The Supremes

U.S. Supreme Court To Consider Use of Expletives

Use by others, that is, although it may use a few of its own.

The Supreme Court granted certiorari today in the case of FCC v. Fox Television Stations, which presents the following question:

Is the Federal Communication Commission's determination that broadcast of vulgar expletives may violate federal restrictions on broadcasting "any obscene, indecent, or profane language" arbitrary in failing to provide a reasoned explanation for the agency's shift in policy on the use of isolated expletives?

The Court will thus be considering, in addition to questions involving torture, the separation of powers, and so on, whether fines can be imposed for dropping the F-bomb on a TV show.

This case arises from Bono's use of the word ("this is really f***ing brilliant") while accepting a Golden Globe in 2003.  According to a timeline put together by the First Amendment Center, the FCC received 234 complaints about Bono's F-bomb, but decided that "the utterance did not violate federal restriction . . . because the language in question did not describe or depict sexual or excretory activities or organs."  It was just the F-word in isolation.

Later, however, supposedly at the urging of FCC Chairman Michael Powell, the FCC reversed its position.  Apparently not wanting to establish a policy that isolated F-bombs (or the less-dreaded but still-indecent S-bombs) would be tolerated, the FCC stated that any use of even "fleeting expletives" would be considered "indecent" and subject to fines -- regardless of context, the number of bombs deployed, or the collateral damage inflicted, if any.

Though the FCC imposed no fines based on this policy for past incidents, it was sued by the four major TV networks in April 2006, who argued the policy was arbitrary and unconstitutional.  The 2d Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 last year that the FCC policy on "fleeting expletives" was arbitrary and capricious and was issued without a "reasoned analysis for departing from prior precedent."  The FCC appealed, and the highest court in the land will now take up the issue.

I very much look forward to the Supreme Court's reasoned analysis, and Bono's reaction to it.

FBI Rejects Waterboarding In Favor of Starbucks

Writing on the New York Times website Tuesday, Mike Nizza discussed the revelation that in contrast to the CIA's admitted use of techniques like "waterboarding" to try to get information out of Al Qaeda suspects at Guantanamo, FBI interrogators used less coercive tactics.  Namely, giving the men "food whenever they were hungry" and, on occasion, even Starbucks coffee.

Ksm Maybe there is more to this story -- like maybe once the suspects got used to Starbucks, they threatened them with having to go back to Gitmo-blend coffee unless they talked.  That might still be cruel and unusual.

As Nizza points out, the Starbucks detail is interesting for a couple of reasons.  First, there is now officially nowhere on the planet that does not have a Starbucks.  (Guantanamo also reportedly has a gift shop, which is good to know.)  Second, if the FBI has been successful this way -- and 60 Minutes reported recently that a tactic called "conversation" also worked with Saddam Hussein -- are the CIA tactics necessary or even a good idea (setting aside whether they are legal)?

According to the Washington Post, an FBI team has been working with the suspects since 2006, attempting to get incriminating information that the CIA had already obtained, but without using any controversial techniques in the hopes that the admissions would hold up in court.  Whether or not the information has already been tainted by the earlier tactics, though, remains to be seen, according to a former judge advocate general who spoke to the Post.  "Once you torture someone," he said, "it is hard to un-torture them."

On the other hand, Justice Scalia thinks we should not be such pansies about this "so-called torture," as he referred to it in a BBC interview.  "Is it really so easy to determine," he said, "that smacking someone in the face to determine where he has hidden the bomb that is about to blow up Los Angeles is prohibited in the Constitution?"  Turns out that's a rhetorical question.  "It would be absurd to say you couldn't do that," he continued, "and once you acknowledge that, we're into a different game."  Sounds like pretty clear guidance -- if you are a character on "24."

So, today's lesson is that if you have time to interrogate a suspect, you should be nice and bring him Starbucks; but if the bomb is ticking, feel free to smack him in the face.  Don't say you never learned anything from reading Lowering the Bar.

Link: The Lede (NYT)
Link: Download the podcast of Justice Scalia re: smacking terrorists in the face

"American National" Sues All Nine Supreme Court Justices

SupremeBrave American citizen Jerry Brumbaugh struck a blow for freedom or something on Friday when he sued the nine current members of the United States Supreme Court for making rulings that have violated his constitutional rights.  Specifically, all of them (all the rulings and all the rights).

In the lawsuit, filed in the Springfield division of the Western District of Missouri, Brumbaugh takes issue with the Court's rulings that have "violated my constitutional rights . . . in all manners, ways, and areas of law."  These include:

  • "Violation of civil liberties by allowing a granted clause of the Constitution to violate my rights in many manners and ways,"
  • "Failing to correct violations of the Constitution which it is the duty of the Court to do," and
  • "Allowing unlawfully the loss of civil liberties by contractual means into the sphere of the 14th Amendment."

We would probably all agree that there are lots of "violations of the Constitution" that the Court has been failing to correct, although we would probably all disagree about exactly what those violations are.  Perhaps hoping to save space, Brumbaugh does not allege any facts supporting his own personal claim.  It is refreshing to see a complaint limited to three pages (especially after last week's titanic 239-page "brief" on behalf of Jeff Skilling), but this one probably needed a little more detail.  And a little more research -- I know the liberal wing of the Court is in the minority these days, but it would still be polite to spell Justice Breyer's name correctly.

On the other hand, Brumbaugh's complaint is consistent with his position that, since he is "an American national citizen," those pesky Federal Rules of Procedure do not apply to him.  The argument seems to be that the Bill of Rights amended "every preceeding [sic] clause" of the Constitution, so that the 14th Amendment's Due Process Clause applies directly to the action, authorizing Jerry D. Brumbaugh to do whatever he wants: "Plaintiff hereby asserts that the rules may not be used to interfere with this case . . . nor its continuance before the courts."

That argument didn't fly in a previous case, Brumbaugh v. Tandy, to which Brumbaugh refers in this complaint in support of his request that counsel be appointed for him.  (In both cases, he has specifically requested Gerry Spence.)  The complaint in that case elaborated a bit on Brumbaugh's arguments, and made some more creative ones, such as the argument that the Privileges & Immunities Clause grants a "right to protection by the government," and "to allow a pro se litigant to flounder is a horrid violation of the right to protection."  Maybe so, but it can also be very entertaining.  I hereby assert the right to deny Mr. Brumbaugh counsel, as to appoint one would infringe upon my pursuit of happiness.

In Brumbaugh v. Thomas, et al., of course, plaintiff has taken a more direct approach, as his certificate of service indicates: "YOU ARE HEREBY GIVEN NOTICE THAT YOU NINE JUSTICES ARE BEING SUED FOR VIOLATIONS OF THE U.S. CONSTITUTION."  Should he prevail, he requests "a ruling that the judges [sic] of the U.S. Supreme Court have violated the Constitution," and as damages "the net worth of each justice as payment for their deriliction [sic] of duty."  You nine justices should take note.

Link:  Brumbaugh v. Thomas, et al., Case No. 07-CV-3295 (W.D. Mo. filed Sept. 7, 2007) (PDF).
Link: The Supreme Court (for now) of the United States

No Protection for "BONG HiTS 4 JESUS"

A united conservative majority of the Supreme Court ruled today in Morse v. Frederick that there is no First Amendment protection for a student who unfurled a banner supporting "BONG HiTS 4 JESUS" across the street from his school.  Writing 4 the majority of 5, Chief Justice Roberts (joined by Kennedy, Alito, Scalia, and, surprisingly, Thomas) wrote that the Ninth Circuit had been wrong to find that Frederick was wrongly punished for the banner.

The majority first disposed of Frederick's claim that thisBonghitsdecision_2 was not a school-speech case because he was not at school.  He was not at school, but he was across the street with a banner pointed at school, so this part of the decision makes sense.  Those who will be supporting bong hits for Jesus elsewhere, though, should be aware that the Court agreed with the language of the school superintendent's decision that a student cannot "stand in the midst of his fellow students, during school hours, at a school-sanctioned activity and claim he is not at school," even if he is not at school.  Future banner-wielders should beware of attempts to expand the protected zone.

In fact, as Roberts noted, "every other authority" to consider the at-school issue had reached the same conclusion: the Ninth Circuit, the district court, the school board, the superintendent, and even "Principal Morse."  Thus, a number of judges who not long ago scoffed at the idea of consulting the law of other civilized countries on the question of the death penalty have signed on to an opinion citing "Principal Morse" as authority.

The harder questions were whether the school's interpretation of the banner as promoting illegal drug use was reasonable, and if so whether it could restrict that speech at a school event.  The Chief Justice of the United States then wrote a paragraph analyzing whether a reference to "bong hits" necessarily advocated the use of illegal drugs.  He concluded that it did, for three reasons:

First, the phrase could be interpreted as an imperative: "[Take] bong hits ..." --a message equivalent, as Morse explained in her declaration, to "smoke marijuana" or "use an illegal drug." Alternatively, the phrase could be viewed as celebrating drug use--"bong hits [are a good thing]," or "[we take] bong hits"--and we discern no meaningful distinction between celebrating illegal drug use in the midst of fellow students and outright advocacy or promotion.

Third, he said, there appeared to be a "paucity of alternative meanings."  There was indeed such a paucity.  (Every time a lawyer uses a phrase like that I have a mental picture of Joel's dad in Risky Business saying "A slight preponderance of bass, perhaps?")  Frederick described it as "meaningless and funny."  Roberts noted that the dissenters also did not have much luck, referring to it variously as "curious," "ambiguous," "nonsense," "ridiculous," "obscure," "silly," "quixotic" and "stupid."  The majority concluded this was not political speech and so could be reasonably have been restricted by the school.

Justice Thomas wrote separately to make clear that he would go further and vote to reverse the school-speech standard set forth forty years ago in Tinker v. Des Moines School District.  That is not activist, though, because during the colonial era, "teachers managed classrooms with an iron hand."  No unfurling of banners linking bong hits with the Savior, or any member of the Holy Trinity, was tolerated.  Under the doctrine of in loco parentis (which I believe is Latin for "like a crazy parent"), Thomas wrote, teachers were allowed to do pretty much anything apart from inflict "clearly excessive" corporal punishment.  One line of cases seems to have held that anything was okay other than an action taken with legal malice or one that caused "permanent injury."  (Going loco approved, so long as injuries only temporary.)  Tinker was a sea change from that grand tradition, Thomas said, and he made clear his view that the Constitution flatly "does not afford students a right to free speech in public schools."

Reading this, I assume that Thomas's record of causing zero incidents of laughter during oral argument is intact.

Justice Stevens, joined by Souter and Ginsberg, agreed that the principal should not be liable for violating First Amendment rights, but did not agree that Frederick could be disciplined simply because his banner made an "oblique reference to drugs."  (I'm not sure "bong hits" is too "oblique," but I admire his spirit.)  Stevens did not quite call the banner "political speech," but he noted that this was still viewpoint discrimination and should be presumed unconstitutional unless there was some reason to think the speech would actually cause the harm that the government seeks to avoid.  Stevens did not think there was a big risk of that:

Admittedly, some high school students (including those who use drugs) are dumb. Most students, however, do not shed their brains at the schoolhouse gate, and most students know dumb advocacy when they see it.  The notion that the message on this banner would actually persuade either the average student or even the dumbest one to change his or her behavior is most implausible.

You know, I once saw a student shed his brain at the schoolhouse gate, and it was no prettier than that metaphor.  But the point still seems like a pretty good one.

The fourth dissenting vote was Justice Breyer, who agreed that there should be no claim for damages but thought the case should be remanded because Frederick's punishment might turn out to be justified on some non-constitutional ground.  That was just a speed bump to the majority's speeding Camaro of constitutional interpretation.  The Chief gave it the footnote treatment.

So, general agreement on qualified immunity for the principal, a majority voting that the school's position was at least reasonable, three votes strongly supporting freedom of speech, and one vote for the Colonial standard of punishing free speech with physical punishment (short of permanent injury, of course).

Link: Morse v. Frederick (via FindLaw)

Pakistani Supreme Court Intervenes in Song-Lyric Dispute

Those of you worried about an activist Supreme Court may want to consider how bad things could be.  Reuters News reported yesterday that Pakistan's Supreme Court had intervened to order a pop singer to change the lyrics of one of his songs after a college girl complained that she was getting teased about them.

I can think of a lot of songs, or even entire genres of music, that I would like to see dealt with, but this is a very slippery slope.  And I'm pretty sure that few Americans would want an institution like our Supreme Court to be the one that decided what was okay to listen to, given that the average justice is a white 70-year-old who is 89% male.  (My statistical analysis could use some work, I guess, but you get the idea.)  So this is a bad plan, generally speaking.

The Pakistani court didn't see it that way, though -- it seems to have intervened, possibly on its own initiative, after a girl whose name appeared in the lyrics wrote to a newspaper saying that male students were teasing her by singing the song.  She said she had stopped going to college because of the harassment.  The report said that the court "summoned" Abrar-ul-Haq and "asked" him to omit the name of the girl "and some other objectionable words in his lyrics."  Haq said he would abide by the court's decision, which was probably a good choice.

Link: Yahoo! News

No Questions Again This Term from Justice Thomas

Now that Supreme Court transcripts identify justices by name, which has only been the case since October 2004, it's possible to (choose one):

[gain even more insight into the thought processes of the justices]

[waste even more time analyzing pointless statistics].

I guess those choices are not completely interchangeable, because here's one pointless statistic that won't give you insight into anyone's thought processes: Justice Thomas did not say one word during the 68 hours of oral argument during the Court's latest term. Thomas has never said very much from the bench, but he has typically thrown out at least a couple of questions each term. He has said that he will ask a pertinent question if someone else doesn't, but on the other hand doesn't need to speak just to hear his own voice.

Fair enough, although that does seem to imply that the other justices are awfully fond of their own voices, because they're asking questions. Especially Justice Breyer, who, according to the report, has uttered almost 35,000 words during oral argument just since January, while Thomas's total is 281 -- and that's since they started keeping records of this back in 2004. Justice Thomas hasn't asked a question in court since February 22, 2006. (And that was probably to ask Breyer if he ever shuts up.)

Since it's probably fair to assume that legal questions are longer than average, it is entirely possible that Justice Thomas has averaged one question during oral argument in each of the 16 years he has been on the Court. Surprisingly, the report did not quote any of these extremely rare questions, but it did allude to one question in a death-penalty case, and recalled the time when Thomas "memorably spoke up four years ago" in a pair of particularly controversial cases.

I'll try to locate and post the Thomas Questions if I'm able to find them.

(AP, May 19, 2007)

 

U.S. Supreme Court Gets All Up in Guam's Face

In a long-awaited and dramatic decision, the Supreme Court held today, unanimously, that in the context of the Guam Organic Act's debt-limitation provision, 48 U.S.C. section 1423a, Guam's debt limitation must be calculated according to the assessed valuation of property in Guam.

Like we didn't all see that coming.  In your face, Supreme Court of Guam!

For those in a fantasy Supreme Court league this year, six points to those  who correctly predicted thisGuam  reversal, three points to those who thought Justice Souter would concur in part and dissent in part, and one point for predicting that Justice Thomas would get this opinion assigned to him.  Subtract five points if you knew anything at all about the Guam Organic Act before you read this post (but only two points if you are a resident of Guam).

Link: FindLaw.com
Link: Supreme Court of Guam
Link: A Quick Tour of Guam, by a Can of Beans

Supremes Rule in Favor of Anna Nicole

The Supreme Court today handed down the biggest legal win ever for a Playmate, reversing the Ninth Circuit's decision in Marshall v. Marshall, which had cost Vickie Lynn Marshall, a.k.a. Anna Nicole Smith, several hundred million dollars.

The previous biggest win involved a custody dispute over a Chihuahua called "Mr. Pooky."

The opinion itself is fairly dry, dealing as it does with the "probate exception" to federal jurisdiction.  The Court unanimously held that the Ninth Circuit had wrongly applied the exception and reversed the judgment.

There were a couple of decent quotes.  Justice Ginsburg (who wrote the majority opinion) criticized the probate exception as something "stemming in large measure from misty understandings of English legal history," although the ruling does not eliminate it.  Concurring, Justice Stevens agreed with the result but said he would put the doctrine out of its misery entirely: "Rather than preserving whatever vitality that the "exception" has retained . . . I would provide the creature with a decent burial in a grave adjacent to the resting place of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine," which he would also execute if he had the chance.

Oh, Rooker-Feldman doctrine, how quickly they forget.  All the wonderful times we had together . . . [sniff].

Link: Opinion on Findlaw.com

Citing Authority, Scalia Argues Cogently That His "Obscene Gesture" Was Misinterpreted As Such

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia fired off a letter to the Boston Herald this week, complaining about a report in that paper that Scalia had made an "obscene gesture" toward reporters on Sunday.  A Herald reporter caught Scalia after he had attended Mass at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross and asked him whether his impartiality in matters of church and state could reasonably be questioned (apparently because he was caught going to church).  Scalia responded via gesture, which was initially reported to be finger-based but by Monday had been identified as "flicking his hand under his chin."  Scalia apparently then followed up with the phrase, "That's Sicilian."

Scalia sharply contested the reporter's interpretation of this as "obscene," saying the reporter had jumped to that conclusion.  "From watching too many episodes of the Sopranos," Scalia wrote, "your staff seems to have acquired the belief that any Sicilian gesture is obscene -- especially when made by an 'Italian jurist' [as the report had described him].  I am, by the way, an American jurist."

Instead, he continued, the gesture is properly construed as merely "dismissive."  As you would expect, he cited authority, quoting from the book "The Italians" by one Luigi Barzini, a name that certainly sounds authoritative, and dangerous.  He quoted Barzini as stating: "The extended fingers of one hand moving slowly back and forth under the raised chin means 'I couldn't care less.  It's no business of mine.  Count me out.'"

Scalia most recently used the gesture on March 29th during oral argument in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, in response to an argument that foreigners had rights.  (No, he didn't.)

Hamdan also saw Justice Thomas use his most common gesture, in which the extended fingers of both hands, as well as the chin and mouth parts, remain entirely motionless.

Link: AP via FindLaw.com

Charmingest-Named Supreme Court Cert Denial Ever

Everything for Love, Inc. v. Tender Loving Things, Inc.

The case involved patent and trademark issues related to a scalp-massage device called "The Tingler."  Sadly, we will be hearing no more of this case.

74 U.S.L.W. 3351 (Feb. 21, 2006).

Study Concludes Scalia 19 Times Funnier than Ginsberg, Infinitely Funnier than Thomas

Using transcripts of Supreme Court oral arguments, in which the term "[laughter]" is inserted when laughter is noted during an argument, a law professor at Boston University has analyzed the relative funniness of the justices and concluded that Scalia is the most funny.

Professor Jay Wexler was able to do the analysis only after the Court began identifying justices by name in the transcripts in October 2004.  He has released his findings in an article published in the excellent law journal "The Green Bag."

Wexler found that Scalia was the funniest justice, with "77 laughing episodes" found, which worked out to 1.027 laughs per argument.  Breyer was next at 45 total laughing episodes.

Justice Thomas "gave rise to no laughter at all."

Wexler concedes that the study is based on limited data, noting that the simple term "[laughter]" does not distinguish between "a series of small chuckles" and "a joke that brought the house down." Nor, he says, can he separate "the genuine laughter brought about by truly funny or clever humor" from "the anxious kind of laughter that arises when one feels nervous or uncomfortable or just plain scared for the nation's future."

New York Times
The Green Bag

New Chief Justice Drops Arm Stripes

New Chief Justice John Roberts has apparently decided not to follow the legacy of his predecessor William Rehnquist -- at least in robe style. Rehnquist wore a robe with four gold stripes on each arm to indicate his status as the chief. But Roberts has appeared, at least so far, in the same black robe that the associate justices wear.

Roberts, Unstriped

This picture shows the Chief Justice in his new, unstriped robe. He is also signing the paperwork to terminate Justice Stevens's health benefits, which is why the President is looking on with such interest.

Yahoo.com
ACSBlog.org

Supreme Court Will Hear Anna Nicole Smith's Case

CNN reports today that the U.S. Supreme Court has accepted the appeal of Anna Nicole Smith, stripper-turned-Playmate-turned-reality-TV-star who is seeking $474 million from the estate of her husband, who was 89 when she married him, and who is now unsurprisingly deceased.

Smith, who I am shocked to learn was the 1993 Playmate of the Year, married J. Howard Marshall II in 1994 after they met in a strip club.  He died a year later, probably still grinning.  The legal fight over who is entitled to Marshall's millions has been going on ever since.   Smith was originally awarded the $474 million, but the award was later reduced to $89 million and then thrown out altogether.  The 9th Circuit let stand a Texas probate court's eventual decision that Marshall's son was his sole heir.

The issue before the high court will be whether and when federal courts may hear claims that also involve state probate proceedings.  But you don't really care about that.

CNN.com

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