Posts Tagged Supreme Court

Hamdan Vs. Rumsfeld Decision

The Supreme Court has ruled that the United States can’t try al-Qaida prisoners with the planned special military tribunals because as constituted certain provisions of those tribunals conflict with the Uniform Code of Military Justice and with treaty provisions of the Geneva Convention.

You can read the full text of the decision here, along with commentary here.

What the decision doesn’t mean is that the detainies are about to be released, nor does it mean that they can’t be tried – they just can’t be tried by the special military tribunals that were set up. As to what effect this has in the overall war on Terror, I guess that depends on how many people this effects. Are there many new prisoners transferred to Gitmo? Will instead they be kept in Iraq and Afganistan instead, and will this cause fewer prisoners to be taken as soldiers wonder “what’s the point”?

So at this point the court ruling looks like we can hold these people as ordinary POWs until the end of the war — which technically will never end since the odds of us ever signing a peace treaty with al-Qaeda are practically nil (from both sides, I might add). So we have the odd outcome that we can impose a sentance of life imprisonment without parole (the highest penalty in may countries) without any trial whatsoever, yet we can’t impose any lesser penalty without going through courts neither designed nor equipped to handle their special cases.

Was the case wrongly decided? Well, that all depends, doesn’t it. There are times, like these, when law and policy become so intermixed that it’s hard to separate one from the other. So let’s just examine what we want out of trials: The guilty punished, the innocent freed, both accomplished in the minimum time required. Would that have been accomplished with the special tribunals? Would Federal or Courts Martia do a better or worse job?

So what’s the real problem with the ruling? Like all matters of the law, it doesn’t take into account reality. The problem is, we are dealing with an enemy like no other in the sense that we are not fighting a war against another nation, another government. It has the organization of a crime syndicate with the aims of a government or national movement. We are fighting against a different kind of organization, but we are trying to apply the rules set up to fight old style enemies. Now I don’t think we need to throw everything out the window and start over, because our aims haven’t changed, just the circumstances. And so I think the special tribunals represented a good faith effort to deliver justice under new circumstances, circumstances that older courts probably will have a hard time with.

The problem is what standard of proof, what rules of evidence are we going to use. In war time, we empower young men to make snap decisions about life and death with oversight that takes into account the difficult nature of such decisions. We provide them with ROE – Rules of Engagement- that they are to be guided by in making such decisions. Those ROE vary depending on the exact circumstances of any deployment. The ROE that normal courts operate under never vary. And for good reason – which is why it’s better to set up something new that can make a change to a new reality, than have existing courts try to deal with cases they are ill equipped to handle.

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Oregon and The Right To Die

There is a lot of happiness in some quarters about the Supreme Court’s decision on doctor assisted suicide in Oregon. I wonder how long the rejoicing will last if applied to things like labor laws, environmental laws, and other laws that roll out from Washington with little regard for the individual states.

So do I think the people of Oregon passed a good law about doctor assisted suicide? Nope (although I may change my mind in a few years), but I think that’s their mistake to make. I sure do hope the legal reasoning get’s extended to other areas besides suicide.

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Isn’t It Bliss, Don’t You Approve

So how do I dislike the Alito hearings? Let me count the ways.

1. Ted Kennedy Any claim that I need to take Ted Kennedy seriously is an offense. The fact that Massachusetts returns the broken down old drunk to the senate every six years is the best indication that the power of incubency is too strong in American politics. Ted, the man’s name is A-li-to, not Al-i-o-to. And for the record , it was Arlen Spector demonstrated who the real the ‘lion in winter’ is.

2. The Hypocrisy I’ll just pick one big example so as not to bore you. The Senate Democrats tell me I need to worry that an organization Judge Alito was a member of 40 years ago, Concerned Alumni of Princeton, was racist and sexist. OK, but how about Robert Byrd? He was not only a member of the Klu Klux Klan, which pretty much set the standard for racist organizations, he was a leader in it. And he still calls people “nigger”. And none of those Democratic senators has the slightest problem with Senator Byrd.

3. The Confirmation Process Confirmation hearings mix grotesque grandstanding with mud throwing by one set of partisans and mud removal by the other set of partisans in equal proportions, which leaves no time for an actual exchange of information with the confirmee. But when senators, who control the confirmation process, complain about the process like it’s something they have no control over, excuse me if I wretch and wretch again.

4. The Intellectual Dishonesty A significant segment of the left is always going on about how the Constitution is a living document that adapts to the needs of the present. How does it adapt? Well, nine people in Washington, AKA the Supreme Court, get to decide. And by golly if they say that the constitution has spoken to them in a new way, or that the American people have changed, well then, the Constitutionality of an issue has changed. So what’s up with this sudden devotion to stare decisis? How can a living document breath if it is put in the straitjacket of stare decisis? But what’s worse, it’s clear that approval/disapproval for someone holding such a position has nothing to do with traditional measures like judicial temperament, philosophy, or ability, but has everything to do with the person’s politics. Because what’s clear is you expect, even demand, that Supreme Court justices follow their own feelings and preferences, because that’s what this whole living document hooha is about. So the whole point of a confirmation hearing isn’t about finding out if a nominee is fit, but flinging so much dirt at a nominee of the other party that enough sticks to derail the confirmation. That and time on TV.

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Judge Alito, Your Bench is Calling

I keep hearing about the confirmation hearings for Judge Alito. I’m not paying much attention because I figure (1) he’s going to be confirmed, and (2) he can’t be any worse than Ruth Ginsberg. I know, I have such high standards for Supreme Court Justices.

My problem with the process is that whoever is nominated is going to say what they think will cause them the least immediate hassle during the confirmation hearings and once on the bench they can and will do whatever they want. And having seen how the august responsibility of having no accountability has turned many a Supreme Court judge into a not so petty tyrant has soured me on the whole process. I’m beginning to think that the best qualification is age – the older the better. Not because of any notion about wisdom coming with age, but just because there is less time for the power to corrupt.

So go ahead, if you have a strong stomach, and read the transcripts and make fun of your least favorite Senator. I’ve seen less posing for the cameras at a fashion show. To me, it’s an acquired taste, like oh, the one for Limberger cheese and through studious indifference I have the good fortune to have not acquired it (or for Limberger either).

I’ll stick to my pre-digested info on this matter, like this hilarious yet sad article from Bloomberg about Democrats who simply can’t believe that Alito won’t endorse the notion that the Constitution confers a right to abortion. I cackle at Dick Durban going “can’t you see the emanations, the penumbras, the auras, the effervesences of the Constitution that quite clearly state, well, not state exactly, but slip into the brain of sensitive people and help them understand that personhood is confered by a decision of one’s mother right up until, let’s be honest, the placenta comes out? Good God man, haven’t you drunk the cool aid yet?” The sad part is that an otherwise sane person could read the constitution and conclude that it does indeed confer a right to abortion on demand by mom until birth and includes an exception for her health (whether abortion should be legal is a separate issue).

And let’s be clear – Alito is against abortion. While it would be nice for him to ask the good senator if he’s ever, you know, actually read the constitution all the way through in one sitting, and then state that of course he’s against abortion and thinks Roe was a terrible case of legislating from the bench, it might cause enough senators to confuse insulting a senator with insulting the senate that he wouldn’t be confirmed. The only real question is does Alito think that overturning what he thinks is a bad judicial ruling that lies somewhere between a super and a super-duper precedent is inline with his judicial philosophy. In other words, does Judge Alito think that correcting the mistakes of one’s predecessors on the bench cause more harm or good? Now if somebody asked that, I’d pay attention.

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In God We Trust

In God We Trust, all others pay cash.

Michael Newdow is trying to have “In God We Trust” removed from US currency. I don’t care, but don’t our courts have better things to worry about? I’m an evangelical Christian, so I think what’s written on our hearts is far more important to God than what’s written on our money. Take it off, leave it on, makes no difference to me. That isn’t the case for everyone, though.

Maybe Mr. Newdow has the right idea for the wrong reason. Maybe we should sell “motto rights” to each individual piece of currency. Think of the money we cold raise if corporations would pay to put their name, logo, or motto on the currency. If big oil did it, would Congress promise to use that money to defray the costs of home heating?

I have to admit I don’t really pay much attention to what’s on there – just enough to let me tell it apart, although the mint keeps screwing with the nickel and freaks me out with every change – the friendly game of golf (it looks like golf clubs and a handshake to me) on the back, the ancient bireme, the ocean view on the back and the weird just Jefferson’s face on the front. But I couldn’t tell you what’s written on there, or if it changes.

So why should a court rule to have the motto removed? Because somebody is offended? And don’t tell me it violates the separation of Church and State, since that isn’t a constitutional provision. Instead, the first amendment reads (in relevant part) “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof”. Putting God on money clearly doesn’t violate free exercise thereof, but does it constitute establishing a religion?

I suppose you could argue that it establishes a monotheistic religion with just three tenets: God exists, there is only one God, and we trust God. Seems pretty slim to me, but I tell you what, if the Supreme Court declares that putting “In God We Trust” on something makes it an official religion, I’ll slap it on all my possessions and tell the IRS hands off because its now religious property in the “In God We Trust” religion. I suppose for those who adhere to the notion that “all religions are basically the same” (I’m not a believer in that church) then those three are enough. I’d just point out that there are huge differences between Christianity and Islam, although they in theory worship the same God.

I think the Supreme Court adopted the right policy when it comes to “In God We Trust”: Leave us out of it.

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More Of The Same

President Bush has nominated Judge Samuel Alito for the Supreme Court. That’s more like it, even if it isn’t Judge Janice Brown. I expect that he’ll be confirmed on a close to party line vote. While he can clearly write court opinions, I’m starting to miss Harriet Miers because she at least was something different, not another brilliant Yalie who followed the correct path (which isn’t meant to be a knock on Judge Alito). The problem was that she represented too great a risk at a time when the Supreme Court has become far too political and not simply judicial. It’s too bad that that’s what we hold elections for now – to pick and confirm Supreme Court Justices so that one side can win the nine vote elections.

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Discretion, Valor, Better Part

Now that Harriet Miers has withdrawn from consideration, I won’t be able to make up my mind on her elevation to the Supreme Court. No hearings, no way for me to decide. I do think the nomination itself was a mistake (yeah think, einstein?) mainly because there seems to have been so little thought put into it. It’s like all this effort went into picking now Chief Justice Roberts, and then they were too tired and distracted and picked the first woman who said yes. It’s like going out to Tony’s for dinner and then stopping off at Shop ‘n’ Save to pick up some house brand ice cream for dessert on the way home.

I suppose I’m a natural optimist, but I don’t think the nomination does any lasting damage to the president if this time President Bush picks a compelling nominee, or at least someone the administration can provide clear reasons to support. Who remembers Kerik? He was clearly qualified for the job, but he had “other” issues. And his successor is the lackluster Chertoff.

I’m hoping for Janice Rogers Brown, but I’m not holding my breath.

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The Queen of Maybe

I suppose the real problem with Harriet Miers nomination is that I actually have to wait until the hearings before I can make up my mind. Oh, I admit I’d like to support her, but nothing so far has indicated to me that she clearly should be on the Supreme Court, nor has there been a clear indicator that she shouldn’t. Team Bush has not been able to put forth a good, let alone compelling, reason beyond George and Laura really like her, and even her most ardent critics have shot intellectual blanks. She’s beyond a stealth candidate, she’s a Rorschach test.

I suppose after Roberts we think the bar is set pretty high, but even a cursory examination of both the current court and past courts show not just that the mediocre is well represented, but can thrive. And the idea that to understand the constitution you have to be a great intellect who’s done nothing but thought deep thoughts about it is a bunch of hooey. It’s a two page document that relies on a combination of common sense and historical insight. Now, I have to admit that the actual court decisions, especially in later years, can be quite impenetrable, especially for those who expect that they should be clear and be related in some modest degree to the actual text. Quite frankly, what good is stare decisis if the previous decisions are not just a hopeless muddle, but unconstitutional on their face, and not even followed by the wing of the court that holds that evolving community standards, as discovered by canvassing nine people who just happen to be the nine most powerful lawyers in Washington, D.C., trump all.

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I Didn’t Get My Way

In keeping with my new policy of posting on issues after a delay to allow me time to (1) get accurate facts and (2) actually think about it, I’m now going to opine on President Bush’s supreme court nominee, Harriet Miers. OK, if I waited until the press got its facts straight, I’d never be able to post. But at least I thought about it, and the great thing is, I’m still as disappointed that the President didn’t pick Justice Janice Rogers Brown this time as I was when he picked Justice Roberts. Oh well. Just so you know where I’m coming from. No, I wouldn’t want 9 of her on the court, but we do need a counterbalance to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg (of whom I would prefer to have a number less than 1 on the court).

Since I couldn’t actually name all the Justices of the Supreme court, I did a little research and discovered that far too many were undergraduates at Stanford (Kennedy, O’Connor, and Breyer) where none of them took the Physics 60 series, the wimps. Only Souter went to Harvard as an undergrad, and we know how he turned out. And all them have as their chief failing that they are lawyers. If not Justice Brown, why not Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman when there were openings for two justices?

And what is with the claim that we want judges who will be fair and impartial and oh by the way, what are their political views? Like we know that Supreme Court justices are going to vote their politics, principles be damned, but that’s OK as long as we agree with their politics? Isn’t that what 99% of the questioning by the Senate during confirmation hearings is about – tell me how you will rule on abortion, gays, guns, affirmative action, the environment, the little guy, unions, hats, etc? It’s even OK to talk in code somewhat, as long as you show your hand. But we have the nominees claiming that it’s inappropriate for judges to do so. Why, you can’t judge shop at the Supreme Court. You get all nine unless they have a conflict of interest. Politicians will tell us that its not right to have litmus tests for judges (too bad you can’t put a piece of paper up against a nominee and see “pro-abortion” or “pro-gun”) but why not?

I’d like to see a nominee come in and spell it all out in detail, not some wonkish “judicial philosophy” but to what stage of development they’d limit abortion at, is a loophole for the health of the mother really a “constitutional” requirement, under what exact conditions should parents be notified or minors be allowed to withhold information from them about abortion, gay marriage is constituitional yes or no or a matter for each state and what does the full faith and credit mean if states differ on this, etc. As long as judges are going to legislate from the bench, we ought to know what their agenda is. I’d prefer that to winks, evasions, silence, and “trust me”. And quite frankly, I think it would be educational hearing the nominees explain their views in detail on the leading issues of the day.

Enough process, I’ll have to tackle Ms. Miers herself another day.

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He’s Baaaaaaack

Sir Charles, that is.  And in fine form, too. He puts his finger right on the problem of modern jurisprudence (OK, it’s a problem that has been with as long as there have been judges) — judges making up law or striking law down because they think that’s what the the law ought to be. So we have a law against partial birth abortions ruled unconstitutional because it has no provision with respect to the health of the mother. Now even if you think that Constitution has a right to privacy somehow embedded, which is the theory on which laws against abortion were ruled unconstitutional, you will never persuade me that it contains a right to better health. But that’s what we’re stuck with because 5 appointees decided it ought to have one.

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