chinese Women’ and Other Courtroom Dramas: A U.S. circuit judge brings historic Asian-American trials back to life.” Elizabeth Yuan has this essay online at The Atlantic.

Posted at 1:18 PM by Howard Bashman



“Our oft-stated rule against judicial revision of statutes finds plenty of anchor weight in the bedrock principle that we are a country of laws, not one ruled by the musings, whether pragmatic or otherwise, of the black-robed class.” So writes Chief Judge Ed Carnes of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in a ruling issued today addressing the “in writing” requirement that Congress imposed in the Telecommunications Act of 1996 on a local government’s denial of a request to build a cell phone tower.

Today’s ruling appears to perpetuate a circuit split on the issue, so perhaps U.S. Supreme Court review (and many more cell phone towers) may be on the horizon.

Posted at 11:07 AM by Howard Bashman



“Christie says Supreme Court justice Helen Hoens would not get a fair hearing”: MaryAnn Spoto of The Newark (N.J.) Star-Ledger has this report.

Posted at 9:55 AM by Howard Bashman



“SCOTUS’s next big privacy issue: Can police seize smartphones?” Alison Frankel’s “On the Case” from Thomson Reuters News & Insight has this report.

Posted at 8:50 AM by Howard Bashman



“Louisiana Supreme Court hears argument on parole for juvenile killers”: The Times-Picayune of New Orleans has this report.

Posted at 8:42 AM by Howard Bashman



“The Next Abortion Case Is Here”: Linda Greenhouse has this post at the “Opinionator” blog of The New York Times.

Posted at 8:16 AM by Howard Bashman