How Appealing



Saturday, September 23, 2006

In today’s mail: Yesterday, as I previously noted here, The Associated Press reported that “Alito predicts Phillies in playoffs, MVP for Howard.”

Today in the mail I received tickets for my son and I to attend two Division Series home games and two League Championship home games should Justice Samuel A. Alito, Jr.’s prediction prove correct and the Phillies make it into the playoffs. Justice Alito, as a Phillies fan himself, may be pleased to learn that during each series, two Phillies home games are tentatively scheduled to occur on Saturdays and Sundays. But if the Phillies fail to make the playoffs, then the final baseball game that my son and I will attend this season will be tomorrow’s game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Florida Marlins.

Posted at 9:00 PM by Howard Bashman



“So Small a Town, So Many Patent Suits”: Tomorrow’s edition of The New York Times will contain an article that begins, “On a crisp Monday morning earlier this month, about 20 lawyers from some of the country’s top law firms shuffled their way into a brightly lit, wood-paneled federal courtroom in this small city in eastern Texas.” And a related graphic can be accessed here.

Posted at 7:20 PM by Howard Bashman



“Why Blogs Are Bad for Legal Scholarship”: Law Professor Brian Leiter has this essay online at The Yale Law Journal’s Pocket Part web site.

At his “Legal Theory Blog,” Law Professor Larry Solum has a responsive post where he writes that “It seems to me that it is a very serious mistake to formulate a question such as ‘Are blogs good or bad for legal scholarship?'”

Posted at 2:30 PM by Howard Bashman



“More Journalists Facing Jail; Time to pass a federal shield law”: The Washington Post today contains an editorial that begins, “Unless a federal appeals court steps in, two reporters for the San Francisco Chronicle will head to jail for as long as 18 months.”

Posted at 2:00 PM by Howard Bashman



“Defense Lawyers Assail Legislation on Detainees; The bill faces scrutiny for stripping habeas corpus; Rights groups worry over vagueness”: The Los Angeles Times contains this article today.

And The New York Times today contains a related editorial entitled “Turning Back the Clock on Rape.”

Posted at 1:58 PM by Howard Bashman



“Judicial Nominee Up For Hearing; Bush, Rell Back Avon Candidate”: The Hartford Courant today contains an article that begins, “The nomination to the federal bench of State Superior Court Judge Vanessa L. Bryant, sharply criticized by state and federal bar groups, will be the subject of a hearing Tuesday by the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary in Washington.”

Posted at 1:33 PM by Howard Bashman



“A Bad Court-Splitting Plan”: The New York Times today contains an editorial that begins, “The Senate held hearings this week on a proposal to split the San Francisco-based United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in two.”

Posted at 1:23 PM by Howard Bashman



“Appeals panel sends journalist back to prison”: The San Francisco Chronicle today contains an article that begins, “Freelance journalist Josh Wolf returned to federal prison Friday after refusing to produce the outtakes of video footage he shot at a violent San Francisco protest in July 2005.”

Posted at 10:22 AM by Howard Bashman



“Supreme Court Justice Scalia to preside over Patrick Schiltz’s investiture as federal judge”: On Thursday, the University of St. Thomas issued this news release previewing a ceremony that took place yesterday.

Update: The blog “Power Line” offers a photo from the ceremony.

Posted at 10:05 AM by Howard Bashman



“High court gives judge a 15-minute reprimand; ‘Judge Downey, what were you thinking?’ the chief justice asks of the longtime jurist done in by computer porn and sex harassment claims.” The St. Petersburg Times contains this article today.

You can access online a video recording of the reprimand by clicking here (RealPlayer required), while the court filings in the case can be accessed via this link.

Posted at 9:55 AM by Howard Bashman



“Breaking prisoners, but not the case; The use of torture on suspects, a common practice around the world, rarely achieves its goal”: This article appears today in The St. Petersburg Times.

Posted at 9:50 AM by Howard Bashman



“Alito leads the way with sign bearing his name in Hamilton”: The Newark (N.J.) Star-Ledger today contains an article that begins, “The former Municipal Drive in Hamilton Township is seven-tenths of a mile long, but to the mayor and residents it represents the road to the Supreme Court of the United States. Yesterday, it was renamed Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. Way in honor of the high court’s newest member and graduate of Hamilton’s public schools.”

And The Trenton Times today contains an article headlined “A sign Alito’s come a long way.”

Posted at 9:45 AM by Howard Bashman