How Appealing



Wednesday, January 11, 2006

“U.S. attorney general: Court must stop mistreating immigrants”: Howard Mintz has this article today in The San Jose Mercury News.

The Austin American-Statesman reports today that “Review of immigration courts is ordered; U.S. attorney general also warns judges to treat claims fairly.”

And The Associated Press reports that “Attorney General Chides Immigration Judges.”

I have posted online the memorandums that Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales sent on Monday to immigration judges and to the members of the Board of Immigration Appeals.

Posted at 10:25 AM by Howard Bashman



Today’s U.S. Supreme Court decision in an argued case: At “SCOTUSblog,” Lyle Denniston has a post titled “Court issues death penalty ruling.”

And Gina Holland of The Associated Press reports that “Justices Reinstate Calif. Death Sentence.”

You can access today’s 5-4 ruling in Brown v. Sanders, No. 04-980, at this link. Justice Antonin Scalia delivered the opinion of the Court. Justice John Paul Stevens delivered a dissenting opinion, in which Justice David H. Souter joined. And Justice Stephen G. Breyer delivered a dissenting opinion, in which Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg joined. Finally, the oral argument transcript is available here.

Posted at 10:11 AM by Howard Bashman



Day three of the confirmation hearing for U.S. Supreme Court nominee Samuel A. Alito, Jr. is scheduled to begin at 9:30 a.m. eastern time: Click here to watch in RealPlayer via C-SPAN. The committee’s live video feed is here (RealPlayer). And National Public Radio is streaming online live audio coverage at this link (RealPlayer).

The Washington Post provides live blogging here. The New York Times provides live blogging here. And “SCOTUSblog” is also live-blogging the hearing.

Posted at 9:22 AM by Howard Bashman



“Berkeley Scouts In Court Over Policy on Gays”: Today in The New York Sun, Josh Gerstein has an article (pass-through link) that begins, “A Boy Scout group argued to the California Supreme Court yesterday that the city of Berkeley violated the Constitution by ending the youth organization’s six decades of free access to the city’s marina in a dispute over the Boy Scouts’ exclusion of gays and atheists.”

The San Francisco Chronicle reports today that “High court hears city, Sea Scouts on berth dispute; Group calls loss of marina privileges punitive for ideals.”

Claire Cooper, legal affairs writer for The Sacramento Bee, has a front page article headlined “Berkeley case tests subsidies for Scouts.”

In The Oakland Tribune, Josh Richman reports that “Lawyers spar over subsidy for Sea Scouts; City to top state judges: Group that discriminates doesn’t have right to Berkeley taxpayer money.”

As I noted earlier here, in The Los Angeles Times, Maura Dolan reports that “Court May Allow City to Deny Scouts a Break; Justices seem ready to uphold Berkeley’s decision not to waive dock fees for group whose parent organization bars gays.”

And David Kravets of The Associated Press reports that “Scouts claim bias over lost funds; Say Berkeley violated rights.”

Posted at 9:10 AM by Howard Bashman



The Philadelphia Inquirer is reporting: Today’s newspaper contains articles headlined “Did he do it? DNA results are due any day for inmate executed in 1992, and the man who fought for an answer” and “Acquaintance with a doomed man.”

And in local news, an article headlined “Judge grants earlobes their day in court; Whether those of a robbery suspect match those on camera is at issue” begins, “Fingerprints, blood, fibers and DNA have set the falsely accused free. But earlobes? A federal judge has cleared the way for a University of Pennsylvania Museum forensic anthropologist who studies differences in human ears to testify at the trial of a Philadelphia man charged with robbing a local bank.”

Posted at 9:05 AM by Howard Bashman



“The gang that couldn’t question straight: Eight Democratic senators had a chance to grill Samuel Alito Tuesday — but their artless queries could have been dodged by a tree sloth.” Walter Shapiro has this essay at Salon.com.

Posted at 7:28 AM by Howard Bashman



“Alito Called ‘Pretty Amazing So Far,’ As Leahy Jokes of His Own Snoring”: This article appears today in The New York Sun.

Today in The Los Angeles Times, Maura Reynolds, David G. Savage and Richard Simon have an article headlined “Alito Tells Skeptical Democrats He Would Keep an Open Mind.” Ronald Brownstein has a news analysis headlined “Democrats Cast Wide Net Seeking Alito Flaw; The senators’ critique showed the party’s difficulty at coalescing around a single, clear argument against his high court nomination.” And Stephen R. Dujack has an op-ed entitled “The Alito testimony you won’t hear.”

In The Chicago Tribune, Jill Zuckman reports that “Alito affirms right to privacy; Abortion, executive powers main topics.” And columnist John Kass has an op-ed entitled “Alito already confirmed–as Phillies fan.”

In USA Today, Joan Biskupic reports that “Nominee speaks softly and sticks to the big picture in his responses.” In related coverage, “Senators divided over Alito’s performance; Court nominee says he’d keep open mind about abortion, sidesteps wiretap questions.” An editorial is entitled “Alito disclaims an agenda, but would he protect rights?” And Jonah Goldberg has an op-ed entitled “Senate ‘show trial’ is product of a too-powerful court.”

Tom Curry, national affairs writer for MSNBC, has an article headlined “What we know and don’t know about Alito; Court nominee is noncommittal on abortion, national security surveillance.”

The Boston Globe today contains articles headlined “Alito backs privacy, asserts an open mind on abortion; Nominee doesn’t disavow his ’85 view against Roe v. Wade” and “Nominee sees ‘oversight,’ but no ethics breach in Vanguard case.”

The Newark (N.J.) Star-Ledger contains articles headlined “Alito tells critics: I’ll be fair; Democrats fail to get Supreme Court nominee to offer personal views” and “GOPers make sure to smother grenades.” And columnist Tom Moran has an essay entitled “So far, the Democrats keep missing tackles.”

In The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Michael McGough reports that “Alito, Democrats parry on Roe, rights; The aggressive questioning sometimes strained civility on the Senate panel.” And in related coverage, “Critics call Specter softer on Roe; Some Democrats, liberal groups contend grilling didn’t match Roberts hearings.”

The San Francisco Chronicle contains an article headlined “Alito offers few hints on how he’d rule; Democrats persistent with questions on war powers for president, abortion.” And Bob Egelko reports that “Questions about Roe skirted with skill; But Alito backs right to privacy, protection for women’s health.”

The Sacramento Bee reports that “Alito vows ‘open mind.’

The Orange County Register reports that “Feinstein criticizes ‘cloudy’ answers.”

The Denver Post reports that “Alito vows open mind on abortion.”

Newsday reports that “Democrats pick their battles carefully.”

The Baltimore Sun contains articles headlined “Court nominee defends record; Alito, in careful answers, declines to detail his views on abortion rights or presidential powers” and “Alito irks foes by sticking to his script; Politely but stubbornly, he deflects Democratic efforts to smoke him out.”

The Houston Chronicle reports that “Alito promises open mind on abortion cases; Testimony covers the law surrounding landmark Roe ruling.”

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports that “Alito grilled on powers of president; Nominee doesn’t get specific under tough questioning from Democrats.”

The Austin American-Statesman contains an article headlined “Analysis: Nominee rarely backed immigrants in court.”

The Washington Times contains articles headlined “Alito won’t prejudge Roe” and “A Jersey clan with Italian family values.” An editorial is entitled “The reasonable Judge Alito.” And Gary Bauer has an op-ed entitled “Out of the closet on abortion.”

FOXNews.com provides a report headlined “A Mostly Swimming Day for Alito.”

The Salt Lake Tribune reports that “In quizzing Alito, Hatch serves up ‘soft lobs to the net.’

The Deseret Morning News reports that “Senators’ grilling, views of Alito split on party lines; ‘He’s as good as it gets,’ Hatch says, but Demos aren’t swayed.”

The Cleveland Plain Dealer reports that “Roe not ‘special,’ DeWine declares.”

The Dayton Daily News reports that “DeWine decries ‘unfair’ attacks.”

The Washington Post reports that “Kennedy Makes a Weapon Of McCain’s Torture Law.”

The News & Observer of Raleigh, North Carolina reports that “UNC-CH law professor called to testify.”

The Herald-Sun of Durham, North Carolina reports that “Duke prof to testify at hearings on Alito.”

The Arkansas News Bureau reports that “Religious leaders oppose Alito confirmation.”

The Baxter Bulletin reports that “Democrats want to hear more from Alito.”

The Oregonian reports that “Confirmation hearing inspires Alito critics, allies in Oregon; Opponents plan a demonstration in Portland, while others quietly voice support.”

The Trenton Times contains an article headlined “Witness to history unfolding.”

The Daily Princetonian contains articles headlined “Alito ’72 faces the fire; In first day of questioning, nominee is grilled on abortion, executive powers and CAP“; “Biden criticizes Princeton; Amid CAP showdown, senator says he ‘wasn’t a big Princeton fan’“; “Kennedy calls for release of CAP archives; Rusher says he has ‘no recollection’ of Alito affiliation with conservative group“; and “CAP critic pulled from Democratic witness list; Dujack ’76 regrets controversial op-ed, will not testify before Senate committee.”

The Times of London reports that “Alito frustrates Democrats with elusive responses.”

Patti Waldmeir of Financial Times reports that “Senators fail to land knock-out blow on Alito.”

The Toronto Globe and Mail reports that “Alito tells U.S. Senate he’d keep ‘open mind’ on abortion.”

And The Toronto Star reports that “U.S. court nominee promises ‘open mind.’

Posted at 7:05 AM by Howard Bashman



“1st Suit in State to Attack ‘Intelligent Design’ Filed”: Henry Weinstein has this article today in The Los Angeles Times.

That newspaper today also contains articles headlined “Court May Allow City to Deny Scouts a Break; Justices seem ready to uphold Berkeley’s decision not to waive dock fees for group whose parent organization bars gays“; “Taking Sides on Same-Sex Marriage; Political, religious and civil rights groups file briefs as the legal fight over gay unions builds“; “Panel Calls for Moratorium on Executions; An Assembly committee approves a suspension of up to three years to study if the innocent are convicted; A critic calls idea an insult to victims“; “Unlikely Allies Back Three-Strikes Change“; and “Colin Farrell Sex Video Hits Internet.”

Posted at 6:54 AM by Howard Bashman



“Funeral protest ban is pushed; Downstate legislator set to introduce bill”: The Chicago Tribune today contains an article that begins, “Angered by a religious group’s demonstrations at scores of military funerals, a state lawmaker said he will soon introduce a bill to make such protests illegal in Illinois.” The article notes, “The state bills raise sticky constitutional questions that legal experts say could rise into the highest levels of the U.S. judicial system.”

Posted at 6:50 AM by Howard Bashman



“Clinical, Cynical: You’ll never believe what left-wing law profs consider ‘mainstream.'” Heather Mac Donald has this op-ed (free access) today in The Wall Street Journal.

Posted at 6:48 AM by Howard Bashman



“FBI checking prints in death row cases; Mistaken match prompts review of fingerprinting”: USA Today contains this article today.

Posted at 6:44 AM by Howard Bashman



“Virginity Tests in South Africa and Judicial Bypass in the U.S.: Ritually Scrutinizing the Virtue of Girls.” Sherry F. Colb today has this commentary online at FindLaw.

Posted at 6:35 AM by Howard Bashman