How Appealing



Tuesday, March 6, 2018

“How the Supreme Court’s paper rules foiled a former Attorney General’s filing in Pa. redistricting case”: Tim Darragh of The Morning Call of Allentown, Pennsylvania has this report.

Posted at 9:38 PM by Howard Bashman



“Which Supreme Court justices are the topic of the most academic articles?” Derek T. Muller has this post at his blog, “Excess of Democracy.”

Posted at 9:05 PM by Howard Bashman



“On Prisoner Rights, Justice Gorsuch Is Precisely Who We Thought He’d Be; He went out of his way last month to protect officials at the expense of injured inmates”: Andrew Cohen has this post online at the Brennan Center for Justice.

Posted at 8:56 PM by Howard Bashman



“Reynolds sworn into Supreme Court Bar Association”: Grayson Schmidt of The Ames (Iowa) Tribune has an article that begins, “Despite a 1 1/2 day layover in Chicago due to this past weekend’s nor’easter storm, Story County Attorney Jessica Reynolds and her family made it to Washington D.C. for her swearing-in ceremony into the United States Supreme Court Bar Association, a moment she described as ‘surreal.'”

Posted at 7:42 PM by Howard Bashman



“Fasano has concerns about Connecticut Supreme Court justice nominee”: Jessica Lerner of The New Haven Register has an article that begins, “State Republican President Pro Tempore Len Fasano says his concerns about the nomination of state Supreme Court Justice Andrew McDonald to be the next chief justice is due to Fasano’s belief that McDonald has a pattern of questionable methodology in decisions. McDonald’s nomination has drawn debate, numerous hours of his testimony before the Judiciary Committee and a 20-20 committee vote to send the nomination to the House of Representatives.”

Posted at 5:57 PM by Howard Bashman



“Iowa Supreme Court ‘supermajority’ required under bill passed by Iowa Senate”: William Petroski of The Des Moines Register has an article that begins, “The Iowa Senate narrowly approved a controversial bill Tuesday that says no state law can be held unconstitutional by an Iowa court without the concurrence of at least five justices of the seven-member Iowa Supreme Court.”

Posted at 5:51 PM by Howard Bashman



“How Businesses Became People”: In next Sunday’s issue of the Sunday Book Review section of The New York Times, law professor Zephyr Teachout will have this review of law professor Adam Winkler‘s new book, “We the Corporations: How American Businesses Won Their Civil Rights.”

And on the new episode of Slate’s “Amicus” podcast, titled “When Did Corporations Become People? If your answer is Citizens United, think again,” Winkler discusses his new book with host Dahlia Lithwick.

Posted at 1:30 PM by Howard Bashman



“Supreme Court candidate Michael Screnock split on stepping away from high-profile issues he helped defend”: Molly Beck of The Wisconsin State Journal has this report.

Posted at 1:20 PM by Howard Bashman



A peek behind the scenes today at “How Appealing”: This blog has been posted to the web using the Movable Type publishing platform since March 2005. Unfortunately, this blog’s longtime web host will no longer be providing free Movable Type upgrades going forward, and my current version of Movable Type won’t continue working for long on that web host’s servers.

As a result, behind the scenes today at “How Appealing,” this blog’s nearly 16 years of archives are being moved to a new home — the same web host as the other Breaking Media sites — and starting at some point soon, I will begin using WordPress as this blog’s publishing platform.

If everything goes as planned, you may not notice any disruption of your access to “How Appealing” today. On the other hand, if you are one of this blog’s many readers who enjoys refreshing this site countless times day and night, there is a slight possibility of a loss of access at some point as ISPs update their DNS records to reflect this blog’s new IP address. The textual web address at which you have reached “How Appealing” in the past won’t be changing; what I am describing happens entirely behind the scenes.

In the unlikely event that this blog ends-up offline for longer than just a moment or two as a result of this switch-over, I will continue to post appellate-related updates on this blog’s Twitter feed. If you aren’t already following “How Appealing” on Twitter, this would be a perfect time to begin doing so.

Thanks again to all of this blog’s amazing readers for your enthusiastic readership and support over the years!

Posted at 10:58 AM by Howard Bashman



“The Justice Department Is Trying To Keep The Secret Surveillance Court As Secret As Possible”: Zoe Tillman of BuzzFeed News has this report.

Posted at 8:40 AM by Howard Bashman



“D.C. Circuit Review — Reviewed: Can Hodge v. Talkin Be Distinguished?” Aaron Nielson recently had this post at the “Notice & Comment” blog of the Yale Journal on Regulation.

Posted at 8:22 AM by Howard Bashman