Thursday, April 18, 2024

"In Pursuit of Meaningful Civil Representation: Advocacy Strategy Propo" by Sophia T. Slater

"In Pursuit of Meaningful Civil Representation: Advocacy Strategy Propo" by Sophia T. Slater
Fordham Urban Law Journal
By Sophia T. Slater, Published on 04/01/24

INTRODUCTION “If we had had representation at the beginning, the eviction probably would not have happened.”1 Cristina Quiñones-Betancourt, a nonprofit attorney from the organization Mobilization for Justice, made this remark about a client who had been evicted after missing rent payments and was seeking to get back his apartment.2 Although Quiñones-Betancourt had a legal argument that her client’s Section 8 housing voucher should have counted toward the outstanding rent, an evicted person with a nonprofit legal attorney bearing an unmanageable caseload has an uphill battle squaring off with a well-represented landlord.3 The Legal Aid Society’s Chief Attorney of the Civil Practice, Adriene Holder, said the mechanism of legal aid is “extremely successful” when implemented, but explained the organization is “still turning away thousands of people because of the lack of capacity.”4 This situation in housing court is just one consequence of the general lack of a right to counsel for civil cases in the United States, which is producing progressively more dire outcomes. The impact of this lack of civil counsel is particularly disparate for those facing financial and racial barriers to legal assistance.5

 IN PURSUIT OF MEANINGFUL CIVIL REPRESENTATION: ADVOCACY STRATEGY PROPOSALS FOR AN INTEGRATED CIVIL GIDEON AND LEGAL EMPOWERMENT APPROACH Sophia T. Slater* Introduction ....................................................................................1274 
I. Factual Background .................................................................1276 
A. The Access to Civil Justice Crisis................................1276 
B. The Civil Right to Counsel (Or Lack Thereof) ............1277 
II. Existing Approaches ................................................................1278 
A. The Civil Gideon Approach .........................................1279 
B. The Legal Empowerment Approach ............................1281 
1. Upsolve, Inc. et al. v. James ...................................1282 2
. The Discriminatory Nature of Professional Regulation in the Practice of Law...........................1284 
III. Proposed Advocacy Strategies.................................................1286 
A. Litigation Strategy for a Civil Right to Counsel Based on the Right to a Jury Trial for Deportable Offenses...1286
 1. The Legal Standard of a Sufficiently Severe Penalty ....................................................................1287 2. Padilla v. Kentucky.................................................1289 
3. Right to a Jury Trial in Proceedings for Deportable Offenses..................................................................1290
i. Bado v. United States.......................................1291 
ii. People v. Suazo ................................................1293 
4. Applications to a Civil Right to Counsel................1295 
B. Gun Violence Intervention Program as a Model for Legal Empowerment Initiatives..............................................1296 
1. The Jacobi Medical Center’s SUV Program...........1297 
2. Applications to a Legal Empowerment Initiative ...1299 C. Why Both Approaches Must be Implemented Together........................................................................1302 Conclusion......................................................................................1303

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Toward a New Constitutional Politics - LPE Project

Toward a New Constitutional Politics - LPE Project
By Aziz Rana (New York)

In recent years, the anti-democratic flaws of the U.S. Constitution have become increasingly apparent. Commentators now routinely worry over the system’s exaggerated checks on popular authority: the lopsided grant of power to certain states, an impassable constitutional amendment process, widespread voter disenfranchisement, and of course the dramatic control exercised by a tiny group of lifetime federal judges.

And yet, if you grew up in the United States around the turn of the twenty-first century, the dominant culture was that of almost religious textual devotion. Even Occupy Wall Street was launched on Constitution Day, September 17. One might well have assumed that the American constitutional system stood at the apex of liberal-democratic ideas. Given its manifest flaws, how did Americans come to idolize this document and what have been the political consequences of this reverence?

My new book, The Constitutional Bind, attempts to make sense of this striking tension in our collective life. It argues that the substance and implications of modern constitutional veneration have not been continuous since the founding. They are, instead, a distinctively twentieth century development. Over the past century, the text became constitutively joined to what Swedish sociologist Gunnar Myrdal in 1944 famously labeled the “American creed”—the idea that the U.S. stands for the promise of equal liberty for all. Such creedal constitutionalism was then further augmented by a series of additional commitments: civil libertarian values, market capitalism, constrained representative government with an empowered Supreme Court, and—crucially—the belief that these principles explained why the U.S. should direct the global order.

The Supreme Court wants to hand a victory to January 6 insurrectionists - Vox

Hostage


The Supreme Court wants to hand a victory to January 6 insurrectionists - Vox
By Ian Millhiser

The Supreme Court spent about an hour and a half on Tuesday morning arguing over whether to make it much harder for the Justice Department to prosecute hundreds of people who joined the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol.

It appears, after Tuesday’s arguments, that a majority of the justices will side with the insurrectionists — though it is far from clear how those justices will justify such an outcome.

The case, known as Fischer v. United States, involved a federal law which provides that anyone who “obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so” commits a very serious federal felony and can be imprisoned for up to 20 years — although, as Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar pointed out during Tuesday’s argument, actual sentences against January 6 defendants convicted under this statute have been much shorter, normally ranging from a little less than one year to slightly over two years.

According to the Justice Department, more than 1,265 people have been arrested for playing some role in the attack on the Capitol. Approximately 330 of them have been charged under the obstruction statute at issue in FischerOne of them is Donald Trump.

As a federal appeals court held in its decision in this case, the obstruction statute is pretty darn clear that it applies to an effort to obstruct any congressional proceeding intended to certify the result of a presidential election — like the proceeding that the January 6 rioters attacked. And very few of the justices seemed to agree with Jeffrey Green, the lawyer representing a January 6 defendant, who proposed one way to read the statute more narrowly.

Nevertheless, many of the justices expressed concerns that the law sweeps too broadly and that it must be narrowed to prevent people who engage in relatively benign activity from being prosecuted.

Justice Samuel Alito, for example, expressed uncharacteristic sympathy for hecklers who interrupt a Supreme Court hearing — suggesting that prosecuting them under a statute that can carry a 20-year sentence goes too far. Justice Neil Gorsuch expressed similar concerns about prosecuting someone who peacefully conducts a sit-in to delay a court hearing, or someone who pulls a fire alarm to disrupt an official proceeding.

Monday, April 15, 2024

NY State Bar Report on AI - Artificial Intelligence use



“The New York State Bar Association has adopted guidelines for lawyers to use artificial intelligence without running afoul of attorney ethics rules, as organizations and courts continue to weigh the benefits and pitfalls of AI in the legal sector. Lawyers should take precautions to safeguard sensitive client information and protect confidentiality, and should not rely solely on information generated by AI and generative AI tools in client matters, a state bar AI task force urged in a new Report and Recommendations of the New York State Bar Association Task Force on Artificial Intelligence.” Read more comment by Reuters here.

Ten Recommendations by the New York State Bar Association Task force on AI:

Task Force Recommendations 

1. Adopt Guidelines: The Task Force recommends that NYSBA adopt the AI/Generative AI guidelines outlined in this report and commission a standing section or committee to oversee periodic updates to those guidelines. 

2. Focus on Education: The Task Force recommends that NYSBA prioritize education in addition to legislation, focusing on educating judges, lawyers, law students and regulators to understand the technology so that they can apply existing law to regulate it. 

3. Identify Risks for New Regulation: Legislatures and regulators should identify risks associated with the technology that are not addressed by existing laws, which will likely involve extensive hearings and studies involving experts in AI, and as needed, adopt regulations and legislation to address those risks. 

4. Examine the Function of the Law in AI Governance: The rapid advancement of AI prompts us to examine the function of the law as a governance tool. Some of the key functions of Page 10 of 85 the law in the AI context are: (i) expressing social values and reinforcing fundamental principles; (ii) protecting against risks to such values and principles; and (iii) stabilizing society and increasing legal certainty.

Toward a New Constitutional Politics - Aziz Rana - LPE Project

The treatment of the Constitution as scripture is a disabling feature in our law and politics.  Especially because the scripture is limited to the 1787 pre-industrial revolution first draft which sought to guarantee the disproportionate power of the slavers like Washington, Jefferson, and Madison, 
No one speaks of the drafters of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments as founders.
- GWC
Toward a New Constitutional Politics - LPE Project
By Aziz Rana [Professor of law and government at Boston College.]

In recent years, the anti-democratic flaws of the U.S. Constitution have become increasingly apparent. Commentators now routinely worry over the system’s exaggerated checks on popular authority: the lopsided grant of power to certain states, an impassable constitutional amendment process, widespread voter disenfranchisement, and of course the dramatic control exercised by a tiny group of lifetime federal judges.

And yet, if you grew up in the United States around the turn of the twenty-first century, the dominant culture was that of almost religious textual devotion. Even Occupy Wall Street was launched on Constitution Day, September 17. One might well have assumed that the American constitutional system stood at the apex of liberal-democratic ideas. Given its manifest flaws, how did Americans come to idolize this document and what have been the political consequences of this reverence?

My new book, The Constitutional Bind, attempts to make sense of this striking tension in our collective life. It argues that the substance and implications of modern constitutional veneration have not been continuous since the founding. They are, instead, a distinctively twentieth century development. 

Sunday, April 14, 2024

The Indian Ocean Slave Trade - with Prof. Bernard Freamon

 Bernard Freamon is author of Possessed by the Right Hand - a history to the present day of Islam and Slavery.



Stormy Daniels Trump trial: Why the legal arguments are stronger than I thought. by Mark Joseph Stern - SLATE


The elements of the offense with which Trump is  charged - falsification of business records are HERE.
Stormy Daniels Trump trial: Why the legal arguments are stronger than I thought.
By Michael Joseph Stern - SLATE

When Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg brought criminal charges against Donald Trump in 2023, I was highly skeptical of his decision. It seemed at the time that other indictments would soon follow, and that they would rest on far firmer legal ground than this one. Over the past year, though, I have realized that my initial doubts about Bragg’s indictment were misplaced. It now seems clear that Trump’s New York trial, slated to begin this week, will be the former president’s only criminal trial before the November election. 
The other three strong indictments against him in other jurisdictions have unfortunately been delayed by a corrupt judge, a foot-dragging Supreme Court, and a district attorney’s questionable conduct in an already complex case. This, combined with Bragg’s excellent pretrial briefing, has substantially strengthened the case for this prosecution. It is important to American democracy that Trump be forced to defend at least some of his alleged criminal conduct before a jury of his peers in advance of Election Day. And there is no reason why this shouldn’t be the case in which he’s compelled to do it. I am now fully onboard.

Saturday, April 13, 2024

The NY Trump prosecution.- elements of the offense

 

A person is guilty of falsifying business records in the first degree when he commits the crime of falsifying business records in the second degree, and when his intent to defraud includes an intent to commit another crime or to aid or conceal the commission thereof.

 New York Consolidated Laws, Penal Law - PEN § 175.10 Falsifying business records in the first degree

A person is guilty of falsifying business records in the first degree when he commits the crime of falsifying business records in the second degree, and when his intent to defraud includes an intent to commit another crime or to aid or conceal the commission thereof.

Falsifying business records in the first degree is a class E felony.


Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Trump is Not Immune from Prosecution - Jack Smith - Special Counsel




 

The United States Supreme Court will soon hear argument in a case in which it has granted a petition for review pre-trial.  Case, No. 23-393 is United States v. Donald J., Trump, prosecution  for charges arising from his role in the attempted obstruction of the lawful transfer of power after he lost the 2020 Presidential election.

On February 6, 2024, in his application to the Supreme Court for a stay of trial, posed two questions for the Court:

The questions presented are: I. Whether the doctrine of absolute presidential immunity includes immunity from criminal prosecution for a President’s official acts, i.e., those performed within the “‘outer perimeter’ of his official responsibility.” Nixon v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 731, 756 (1982) (quoting Barr v. Matteo, 360 U.S. 564, 575 (1959)). II. Whether the Impeachment Judgment Clause, U.S. CONST. art. I, § 3, cl. 7, and principles of double jeopardy foreclose the criminal prosecution of a President who has been impeached and acquitted by the U.S. Senate for the same and/or closely related conduct that underlies the criminal charges. 

The Court granted the stay but reframed the questions  presented as:

Whether and if so to what extent does a former President enjoy presidential immunity from criminal prosecution for conduct alleged to involve official acts during his tenure in office.

In his Brief for the United States To this the Special Counsel Jack Smith has a plain answer:  

I. A former President lacks immunity from federal criminal prosecution for official acts during his presidency  
A. A claim of absolute criminal immunity for a
former President’s official acts violates
established separation-of-powers principles
B. History supports the conclusion that former
Presidents are subject to prosecution for official
acts.

The Court earlier this year declined a request by Smith to rule quickly on the issue. but the Court ordered that the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals first rule on the issues.  The Court did.  This appeal by Trump followed.  the delay i consequential.  A decision is unlikely until the end of June, making trial and judgment before the November election doubtful.  Should Trump be re-elected he could order dismissal of all charges by the Attorney General whom he appoints.

- GWC 4/11/24


Monday, April 8, 2024

Trump is not immune_DavidBoyle amicus

20240321205032155_23-939_tsac_DavidBoyle.pdf

After Courts: Democratizing Statutory Law by Ryan Doerfler, Samuel Moyn :: SSRN

The latest in a line of articles opposing judicial aggrandizement, the imperial judiciary, etc..
- GWC
 
After Courts: Democratizing Statutory Law

70 Pages Posted:

Ryan Doerfler

Harvard Law School

Samuel Moyn

Yale University

Date Written: April 7, 2024

Abstract

In Federalist No. 78, Alexander Hamilton argued for locating interpretive authority over law separately from those institutions tasked with formulating it. Hamilton’s vision, never accurate as a description of American practice, has not been credible for a long time. To the extent massive power is still allocated to judges, our legal institutions have been out of step with our legal theory, which has long regarded them as political actors and policymakers. More practically, every Term it is clearer and clearer that the role of the Supreme Court in statutory cases (including checking administrative rule-making and other processes) is, if anything, more menacing than its role in the rare instances when it deploys its heaviest weaponry of constitutional invalidation. Against progressive calls to reclaim the judiciary, this Article completes our proposal to disempower courts exercising lawmaking authority—including when they are interpreting statutes alone. Indeed, the same considerations that counsel the constitutional disempowerment of courts counsel their statutory disempowerment, and the allocation or reallocation of their authority over law to politically accountable agents. The heart of our Article offers a survey of court disempowerment strategies and tools, which are comparable to though not identical with the disempowerment mechanisms that have been proposed in the arena of constitutional reform. Such strategies and tools are appealing in the short term; but in the long term, a fuller rethinking our desirable institutional plan of legal interpretation beckons. Available and existing disempowerment strategies for courts are best conceived as early and partial versions of full-scale allocation of interpretive authority over law to “political” branches and openly political control.

Doerfler, Ryan and Moyn, Samuel, After Courts: Democratizing Statutory Law (April 7, 2024). Michigan Law Review, Forthcoming, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=

History, Tradition, and the Designated Hitter Rule - Eric Segall // Dorf on Law

History, Tradition, and the Designated Hitter Rule // 
By Eric Segall

****Professor Solum, along with Professor Randy Barnett, has also commented on the role of history and tradition in some of the Court's recent cases. These two well-known academic originalists wrote an article titled "Originalism After Dobbs, Bruen, and Kennedy: The Role of History and Tradition." 

Their article begins by saying that "in three recent cases, the constitutional concepts of history and tradition have played important roles in the reasoning of the Supreme Court." Not surprisingly, these two originalists concluded the following about history and tradition (the article is sophisticated and provocative but is not the direct subject of this post, hence the leap to the conclusion):

In this Article, we have argued for an originalist approach to history and tradition. History and tradition are essential elements in the originalist toolkit: no originalist should leave home without them. But originalists should be wary of the use of history and tradition by non-originalists, whether they be Progressive or Conservative Constitutional Pluralists. An originalist embrace of history and tradition that is inconsistent with the original public meaning of the constitutional text would undermine originalism itself and sacrifice the rule of law, the separation of powers, and popular sovereignty on the altar of pragmatism and political expediency. Our message is simple: “Originalists, don’t go there!”

Not only should originalists not go there (a strong version of traditionalism) but no one else should either because a tradition-focused approach to constitutional interpretation provides little guidance to judges and lets them hide their implicit value judgments and ideologies behind centuries of disputed practices, customs, and traditions (or the absence thereof). How long does something have to last to be a tradition? How widespread does the tradition have to be? Is rejection of  practices something judges should take strong notice of when examining the role of history and tradition? What if a long tradition is viewed as pernicious by large segments of minority populations? There are no good answers to any of these questions.

Here is a hypothetical to demonstrate these problems....

Friday, April 5, 2024

Demand the Impossible - One Lawyer's pursuit of equal justice for all

 


A conversation with legendary capital punishment defender Stephen Bright, with Robert Tsai - author of a biography of the passionate lawyer.

Thursday, April 4, 2024

Bishop Gumbleton, longtime soul of the US Catholic peace movement, dies | National Catholic Reporter



Bishop Gumbleton, longtime soul of the US Catholic peace movement, dies | National Catholic Reporter

Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, the Detroit prelate who for many American Catholics defined faith-based social justice activism in the post-Vatican II church, died April 4. He was 94.

Described sometimes as the pastor of the Catholic peace and justice movement, Gumbleton lived in Detroit nearly his entire life, yet his influence was felt in far-flung places such as El Salvador, Haiti, Vietnam, Iran and Iraq. 

He was a founding member of both Pax Christi USA, the national arm of the international Catholic peace movement, and Bread for the World, an advocacy organization seeking to end world hunger.

"To put it most succinctly, Tom lived out the peace of Christ in his complete being," said Johnny Zokovitch, Pax Christi USA's executive director, shortly after the bishop's death. "Everything that our movement strives to be was evident in Tom and how Tom lived."

Immaculate Heart of Mary Sr. Irene Therese Gumbleton, the last living of nine Gumbleton siblings, said her brother passed away at a hospital in Dearborn, Michigan, following physical decline over the past week. "It means a lot to us that we've lost him," she told NCR by phone. "I think the church is really going to miss him."

Jeffrey Clark’s bid to aid Trump election scheme violated attorney rules, DC Bar panel finds - POLITICO

Jeffrey Clark’s bid to aid Trump election scheme violated attorney rules, DC Bar panel finds - POLITICO

Originalism after Dobbs, Bruen, and Kennedy: The Role of History and Tradition by Lawrence B. Solum, Randy E. Barnett :: SSRN

Randy Barnett was the originator of the concept that nearly killed the affordable care act: that liberty prohibited compelling someone to buy insurance.  Such an argument from history led to a profoundly harmful result.  But John Roberts saved the day by finding the so-called individual mandate to be permissible under the taxing power.

Then in The Original Meaning of the 14th Amendment Barnett with Evan Bernick celebrated a letter by Justice Joseph Bradley to a District Judge embracing an understanding of the 14th Amendment that did NOT have the state action requirement.  So a state's failure to protect rights was as actionable as an affirmative measure.  The implications are profound and surprising from such a prominent conservative/libertarian voice.  - GWC

Originalism after Dobbs, Bruen, and Kennedy: The Role of History and Tradition

62 Pages Posted: 27 Jan 2023 Last revised: 11 Oct 2023

Lawrence B. Solum

University of Virginia School of Law

Randy E. Barnett

Georgetown University Law Center

Date Written: October 7, 2023

Abstract

In three recent cases, the constitutional concepts of history and tradition have played important roles in the reasoning of the Supreme Court. Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization relied on history and tradition to overrule Roe v. Wade. New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen articulated a history and tradition test for the validity of laws regulating the right to bear arms recognized by the Second Amendment. Kennedy v. Bremerton School District looked to history and tradition in formulating the test for the consistency of state action with the Establishment Clause.

These cases raise important questions about the Court’s approach to constitutional interpretation and construction. Do Dobbs, Bruen, and Kennedy represent a new theory of constitutional interpretation and construction based on history and tradition? In the alternative, should the references to history and tradition in these opinions be understood through the lens of constitutional pluralism as modalities of constitutional argument? Finally, can the use of history and tradition in Dobbs, Bruen, and Kennedy be reconciled with the Supreme Court’s embrace of originalism?

Part One of this article elucidates the constitutional concepts of history and tradition. Part Two lays out four distinct roles that history and tradition can play:

 (1) as evidence of original meaning and purpose, 

(2) as modalities of constitutional argument within a constitutional pluralism framework, 

(3) as a novel constitutional theory, which we call “historical traditionalism,” and 

(4) as implementing doctrines. Part Three investigates the roles of history and tradition in Dobbs, Bruen, and Kennedy. Part Four articulates a comprehensive strategy for the incorporation of history and tradition in constitutional jurisprudence.

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Former Trump Lawyer John Eastman Should Be Disbarred, California Judge Rules - Democracy Docket

John Eastman, left, addresses the crowd at the 
January 6, 2021 rally preceding the assault on
the United States Capitol


Former Trump lawyer John Eastman - then the Dean of Chapman University School of Law - is now listed as not eligible to practice in his home state of California.
He awaits trial in Georgia where he is charged for his role in trying to obstruct the lawful transfer of power after the 2020 Presidential election. 
The California State Bar Court Judge Yvette D. Rowland recommends disbarment in her 128 page opinion and order.  .  She has ordered Eastman to be suspended from the practice of law pending final review by the state's Supreme Court.  He is also ordered to pay $10,000 in fines. The thrust of the findings is stated by the Judge:
Even after courts in key states authoritatively rejected unsupported allegations of outcome-determinative fraud in the election, Eastman persisted in proposing a legally unsustainable strategy. From November 2020 forward, as his many legal challenges failed, Eastman substantively advanced the false narrative that widespread fraud had tainted the election, and that Vice President Pence possessed the power to contravene the constitutional electoral process. His demonstrated intent was to foment loss of public confidence in the integrity of the 2020 election and persuade Vice President Pence to refuse to count or delay the counting of electoral votes on January 6.
Most of his misconduct occurred squarely within the course and scope of Eastman’s representation of President Trump and culminated with a shared plan to obstruct the lawful function of the government. While attorneys have a duty to advocate zealously ee RPC for their clients, they must do so within the bounds of ethical and legal constraints. Eastman’s actions transgressed those ethical limits by advocating, participating in and pursuing a strategy to challenge the results of the 2020 presidential election that lacked evidentiary or legal support.
Vigorous advocacy does not absolve Eastman of his professional responsibilities around honesty and upholding the rule of law. While his actions are mitigated by his many years of discipline-free practice, cooperation, and prior good character, his wrongdoing is substantially aggravated by his multiple offenses, lack of candor and indifference. Given the serious and extensive nature of Eastman’s unethical actions, the most severe available professional sanction is warranted to protect the public and preserve the public confidence in the legal system. 

It is important to note that the purpose of suspension and disbarment is not punishment.  Rather the purpose is to protect the public, not to punish the delinquent lawyer.  That purpose is set forth in Comment [8] of the Preamble to the ABA's Model Rules of Professional Conduct which calls for "zealous" representation.

[8] A lawyer's responsibilities as a representative of clients, an officer of the legal system and a public citizen are usually harmonious. Thus, when an opposing party is well represented, a lawyer can be a zealous advocate on behalf of a client and at the same time assume that justice is being done. So also, a lawyer can be sure that preserving client confidences ordinarily serves the public interest because people are more likely to seek legal advice, and thereby heed their legal obligations, when they know their communications will be private. 

- GWC
Former Trump Lawyer John Eastman Should Be Disbarred, California Judge Rules - Democracy Docket

WASHINGTON, D.C. — A judge in California ruled on March 27 that John Eastman, former President Donald Trump’s attorney in 2020 and the chief architect of the insurrection on the Capitol, should be disbarred for his involvement in Trump’s coordinated attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. On April 7, Eastman’s official status with the State Bar of California was updated to “not eligible to practice law.”

In the 128-page ruling from the State Bar Court of California, Eastman was charged with one count of “failing to support the Constitution and laws of the United States,” two counts of “seeking to mislead a court,” six counts of “moral turpitude by making various misrepresentations” and finally, two counts of “moral turpitude.”

Eastman faced 11 charges from the California State Bar over his myriad legal efforts to help Trump overturn the election results. Those charges stemmed from two memos he sent — one on Dec. 23, 2020 and another on Jan. 4, 2021 — presented ways in which Trump could stay in the White House. The second one Eastman sent, a notorious six-page memo, outlined how Trump could stay in the White House by persuading Vice President Mike Pence to throw out the electoral votes for Joe Biden in seven key states and instead cast them for Trump. 

Eastman’s memo hinged, in part, on the fringe right-wing legal theory called the independent legislature theory (ISL) that interprets the word “legislature” to mean that only the legislature can set the rules for federal elections, including how presidential electors are chosen. 

Eastman sent the memo on Jan. 4, 2021 — just two days before the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters who were trying to thwart the certification of the election. Eastman spoke at the Jan. 6 rally near the White House that preceded the attack where he asserted, without evidence, that voter fraud helped Biden win the election. 

“They were unloading the ballots from that secret folder, matching them, matching them to the unvoted voter, and voilà, we have enough votes to barely get over the finish line,” Eastman said at the rally. “We saw it happen in real time last night and it happened on Nov. 3rd as well.” 

During the attack, Greg Jacob, Pence’s chief counsel, sent an email to Eastman that said, “Thanks to your bullshit, we are now under siege.” In the subsequent congressional investigation into Jan. 6, Jacob testified that he told Trump his plan would violate the Electoral Count Act and wrote in an email to fellow Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani that he should be on a “pardon list.”

The Dec. 23 two-page memo outlined a plan to keep Trump in office alleging false evidence of election fraud. Eastman allegedly devised this plan even after multiple lawsuits in numerous states found no credible evidence of fraud that would affect the outcome of the election. The California State Bar’s decision to disbar Eastman stems from the plan formulated in the Dec. 23 memo.

In the time since the California State Bar charged Eastman, he’s remained active in legal matters elsewhere. In August of 2023, Eastman represented the Colorado Republican Party in a lawsuit attempting to bar unaffiliated voters from participating in the state’s 2024 Republican primary — a lawsuit that could have disenfranchised nearly two million voters

The California court recommended that Eastman not only be disbarred but have to pay “monetary sanctions” for his actions. The judge ruled that he should pay $10,000 for “making numerous false and misleading statements regarding the conduct of the 2020 presidential election and Vice President Pence’s authority to refuse to count or delay counting properly certified slates of electoral votes and for his collaborative efforts with President Trump to impede the counting of electoral votes.”

Eastman’s disbarment takes effect three days from the date of the order, according to the judge’s ruling. 

Read the California Bar’s 11 charges against Eastman here. 

Gag order - Trump, by Judge Merchan, NY, NY

New York Supreme Court
Justice Juan M. Merchan


Because the United States Supreme Court has stayed trial in the most important charge arising from the January 6, 2021 attempt to retain power despite losing the Presidential election Donald Trump is likely to first face criminal charges in New York.  The charges there arise from his attempts as a candidate to buy silence regarding his involvement with the porn actress whose stage name is Stormy Daniels.
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified on December 15, 1791. It guarantees the rights of criminal defendants, including the right to:
  • A speedy and public trial by an impartial jury
  •  To confront witnesses against the accused
Because Donald Trump's rhetoric poses a threat to jurors and witnesses, as well as to lawyers and prosecutors and family New York Supreme Court trial judge Juan M. Merchan has issued a four page "gag order", enforceable by  contempt of court,  which order seeks to prevent Donald Trump from disparaging or threatening jurors, court officials and others

ORDERED, that the People's motion for clarification is GRANTED. '
I'he Court's Order of March 26,2024,did not contemplate the family members of this Court or of the District Attorney. It is therefore not necessary for this Court to determine -whether the statements were intended to materially interfere with these proceedings; and it is further ORDERED, 
that the Court's Order of March 26, 2024, is amended as indicated below. Defendant is directed to refrain from:
Making or directing others to make public statements about known or reasonably foreseeable witnesses concerning their potential participation in the investigation or in this criminal proceeding; Making or directing others to make public statements about 
(1) counsel in the case other than the District Attorney, 
(2) members of the court's staff and the District Attorney's staff, or 
(3) the family members of any counsel, staff member, the Court or the District Attorney, if those statements are made with the intent to materially, interfere with, or to cause others to materially interfere with, counsel's or staff's work in this criminal case, or with the knowledge that such interference is likely to result; and making or directing others to make public statements about any prospective juror or any juror in this criminal proceeding. 

The Anti-Innovation Supreme Court: Major Questions, Delegation, Chevron and More by Jack Michael Beermann :: SSRN

 

"The Anti-Innovation Supreme Court: Major Questions, Delegation, Chevron and More" Free Download
William & Mary Law Review, Forthcoming
Boston Univ. School of Law Research Paper No. 4383132

JACK MICHAEL BEERMANNBoston University School of Law
Email: beermann@bu.edu

The Supreme Court of the United States has generally been a very aggressive enforcer of legal limitations on governmental power. In various periods in its history, the Court has gone far beyond enforcing clearly expressed and easily ascertainable constitutional and statutory provisions and has suppressed innovation by the other branches that do not necessarily transgress widely held social norms. Novel assertions of legislative power, novel interpretations of federal statutes, statutes that are in tension with well-established common law rules and state laws adopted by only a few states are suspect simply because they are novel or rub up against tradition. In periods of governmental innovation and assertions of expanded authority, this aggression becomes evident and perhaps more robust.

In recent years, the Court has created new barriers to government innovation even as government is confronted with serious threats to the health and welfare of mankind. Chief among this new set of limitations on the power of federal administrative agencies is an interpretive device that has become known as the Major Questions Doctrine. This doctrine purports to be based on a view of legislative intent and judicial role that, but in reality it resonates more with conservative anti-regulatory political views. Under this new doctrine, the Court rejects agency assertions of regulatory authority when it finds that the agency’s action would have major social and economic affects and lacks crystal-clear congressional authorization. Ironically, because the MQD has no basis in the Administrative Procedure Act or prior law, the Court has in effect created a major new doctrine of administrative law severely limiting agency authority without clear authorization from Congress.

The Court has also suppressed agency innovation by confining Chevron deference to unimportant issues of statutory construction. Chevron, for all of its faults, has the virtue of validating agency policy innovation so long as Congress had not clearly denied agency authority. This reform to Chevron, together with the creation and application of the Major Questions Doctrine, in effect accomplishes the aim of some Justices to impose a more robust nondelegation doctrine, making agency innovation even more difficult. In addition, the Court has worked to prevent innovation in other areas of law, such as gun control and the spending power, preventing the state and federal governments from taking action to deal with pressing social problems. The current court has truly become an anti-innovation Court.

Clarity Doctrines in law - Richard M. RE

 

Clarity Doctrines

66 Pages Posted: 8 Feb 2019 Last revised: 9 Oct 2019

Richard M. Re

University of Virginia School of Law

Date Written: January 31, 2019

Abstract

Clarity doctrines are a pervasive feature of legal practice. But there is a fundamental lack of clarity regarding the meaning of legal clarity itself, as critics have pointed out. This article explores the nature of legal clarity as well as its proper form. In short, the meaning of legal clarity in any given doctrinal context should turn on the purposes of the relevant doctrine. And the reasons for caring about clarity generally have to do with either (i) the deciding court’s certainty about the right answer or (ii) the predictability that other interpreters (apart from the deciding court) would converge on a given answer. Each of these two sorts of reasons gives rise to a model form of legal clarity with its own strengths and difficulties. More generally, debates about what type and degree of clarity to require often reflect implicit disagreements about the relevant clarity doctrine’s goals. So by challenging a doctrine’s accepted purposes, reformers can justify changes in clarity doctrines. To show as much, this article discusses a series of clarity doctrines and illuminates several underappreciated avenues for reform, particularly as to federal habeas corpus, Chevron, qualified immunity, constitutional avoidance, and the rule of lenity. Finally, this article acknowledges, but also discusses ways of mitigating, several anxieties about clarity doctrines, including worries that major clarity doctrines are too pluralistic, malleable, or awkward.

Re, Richard M., Clarity Doctrines (January 31, 2019). 86 University of Chicago Law Review 1497, UCLA School of Law, Public Law Research Paper No. 19-06, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3327038