How Appealing



Thursday, October 8, 2015

Programming note: Additional posts will appear here on Friday night. During the day Friday, I will be driving from the Philadelphia suburbs to Atlanta, Georgia, where this weekend I will be visiting my son (who will be on fall break from college until next Tuesday), other family, and friends.

As is often the case, while I am away from the computer additional appellate-related posts may appear at this blog’s Twitter feed.

While I’m on the road tomorrow, a stop for lunch is planned in Lexington, Virginia and for an early dinner in Lexington, North Carolina.

Update: I have arrived in Atlanta. Due to the lateness of the hour, however, additional posts will appear here on Saturday morning.

Posted at 10:16 PM by Howard Bashman



“Downward dog duplication? Relax, yoga poses can’t be copyrighted, court rules.” Maura Dolan of The Los Angeles Times has this news update.

Dan Levine of Reuters reports that “U.S. court says yoga sequence cannot be copyrighted.”

The Associated Press has a report headlined “Court: Yoga sequence not entitled to copyright protection.”

And David Kravets of Ars Technica reports that “Guru denied copyright protection for Bikram yoga sequence of postures; Brushing teeth, pushing lawnmowers, shaking Polaroids also not copyrightable.”

My earlier coverage of today’s Ninth Circuit ruling appears at this link.

Posted at 9:44 PM by Howard Bashman



“Legal experts decry offensive Eakin emails”: Craig R. McCoy and Angela Couloumbis of The Philadelphia Inquirer have a news update that begins, “Experts on legal ethics condemned state Supreme Court Justice J. Michael Eakin on Thursday following disclosures that he had sent or received emails that mocked Muslim children as suicide bombers, called Mexicans ‘beaners,’ and joked about domestic-assault victims.”

Posted at 9:35 PM by Howard Bashman



“MBTA’s acceptance, rejection of ads may land before Supreme Court; Free-speech dispute on court’s radar”: Kimberly Atkins of The Boston Herald has this report.

Posted at 1:32 PM by Howard Bashman



“Enough is a enough on capital punishment”: Mark White and Mark Earley had this op-ed in yesterday’s edition of The Tulsa World.

Posted at 11:09 AM by Howard Bashman



“Were These Transgender Prisoners Paroled — Or Just Kicked Out? Three prisons were ordered to provide transgender health care; Three prisoners were suddenly set free.” Beth Schwartzapfel has this report online at The Marshall Project.

Posted at 11:08 AM by Howard Bashman



“Coming Your Way Soon: The Little Book Of Big Appellate Tips!” Dan Klau recently had this post at his “Appealingly Brief!” blog.

Posted at 11:04 AM by Howard Bashman



“Kane’s release of complaint against Supreme Court justice mirrors leaks in her case”: Terrie Morgan-Besecker has this front page article in today’s edition of The Scranton Times-Tribune.

Posted at 8:25 AM by Howard Bashman



“Governor Wants To Pack Georgia Supreme Court And Give Republicans A Majority”: Ian Millhiser has this post at ThinkProgress.

Posted at 8:22 AM by Howard Bashman



“Donald Trump goes to Supreme Court over Menie wind farm; Donald Trump’s challenge to a planned offshore wind farm is being heard at the UK’s Supreme Court”: BBC News has this report.

Posted at 8:20 AM by Howard Bashman



“Supreme Court Probes Protections in Death-Penalty Cases; Passions run high in arguments devoted to capital punishment”: Jess Bravin has this article in today’s edition of The Wall Street Journal.

Posted at 8:12 AM by Howard Bashman



“Bob Dylan and the supremes — Ginsburg and Scalia, that is”: Reuters has this report on an interview with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg that appears today in the Swiss newspaper Neue Zuercher Zeitung.

Posted at 8:06 AM by Howard Bashman



“Death Penalty States Face Hurdles in Carrying Out Executions”: Manny Fernandez will have this article in Friday’s edition of The New York Times.

Posted at 8:00 AM by Howard Bashman



“The Supreme Court’s Loss of Prestige: For the first time in a long time, more people disapprove than approve of its performance.” Law professor Eric Posner has this essay online at Slate.

Posted at 7:56 AM by Howard Bashman