Archive for the Law Category

The Kennedy Court Reigns In the King (July 3, 2006)

Posted in Law, Supreme Court on July 3, 2006 by e-commentary.org

A few days before the celebration of our independence from King George III, some of the Justices who appointed King George II reigned in the Emperor.  In Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, the Supreme Court ruled that some of the military commissions created by Bush had been improperly constituted. 

The health of the Constitution now turns substantially on the health of a Justice who is turning four score and seven years young next April.  Justice Stevens grew or emerged on the job.  Justice Kennedy is the lynch pin on the Court.  He is the real Decider who has grown and emerged on the job.  Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito are showing fealty to the one who appointed them.  The Four Justices of the Apocalypse–Roberts, Scalia, Thomas and Alito–would be satisfied to recess the Court for good and let all three branches of government receive mail at and take direction from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue

Happy birthday to this very good Republic. 

Presidential Signing Orders (May 22, 2006)

Posted in Bush, Law, Politics on May 22, 2006 by e-commentary.org

High school civics classes teach us that the legislature passes laws, the executive implements laws, and the courts interpret laws.  Legislative bodies pass the laws and provide “legislative intent” that accompanies the actual language in the legislation itself.  Presidents in recent years have been trying to create “executive intent” by appending a “presidential signing order” to the legislation when it is signed.  The p.s.o. provides the Presidents spin on the legislation.  The President is giving direction to executive agencies such as Health and Human Services, Environmental Protection Agency, Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Labor, etc. to shape the interpretation of the legislation.

The various courts in the country employ a variety of tests to determine “legislative intent.”  To date, courts do not resort to “executive intent” to construe a law.  To date, law students are not taught to divine “executive intent.”  In the future, courts could be induced to resort to an analysis of the presidents twist.

The likely effect of a p.s.o is much more subtle and pernicious.  The p.s.o. directs an agency to undertake a different interpretation of a law than the legislature intended.  As an agency administers a law over the years, the agency’s interpretation becomes a generally accepted standard.  In a case, Udall v. Tallman, 360 U.S. 1, 16 (1965), the United States Supreme Court held:  “When faced with a problem of statutory construction, this Court shows great deference to the interpretation given the statute by the officers or agency charged with its administration.”  The same is true of the administrative regulations adopted to implement a statute.  “When the construction of an administrative regulation rather than a statute is in issue, deference is even more clearly in order.”  Thus, the p.s.o. exercises an indirect but nonetheless potent impact on the interpretation of a law.  A president who aggressively stacks the judiciary with ideologues and then redirects the interpretation of laws via p.s.o.s will have a far greater influence for many more years than an executive who merely signs legislation without comment.

There is nothing in the Constitution to incorporate the intent of the executive at any time.  Each incoming president may find it necessary to issue a series of revised presidential signing orders to reflect the current “executive intent.”  An incoming president may need to assemble a transition staff charged with redirecting the practice of the bureaucracy.  The first one hundred days of an administration may be marked not by new legislation but by new spin on extant legislation.  An incoming president could issue a report a week for each executive agency.

[Phillip J. Cooper author of By Order of the President:  the Use and Abuse of Executive Direct Action discusses presidential signing statements in more detail.]

May Day (May 1, 2006)

Posted in Law, Society on May 1, 2006 by e-commentary.org

May 1 is May Day.  This is Law Day, a day to reflect on our heritage of liberty, justice and equality under the law and to celebrate the rule of law in a democracy.  Hundreds of years ago in England, a homeowner behind on his (not her) mortgage could pay the arrears on May 1 and avoid a foreclosure.  This is also International Workers Day.  Workingmen of the world unite and celebrate their rights.  This is also Labor Day in Mexico.  Hispanics are laboring this day by boycotting work and business in support of the first National Day Without Immigrants.  Today is also “Mission Impossible” Day in the United States, a day of mourning to decry Emperor Bush’s proclamation: “Mission Accomplished.”  That it isn’t.  Busy day.

“A Man’s Home Is His Gated Community” (April 10, 2006)

Posted in Housing, Law, Society, Supreme Court on April 10, 2006 by e-commentary.org

“A man’s home is his castle.”  This maxim reflects a fundamental social and economic compact in Anglo-American law.  All of us agree to treat each other’s home as if it were a castle which frees each of us to do something more productive than to defend one’s home 24/7/365.  A land of fortified castles is far less efficient and creative than a land of homes and businesses respected by all of us.

The recent Supreme Court case of Georgia v. Randolph, 547 U.S. ___ (2006), threatened to depart in a small way from this cornerstone of the Constitution.  The Court addressed whether the police can search a home without a warrant when one occupant gives consent but another objects.  The wife allowed the police to enter and search the home despite the objection of her husband who co-inhabited the residence.  Other prior cases had allowed the police to enter if consent was given by the one inhabitant who was present.  By a 5 to 3 decision, the Supreme Court rejected the search as unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment and invalid as to him.  A man’s and a woman’s home is their castle not just his or her castle.

Some of those who are concerned about crime seek to expand the “castle doctrine,” a corollary to the “castle rule” that allows a person to use force including deadly force to protect oneself and others from attack.  There is a countervailing “duty to retreat” under some circumstances.  The “castle doctrine” has been expanding in recent years to allow one to pursue a possible assailant.  The legislatures and courts must balance these concerns with care.

Gated communities are expanding in many regions of the Republic.  The communities represent a rejection of the “castle compact” and a return to castles with gates and guards rather than draw bridges and moats.  The denizens have their own private McFortress within the larger compound.  They send their kids to private schools in equally guarded enclaves detached from the public.  Their shelters shelter them from ordinary activities.  The reaction is not entirely surprising in the face of criminal activity.  However, the moated communities are changing the landscape and lifestyle of America.

Perjury, The American Way (February 20, 2006)

Posted in Law, Perjury/Dishonesty, Society on February 20, 2006 by e-commentary.org

Hundreds of thousands of American swear every day to: “tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth,” and then consciously don’t.  They may tell the truth and may tell nothing but the truth, but they don’t tell the whole truth.  They are counseled beforehand not to tell the whole truth.  They are counseled to lie.  That practice does not vary in any state or federal court in the Republic.  Lying is formally institutionalized.  Alberto “Torture Boy” Gonzales continued the long and storied American tradition.  In his confirmation hearings on January 6, 2005, the following exchange occurred:

SPECTER: Thank you very much, Senator Salazar.

Judge Gonzales, would you now stand for the administration of the oath? Raise your right hand.

Do you solemnly swear that the testimony you will give before the Senate Judiciary Committee will be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God?

GONZALES: I do.

SPECTER: Would you begin, Judge Gonzales, by introducing your beautiful family?

During the questioning, Senator Feingold (D-Wis.) inquired into whether the president could authorize warrantless wiretapping of U.S. citizens.  In response, Torture Boy discounted the possibility and diverted Congress’ attention by referring to the matter as a “hypothetical situation” at a time when it was a settled practice of the president.  The whole truth?  He lied, but he is in power so lying is de rigueur.  Perjury is the American Way.

[See Carol D. Leonnig, “Gonzales Is Challenged On Wiretaps,” The Washington Post, January 31, 2006, page A07.]

California Prisons Explode Again (February 13, 2006)

Posted in Law, Politics, Prison/Criminology, Supreme Court on February 13, 2006 by e-commentary.org

Almost a year after Johnson v. California was issued by the Supremes, the California prison system exploded again.  [See the February 28, 2005 e-ssay entitled “The Courts, the California prison experiment and the Y Chromosome.”]  Prisoners fight and fornicate.  The legal issue is black and white (and brown).  Prisoners of all stripes uniformly requested to be segregated.  The jury has spoken.  Respect the jury.  Separate the prisoners.

Federalism Distorted (February 6, 2006)

Posted in Law, Politics, Supreme Court on February 6, 2006 by e-commentary.org

Federalism questions – those involving the interplay of federal and state law – are determined by ideology not principle or doctrine.  When a state desires to allow a citizen to use medical marijuana, the Right embraces federal law limitations to preclude individual choice because the Right dislikes dope.  When a state offers to allow and regulate assisted suicide, the Right embraces federal law limitations to preclude individual choice because the Right decides who gets to decide.  However, when the federal government respects a fundamental right that is anathema to the Right’s agenda, the Right disregards the commerce clause and other constitutional safeguards and embraces states’ rights to trump the federal provision and rights.  These are the rules of the game.  The rule of law has been replaced by the law of rules.

King (January 16, 2006)

Posted in Law, Race, Society on January 16, 2006 by e-commentary.org

King offered the non-violent vision at a time when frustration was fomenting violence.  Others fomenting violence made the non-violent course of action more appealing.  The non-violent avenue is more likely to overcome in a society that tolerates free speech and protects due process.  The success of King was as much a product of his determined and incremental challenge to American apartheid as it was of the resilience of American society to respond to his challenge to injustice.

Gun Control, NRA Style (January 9, 2006)

Posted in Civil Rights/Civil Liberties, Guns, Law, Politics, USA PATRIOT Act on January 9, 2006 by e-commentary.org

Some agency could easily download the membership list of the NRA, legally or illegally, although there seems to be no difference today.  The technology exists; the USA PATRIOT Act provides a pretext if one is needed.  Then the agency could break into the homes of all NRA members and confiscate their weapons.  There may not be a Fourth Amendment limitation because the Fourth Amendment may soon be deleted from the Constitution.  Probable cause has been shown because the members of the NRA probably caused themselves to own guns.  And probable cause may not even be required in the near future.  The agency may be prying many cold, dead fingers off many guns.  “I really wasn’t using my civil liberties anyway.”

USA PATRIOT ACT (April 4, 2005)

Posted in Bush, Civil Rights/Civil Liberties, Law, PATRIOT Act, USA PATRIOT Act on April 4, 2005 by e-commentary.org

USA PATRIOT ACT – Undermining and Subverting America by Perverting All Time-honored Rules To Interrupt and Overcome Tyranny

What more needs to be said?