The Court pointed to the agency's superior knowledge of the
"technical, complex, and dynamic" subject matter over which it
presides, and it therefore found that it is necessary to defer to the
agency's construction of review as long as the agency works within its
statutory jurisdiction, follows the unambiguous terms of statutes under its
purview, and exercises a "reasonable" framework of review
practices. The FCC reasoned that from the end-user's perspective, cable
broadband is utilized for "internet access" and not for its
"ability to transmit information;" an interpretation that
reasonably followed the ambiguous operative language of the Communications
Act. Further, despite respondent's claim that the FCC's inconsistency
regarding regulation of Direct Subscriber Lines owned by telephone companies
and cable broadband was arbitrary and capricious, the Court ruled the
Commission's reasoning for the distinction valid under the Ch! evron
framework. The Court of Appeals judgments leading to both cases of this
consolidated decision (04-277 and 04-281) were reversed and remanded. Further
reference
Upon filing a joint petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy
Code, Rousey and his wife demanded protection from creditors seeking to
liquidate assets held by the Rouseys' Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs)
under 11
U.S.C. § 522(d)(10)(E). Title 11 of the U.S. Code allows persons filing
for bankruptcy to withdrawal their "right to receive…a payment under
a stock bonus, pension, profit-sharing, annuity, or similar plan or contract
on account of…age" § 522(d)(10)(E) from the assets claimed within
the bankruptcy estate. Looking to ordinary meaning, the Court agreed that
the IRA was considered a "similar plan or contract" as it shared
in common with the other specified financial instruments the purpose of
providing income in substitution for wages earned through employment.
Considering whether IRAs satisfied the age element, the Court expressed that
due to the f! act that a full, unfettered withdrawal of the funds can only
take place after the IRA holder reaches age 59, said instrument does in fact
carry a right to payment "on account of…age" 11 U.S.C. §
522(d)(10)(E). Accordingly, the Court ruled that the IRA-shielded assets
successfully fulfilled both enumerated elements of 11 U.S.C. §
522(d)(10)(E), and could therefore be exempt from creditors and withdrawn
from the bankruptcy estate. Reversing decisions from three lower courts,
this case will serve as precedent in resolving conflicting practices in the
various courts of appeal. Further
reference
contents
Conflicting practices among the Appeals Circuit led the Court to resolve
the issue of to what extent the Rooker-Feldman doctrine affects federal
jurisdiction. The Rooker-Feldman doctrine precludes federal district
jurisdiction over suits that are properly appeals of state court decisions.
The Court held that the doctrine is too narrow to dismiss any action over
which federal courts have original (rather than appellate) jurisdiction
simply because they are being or have been disposed of in state courts.
In the present case, a dispute over charges between two Exxon
subsidiaries and Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC), led SABIC to
sue Exxon in a Delaware state court. Two weeks later, Exxon brought the same
action against SABIC in Federal District Court. SABIC moved for dismissal on
other grounds, and when this motion was denied, appealed to the Third
Circuit. Meanwhile, Exxon prevailed in the Maryland suit, procuring nearly
$400 million in damages. The Third circuit, without addressing SABIC's
motion, dismissed the federal action because of want of jurisdiction under
the Rooker-Feldman doctrine; because the same issue had been decided in
Delaware state court, the Third Circuit reasoned, the federal court
jurisdiction "vanished". In reversing, the Supreme Court clarified
the "narrow ground" occupied by Rooker-Feldman, namely cases in
which state court losers seek to void an adverse decision in federal court,
and found that the Exxon federal suit fell beyond i! ts application. Further
reference
Alleged espionage relationships - Tenet
v. Doe (March 2, 2005)
In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court barred all lawsuits brought
against the U.S. government alleging any mode of espionage relationship.
Respondent and his wife brought suit against the United States and the
Director of the Central Intelligence Agency to procure funds owed them in
exchange for Cold War espionage services. Claiming violations of procedural
and substantive due process rights as well as estoppel, respondents
prevailed in the lower courts.
Reversing these decisions, the Supreme Court invoked a broad reading of
the Totten rule (Totten v. United States 92
U.S. 105 [1875]) requiring that cases based on espionage be
"dismissed on the pleadings without ever reaching the question of
evidence" United States v. Reynolds, 345
U.S. 1 (1953). The Court clarified with this holding that the Totten
rule is much more than a contract rule, but rather a full fledged protection
of sensitive state information and relationships. Allowing a looser
interpretation of Totten would invite a flood of lawsuits, threatening
"graymail" (individual suits forcing settlement under threat of
litigation or publication of sensitive information) and impairment of
intelligence gathering by compromising covert sources. Further
reference
contents
In a case with broad significance for corporate accounting procedures,
the Supreme Court found that jury instructions leading to a 2002 conviction
of Arthur Andersen, LLP were defective, reversing a Fifth Circuit decision.
Andersen, employed by Enron and once among the world's largest accounting
and consulting firms, fell in the wake of the Enron scandal. When questions
arose concerning accounting practices, Andersen began enforcing its
"document retention" policy and destroyed a number of files
relevant to the pending SEC Enron investigation. When evidence of this came
to light, Andersen was indicted in a Texas Federal District Court for
witness tampering. He was convicted in a jury trial, sentenced to five years
probation and fined $500,000. Andersen appealed, alleging defective jury
instructions. The Fifth Circuit of Appeals affirmed the conviction. Further
reference
The question before the Court was whether the proper interpretation of
statute 18 U.S.C.
§ 1512(b)(2)(A) and (B) rendered the jury instructions defective.
Andersen alleges that the statute includes a mens rea (guilty mind)
component, and that the statute necessitates a connection, or nexus, between
the destruction of evidence and the ("official") proceeding in
which such evidence is pertinent. Andersen argued that had the District
Court specified these components in its jury instructions, it would not have
been convicted, since neither element was fulfilled. A unanimous Court
agreed, holding that the instructions were sufficiently defective to require
a new trial, and clarifying for lower courts the correct interpretation of
§ 1512. Further
reference
Representation for indigent clients
- Kowalski
v. Tesmer (December 13, 2004)
This case was brought to Federal Court by three indigent convicts and two
defense attorneys challenging the constitutionality of a Michigan statute
that denies appointed council for indigents pleading guilty or no contest.
Both the District and Appeals courts (Sixth Circuit) found that while the
indigents themselves were barred from bringing a federal action (by Younger
abstention), the attorneys had third party standing (or jus tertii) to bring
the suit. Lower courts differed on whether or not the Michigan statute
violates the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
The Court was faced 1) with the issue of whether the attorneys have
third-party standing to litigate the rights of their potential clients, and
if so, 2) whether the statute is constitutional. Despite the unanimity of
the lower court decisions with respect to the first issue, the Supreme Court
found that the attorneys do not have standing, and thus the Court never
reached the constitutional issue. In determining that the attorneys do not
have standing, the Court questioned whether there was "closeness"
between the attorneys and the indigent clients, and whether or not the
clients were significantly "hindered" in their ability to pursue
their own claims (both conditions on the conferral of jus tertii). A 6-3
majority found that the "closeness" requirement was undermined by
the hypothetical nature of the "close" relationship, as opposed to
an actual "close" relationship, and pointed to cases of other
indigents proceeding on appeals pro se (representing themselves) to u!
ndermine the hindrance condition. Further
reference
Race and peremptory challenges in
jury selection - Johnson
v. California (June 13, 2005)
Johnson, an African-American male, was convicted by an all-white jury of
murdering the daughter of his white girlfriend. During jury selection the
prosecution used 3 of its 12 peremptory challenges to remove the only three
African-Americans remaining in the jury pool. The defense objected to both
the second and third prosecution challenges on the grounds that they
appeared race-based. The trial judge denied both motions, and the California
Supreme Court eventually affirmed the trial judge's decision.
In Batson v. Kentucky, the Court set out a procedure for objections to
peremptory challenges: 1) the objector must make a prima facie case that
group bias motivated the challenge; 2) the prosecutor must then give
race-neutral reasons for its challenge; and 3) the trial judge must decide
whether group bias is the more likely explanation. The specific issue of
this case is what constitutes "a prima facie case" that bias
exists. Choosing between the "more likely than not" standard for
initial objections (followed by the California Supreme Court), and the
"reasonable inference exists" standard (employed by the Ninth
Circuit of Appeals), the Court sided with the latter. An 8-1 majority found
that California's stricter standard effectively conflates the first and
third steps, unreasonably requiring an objector to establish a preponderance
of evidence before the prosecution's alleged motivation is even known.
Justice Thomas, the Court's sole African-American member, was als! o its
sole dissenter. Further
reference
contents
Medical marijuana - Gonzales
v. Raich (June 6, 2005)
The Supreme Court held that Congress's Commerce
Clause authority warranted regulation and prohibition of local
cultivation and personal use of marijuana, even when in compliance with
state law. Without disputing the constitutionality of the Controlled
Substance Act (CSA: part of the Comprehensive
Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act), respondents argued that the
CSA's "categorical prohibition of the manufacture and possession of
marijuana as applied to the intrastate manufacture and possession of
marijuana for medical purposes pursuant to California law" was outside
of Congress's authority as defined by the Commerce Clause. Respondent's
qualm with just this piece of the CSA was deemed irrelevant, as it is
outside the scope of the Court to excise individual components from larger
policy ! schemes.
In addressing the constitutionality of the entire scheme, the Court
upheld case law
firmly supporting the right of Congress to regulate local activities that
were part of an economic "class" of "activities that
substantially affect interstate commerce" NLRB v. Jones &
Laughlin Steel Corp., 301
U.S. 1, 37 (1937). Essentially, when Congress determines that a
"total incidence" of a particular practice threatens the
government's ability to regulate the entire interstate market, it has the
right to regulate that entire class of activity. Strongest of the Court's
precedential grounds was Wickard, which established that "Congress can
regulate intrastate activity that is not itself ‘commercial'…if it
concludes that failure to reg! ulate that class of activity would undercut
the regulation of the interstate market in that commodity." A further
concern was the leakage of sanctioned cannabis into the illicit interstate
marijuana market.
In summation, the Court declared the powers of Congress under the
Commerce Clause comprehensive enough to allow regulation of intrastate,
local activities when needed to regulate broader interstate markets with
efficacy. Proper avenues for legalization of marijuana lie with congress and
the drug's demotion from Schedule-One status. Further
reference
Consolidating three cases, Michigan beer & Wine Wholesalers v. Heald,
Swedenburg v. Kelly, and Granholm v. Heald, the Court addressed Michigan and
New York state policies granting licenses for direct product shipment to
residents for in-state wineries while disallowing or discouraging reciprocal
privileges to out-of-state wineries. In a 5-4 vote, the Supreme Court
reaffirmed that state-sponsored regulatory schemes that promote
"differential treatment of in-state and out-of-state economic interest
that [benefit] the former and [burden] the latter," (Oregon
Waste Systems, Inc. v. Dept. of Envtl. Quality of Ore., 511 U.S. 93
[1994]), are in violation of the Commerce
Clause and constitute exercises of state discretion outside of the scope
of the Twenty-First
Amendment.
The Court cited the concern of Constitutional Framers for eliminating the
economic balkanization that had beleaguered the colonies and the states
under the Articles of Confederation as central to the purpose of the
Commerce Clause. It argued that allowing policies such as those in New York
and Michigan to stand would have set precedent consenting to a reversion
into state negotiations over mutual economic interests, a
"multiplication of preferential trade areas," and eventual
interstate, intranational trade war. Each state's Twenty-First Amendment
right to regulate the transportation, importation, and use of liquor within
its borders does not warrant inequitable treatment of domestic and out-of
state products in violation of the non-discrimination principle of the
Commerce Clause.
Further, the Court ruled that Michigan and New York trade policies did
not "advance a legitimate local purpose that [could not] be adequately
served by reasonable nondiscriminatory alternatives" New Energy Co.
of Ind. V. Limbach 486
U.S. 269 (1988), 278, as illustrated by the states' weak evidentiary
support of problems, including internet purchasing of alcohol by minors and
tax evasion. Further
reference
contents
The Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) was passed in 1967 in
language similar to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Court has
long recognized two kinds of discrimination prohibited under Title VII:
"disparate-treatment", employer actions that discriminate against
a protected class of employees because of their membership in that class;
and "disparate-impact", employment practices that are
superficially neutral with respect to the protected classifications, but
which in fact have negative consequences for the protected class of
employees. The question before the Court was whether the ADEA, like Title
VII, prohibits both types of discrimination. Specifically, the Court had to
decide whether and to what extent disparate-impact can be claimed under the
ADEA.
This case was brought by a group of Jackson police officers, who claimed
that a new pay scheme is discriminatory with respect to age. The officers
alleged both disparate-treatment and disparate-impact under the ADEA. The
District Court dismissed both claims, and the 5th Circuit found that while
the District Court should have allowed more proceedings on the
disparate-treatment claim, "disparate-impact claims are categorically
unavailable under the ADEA." Because the various Courts of Appeal treat
this question differently, the Court granted certiorari and found that while
disparate-impact claims are in fact cognizable under the ADEA, such claims
are more circumscribed than those brought under Title VII (for
race/religion/sex-based discrimination), and that the officers' case failed
to state a sufficiently specific disparate-impact claim. Further
reference
This class action suit against Norwegian Cruise Line LTD was brought
under Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) by a
number of disabled passengers. Title III "prohibits discrimination
based on disability" on public transportation services and requires
modifications to ensure access to disabled persons. Norwegian sails to and
from United States ports and serves predominantly American citizens, though
it flies a so-called "flag of convenience" of the Bahamas, where
it is registered. The petitioners allege that they were subject to
discriminatory pricing and unable to fully enjoy the ships amenities due to
structural barriers. Reversing a lower decision, a divided Court held that
Title III does in fact cover foreign-flag vessels, but that such coverage is
subject to certain limitations.
The first limitation is statutory: Title III requires only modifications
and accommodations that are "readily achievable". If such
modifications cause undue expense, or bring the ship into non-compliance
with other laws, foreign or domestic, they are not "readily
achievable" by the Court's definition. The second limitation is derived
from a precedent that regardless of whether or not a statute's requirements
are readily achievable, if they interfere with the "internal
order" of a vessel, they cannot be enforced (to derive this rule the
Court contrasted Benz and McCulloch with Longshoremen v. Ariadne Shipping
Co., 397 U.S. 195). While Title III holds generally, any provision that
affects internal order cannot be enforced.
Thus the application of a general U.S. statute on foreign-flag vessels
can be precluded either when compliance is not "readily
achievable" or when compliance interferes with a ship's "internal
order". In her concurring opinion Justice Ginsburg questioned the scope
and motivation for the internal order exception, and in his dissent Justice
Scalia disputed any application of Title III to foreign-flag vessels. Further
reference
The Oneida Indian Nation (OIN), nearly 200 years after their major
removal from central NY, brought this suit against the City of Sherrill, NY
to reassert their present and future sovereignty over historic reservation
lands. The dispute arose when the OIN purchased two parcels of land on the
open market within Sherrill city limits, and subsequently refused to pay
property taxes assessed by Sherrill. The Oneida, relying on federal treaties
and the Nonintercourse Act, claim that the land falls within their historic
reservation, qualifies as "Indian country" under 18
U.S.C. § 1151 and is therefore tax-exempt.
Reversing the judgment of the Second Circuit, the Supreme Court found
that since the Oneida long ago relinquished control and sovereignty over the
lands, they cannot now reclaim aboriginal possessory rights. Although the
Court may award monetary damages to dispossessed natives (see Oneida II),
reinstituting sovereignty piecemeal over open market purchases, especially
given the Oneida's long delay in asserting that right, would be inequitable
and impracticable. The consequences for the 99% non-Indian population of
Sherrill, as well as for the administrative and regulatory work of state and
local governments, aggravated by the Oneida's long absence, made a judgment
in the Oneida's favor impossible. Further
reference
File-sharing software - MGM
v. Grokster (June 27, 2005)
In a highly anticipated decision, a unanimous Court sided with
petitioners, a group of entertainment industry giants (hereafter MGM)
against Grokster and Streamcast, two companies that distribute peer-to-peer
file-sharing software. Both Grokster and Streamcast distribute free software
that MGM claims is used almost exclusively for illegal downloads of music
and video. Because of the decentralized, or peer-to-peer, architecture of
the services, it is difficult for copyright holders to litigate directly
against end users. Thus, the issue before the Court was whether the software
companies could be found secondarily liable for the copyright infringement
of their users under the Copyright
Act.
Grokster was granted summary judgment in District Court, and the Ninth
Circuit of Appeals affirmed that decision, finding that the precedent of
Sony v. Universal Studios (addressing the question of whether VCR
manufacturers could be held liable for infringement) ruled out liability for
a distributor whose product has "substantial non-infringing uses."
The Supreme Court, however, ruled that although Sony does bar some claims of
secondary liability, it does not preclude all, and that the preliminary
findings establish that both companies actively and intentionally promoted
the illegal use of their software. Leaving the Sony rule in place, while
subjecting to liability inducement of illegal uses, the Court sought with
this decision to balance the competing interests of protecting artistic
creation and leaving room for innovative technologies that have both legal
and non-legal uses. Furt!
her reference
Under the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA), which regulates the
"manufacture, use, or sale of drugs," pharmaceutical manufacturers
are required to submit research on fledgling products to the Food and Drug
Administration (and other federal agencies) in two phases. Phase one entails
the investigational new drug application (IND) while phase two includes the
new drug application (NDA), charging collection of data from preclinical
testing to the former and safety and effectiveness data to the latter.
The
Drug Price Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act (DPCPTRA) of
1984, §202, 98 Stat. 1585, 35
U.S.C. §271(e)(1) states: "It shall not be an act of infringement
to make, use, offer to sell, or sell within the United States or import into
the United States a patented invention…solely for uses reasonably related
to the development and submission of information under a Federal law which
regulates the manufacture, use, or sale of drugs…." During
preclinical research, petitioner Merck used respondent Integra's patented
"RGD peptides" in experiments, integrating the peptides with
petitioner's work in "angiogenesis" technology. Respondent's
charged petitioners with patent infringement, as the testing done involving
the "RGD peptides" was not, in the end, submitted to the FDA for
any reason.
The Court ruled that the use of patented inventions in preclinical
research, in which the results are never submitted to the FDA, are exempted
from infringement under 35
U.S.C. §271(e)(1). In its ruling, the Court found that the statutory
infringement exemption of DPCPTRA provides a "wide berth for the use of
patented drugs" in any process or activity associated with the federal
regulatory scheme, embracing a "global" gamut of experimental
activity. Accordingly, the statute exempts from infringement any and all
experimental uses of patented inventions "reasonably related" to
processes and activities aimed at eventual submission to the federal
regulatory process. Further
reference
contents
Ten Commandments display for religious purpose - McCreary
County v. ACLU (June 27, 2005)
In this case, the Supreme Court found that Ten Commandment displays in a
Kentucky Courthouse contravene the First Amendment's Establishment Clause.
Following the precedent of Lemon v. Kurtzman (403
U.S. 602 [1971]), the Court found that the displays lacked a primary
secular purpose since the Commandments convey a distinct Judeo-Christian
message. (Lemon requires the secular purpose to be of the most
genuine nature and not one that stands secondary to the "ostensible and
predominant purpose of advancing religion.")
The attempted revision supported by the counties was also ruled
unconstitutional even though the counties included a secular codicil to the
Commandments, noting the profound effect that the Commandments have had on
the development of "Western legal action and thought." The Court
still included this attempted revision within the initial injunction,
stating that the underlying factor is the unconstitutional endorsement of a
message suffused with a religious motif.
Writing for the majority, Justice Souter pointed to the precedent of Wallace
v. Jaffree (472
U.S. 38, 75 [1985]), which requires that government neutrality always
remain intact when a religious message appears on public property. Pointing
to Stone v. Graham, in which even though the appearance of the Ten
Commandments within a public school classroom was ruled unconstitutional,
Souter noted that the Court does not hold "that a sacred text can never
be integrated constitutionally into a government display on law or
history"; rather, such a display must be part of a greater secular
display that does not imply government support or endorsement of a specific
religion. Further
reference
Ten Commandments monument on state Capitol grounds - Van
Orden v. Perry (June 27, 2005)
In a related decision to McCreary, the Court found that a 6 foot
edifice depicting the Ten Commandments, placed on the grounds of the Texas
State Capitol, does not violate the Establishment Clause of the First
Amendment. Justice Rehnquist, joined by Justices Scalia, Kennedy, and
Thomas, focused on the challenge of balancing freedom and tradition:
Our cases, Januslike, point in two directions in applying the
Establishment Clause. One face looks toward the strong role played by
religion and religious traditions throughout our Nation's history.... The
other face looks toward the principle that governmental intervention in
religious matters can itself endanger religious freedom. This case, like
all Establishment Clause challenges, presents us with the difficulty of
respecting both faces. Our institutions presuppose a Supreme Being, yet
these institutions must not press religious observances upon their
citizens. One face looks to the past in acknowledgment of our Nation’s
heritage, while the other looks to the present in demanding a separation
between church and state. Reconciling these two faces requires that we
neither abdicate our responsibility to maintain a division between church
and state nor evince a hostility to religion by disabling the government
from in some ways recognizing our religious! heritage....
Pointing to the monument's nature and its relation to history, Rehnquist
contrasted the "passive" display and location of the statue with
the school-classroom display disallowed in Stone v. Graham, (449
U.S. 39 [1980]). Justice Breyer, affirming the judgment, found a
deciding factor to be the statue's forty-year tenure on the Capitol grounds.
Further
reference
Religious accommodation in prison - Cutter
v. Wilkinson (May 31, 2005)
The Religious
Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 (RLUIPA), §3 states
"no government shall impose a substantial burden on the religious
exercise of a person residing in or confined to an institution," unless
there is "a compelling governmental interest" justifying a burden
imposed "in the least restrictive means" 42
U.S.C. § 2000cc. Petitioners, past and present inmates of Ohio's
correctional system, claimed that Ohio prison officials failed to
accommodate their "nonmainstream" religious practices (Satanist,
Asatru, Wicca, etc.) in violation of RLUIPA §3, while respondents facially
challenged the RLUIPA, charging that the Act "improperly advance[d]
religion in violation of the First Amendment's Establishment
Clause." In ! providing greater protection for religious rights
than other Constitutional rights within confining institutions, respondents
claimed that RLUIPA §3 manifested implicit encouragement for prisoners to
become religious so as to capitalize on these "superior rights."
Further reference
The Court found for petitioners, asserting "'there is room to play
in the joints' between the Free
Exercise Clause and the Establishment Clause" such that RLUIPA §3
fits firmly within the interstice. It is the very intent of the RLUIPA to
proffer protection for persons confined by institutions, those who cannot
see to their religious needs without government accommodation and
assistance. Further, the Court ruled that RLUIPA §3 cannot discriminate
amongst bona fide religions (mainstream or not), and does not engender
safety concerns in its execution culpable of "compelling government
interest" to justify any imposed burden. The circuit court's decision
was reversed and petitioner's case remanded for review. Further
reference
Since the 1985 passing of the Beef
Promotion and Research Act, the Federal government has collected a
mandatory one dollar per head "checkoff" from producers of cattle
and imported beef. From 1988 to present, the 1 billion dollars grossed from
the assessment has gone to fund beef-related projects and to finance
marketing. The issue raised by the respondents is that the "checkoff"
circumvents the First
Amendment by forcing the private sector to label their beef as a generic
commodity; thus, hindering the producer's ability to market the superiority
of their own product.
The District Court ruled that even though the Act is headed by a state
government committee it is nonetheless unconstitutional. Specifically, the
Court denied the right of "compelled subsidy" in this case stating
that an act which forces citizens to subsidize speech for a cause which they
object to is unconstitutional. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals sustained
the District Court ruling.
The Supreme Court found that respondents' case argument, that the program
fails to qualify as government speech because its funding targets beef
promotional activity and that this promotional activity "speaks
for" the beef producers, has no legal bearing, since the program is
politically authorized and controlled. Citizens have great latitude in
challenging private speech issues; however, they are afforded no right under
the First Amendment not to fund government speech. Congress developed the
Program, like others, with particular "safeguards" allowing for
reform or veto to ensure political accountability and equity. Therefore, the
Court upheld the District Court ruling since the checkoff funded government
speech; as such, it found that compelled funding for state sponsored
activities does not contravene the First Amendment. Further
reference
contents
Probable cause for arrest - Devenpeck
v. Alford (December 13, 2004)
After being pulled over on suspicion of impersonating a police officer,
respondent Alford began recording, surreptitiously, his conversation with
the police officers on the scene (officer Haner and Sergeant Devenpeck of
the Washington State Patrol, petitioners). Both officers felt that Alford's
behavior was "untruthful and evasive", and upon Devenpeck's
discovery of the tape recorder, they placed Alford under arrest for
violation of the Washington State Privacy Act. Alford filed suit in Federal
District Court, claiming petitioners "arrested him without probable
cause in violation of the Fourth
and Fourteenth
Amendments." Although the officers prevailed in District court, the
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed and found that no probable cause
existed for the charges of impersonating o! r obstructing a law-enforcement
officer, as they were not "closely related" to the arresting
charge (violation of Privacy Act).
The Supreme Court reversed, holding that the police officer's
"subjective reason for making the arrest need not be the criminal
offense as to which the known facts provide probable cause." The Court
also invalidated the "closely related offense" rule, allowing
offenses establishing probable cause to be completely unrelated to offenses
invoked on a suspect at the time of arrest. Between this ruling and that of
Illinois v. Caballes, the police in every state have gained a considerable
leeway in conducting searches. Further
reference
Drug-sniffing dogs at traffic stops
- Illinois
v. Caballes (January 24, 2005)
Respondent Caballes, having been pulled over by an Illinois State trooper
for speeding on an interstate highway, was arrested when a second officer
appeared on scene with a narcotics-detection canine and discovered marijuana
in respondent's trunk. The Illinois Supreme Court concluded, upon
respondent's appeal, that "because the canine sniff was performed
without any ‘specific and articulable facts' to suggest drug
activity" the dog-search "unjustifiably enlarged the scope of a
routine traffic stop" in violation of the Fourth
Amendment 207 Ill. 2d 504, 510, 802 N. E. 2d 202, 205 (2003).
Reversing the Illinois court, the U.S. Supreme Court defined searches not
"compromis[ing] any legitimate interest in privacy" as outside the
purview of the Fourth Amendment, and affirmed all privacy interest in
"contraband" as illegitimate. Applying this holding to the case at
hand, the Court ruled that the narcotic-detection canine was trained only to
locate specific forms of drug paraphernalia, disclosing only "the
presence or absence of narcotics, a contraband item." The dog's
positive identification provided probable cause for search of the trunk,
regardless of the scope of the initial grounds for detainment. Thus the
Court found the concern for keeping lawful but private activity safe from
government intrusion to be incommensurable with the hopes of keeping
unlawful behavior free from scrutiny. Further
reference
contents
To combat a failing economy, the city of New London, Connecticut created
a real estate development plan projected to create jobs, increase tax
revenue, and rejuvenate downtown and waterfront areas. The city purchased,
from willing owners, property needed for the development's success while
exercising the power of eminent domain to acquire property, after just
compensation, from unwilling owners. Kelo, an unwilling property owner,
argued that the city's "taking" of her land does not qualify as
"public use" as enumerated in the Takings Clause of the Fifth
Amendment. Over the years, the Court has embraced a broader interpretation
of "public use" as "public purpose," citing Justice
Douglas' opinion in Berman v. Parker: "The concept of public welfare is
broad and inclusive... Congress and its authorized agencies have made
determinations that take into account a wide variety of values... it's not
for us to appraise them." Finding for New London, the Court held that
takings! to promote economic development are unequivocally provided for
under the Fifth Amendment, and the Court has and will continue to show great
deference to the decisions of state and local legislatures concerning the
use of eminent domain. Further
reference
Johnson, a California inmate since 1987, brought this suit to challenge
the constitutionality of a California Department of Corrections (CDC) policy
that racially segregates incoming inmates. The policy placed new prisoners
in cells with prisoners of the same race in order to curb race-related gang
violence. The policy withstood the constitutional challenge in lower courts
under a standard of review known as the Turner standard, which is
deferential to prison authorities, requiring only that policies
circumscribing constitutional rights be aimed toward a "legitimate
penological interest". Johnson urged that because this violation of
equal protection involves the "suspect" classification of race,
the standard of "strict scrutiny" (not Turner) ought to be
applied, under which a policy must be "narrowly tailored to serve a
compelling government interest."
Faced with the issue of which standard ought to be applied, and whether
the policy survives that standard, the Supreme Court held that in every
classification of race strict scrutiny is required. Justice O'Connor's
majority opinion distinguished between those constitutional claims that may
be reviewed under the Turner test (such as First Amendment rights) and those
that must face strict scrutiny (such as Eighth Amendment and equal
protection rights). Establishing strict scrutiny as the correct standard,
the Court did not go on to decide whether the policy survived that standard,
but remanded. In his dissent, Justice Thomas recommended greater deference
to prison authorities, whose expertise better equips them to weigh the costs
and benefits of temporary segregation. Further
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Respondents Booker and Fanfan were charged with narcotics possession in
separate trial courts, the jury finding in each case a set of facts
confirming respondents' guilt. The trial judges in both cases found, by a
preponderance of the evidence, additional facts allowing them to assign a
prison sentence, as dictated by the Federal Sentencing Guidelines (FSG),
significantly longer than that based purely on the jury-found fact scenario.
Respondents argued that the maximum term limits on prison sentences as
prescribed by the FSG are binding with the force of law, and that
application of separate findings of fact to sentencing procedures, outside
the jury holding, is in violation of respondents' Sixth Amendment right to a
jury trial.
The Supreme Court held that the encumbrance of enhanced sentences under
Federal Sentencing Guidelines, derived from the "sentencing judge's
determination of a fact that was not found by the jury or admitted by the
defendant", is in violation of the Sixth
Amendment. As written, the FSGs are strict limits on sentencing terms
rather than advisory guidelines. Upon analysis of the FSG, though, the Court
found that the original intent of the statute, as indicated by the language
of the majority of the sections, was actually as advisory. Using judicial
discretion, the Court excised §3553(b)(1)
and §3742(e),
resulting in an amended set of Federal Sentencing Guidelines 18
U.S.C. § 3551 ! et seq., 28
U.S.C. § 991 that are de jure advisory. The respondents' respective
cases were returned to lower courts for sentencing under the newly emended
Sentencing Act. Further
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Reversing a decision just 16 years old (Stanford), the Court ruled that
the execution of juveniles under the age of 18 violates the Eighth
Amendment (which bars "cruel and unusual" punishment) and is
therefore unconstitutional. The case arose when Simmons, having failed in
several post-conviction relief proceedings to overturn his death sentence
for crimes committed while a minor, took his case to the Missouri Supreme
Court in 2002. That year the Supreme Court had decided in Atkins
v. Virginia that the execution of the developmentally disabled is a
violation of the Eighth Amendment, citing an evolving national consensus
against the execution of the developmentally disabled (and reversing Penry).
Before the Missouri Supreme Court, Simmons argued that the reasoning in
Atkins necessitated banning the execution of juveniles. The Missouri Court
agreed, and the Supreme Court affirmed in a contentious 5-4 decision. In his
majority opinion Justice Kennedy relied on recent state laws in death
penalty states that preclude executing minors, the growing majority of
states that disallow the practice, the infrequency of its use where it
remains "on the books", and America's isolation from the world
community on the issue. In his dissent, Justice Scalia questioned the
majority's methodology, suggested a usurpation of legislative function,
accused the Court of moral arbitration, and dismissed out of hand reference
to the international community. Further
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