Supreme Court

Greed

Star
Registered
In entire court term, justices see 1 black lawyer
By MARK SHERMAN | Associated Press
Sun, May 12, 2013

WASHINGTON (AP) — In roughly 75 hours of arguments at the Supreme Court since October, only one African-American lawyer appeared before the justices, and for just over 11 minutes.

The numbers were marginally better for Hispanic lawyers. Four of them argued for a total of 1 hour, 45 minutes.

Women were better represented, accounting for just over 17 percent of the arguments before the justices.

In an era when three women, a Hispanic and an African-American sit on the court and white men constitute a bare majority of the nine justices, the court is more diverse than the lawyers who argue before it.

The arguments that took place from October to April were presented overwhelmingly by white men. Women and minority lawyers whose clients' cases were heard by the court were far more likely to represent governments or be part of public-interest law firms than in private practice, where paychecks are much larger.

The numbers generally reflect the largely white and male upper reaches of the biggest and richest private law firms, where there have been small gains by women and minorities in the past 20 years. A recent survey by the Association for Legal Career Professionals found that more than 93 percent of partners in law firms are white and nearly 80 percent are men.

The statistics from the court term, though, also reveal a lack of African-American and Hispanic lawyers in the elite Justice Department unit that represents the federal government at the Supreme Court.

The top supervisory positions in the Office of the Solicitor General all are held by men, though there are six women in the office who argued high court cases this term.

The office serves as a pipeline to the big firms that dominate the argument calendar at the court. Lawyers in the office make several arguments a term and acquire the experience and ease of standing before the justices that make them attractive to private firms.

The first woman on the court, Sandra Day O'Connor, touched on the importance of diversity at the court in a tribute to the first African-American justice, Thurgood Marshall. O'Connor said Marshall "imparted not only his legal acumen but also his life experiences, constantly pushing and prodding us to respond not only to the persuasiveness of legal argument but also to the power of moral truth."

The justices also benefit from seeing lawyers who don't all look and sound the same, said Alan Jenkins, an African-American former Justice Department lawyer who argued four cases at the Supreme Court. "It's especially true of people who appear before the Supreme Court because the court, as an institution, is intentionally set apart from the day-to-day life of the nation," said Jenkins, executive director of the not-for-profit The Opportunity Agenda in New York.
The only minority group that could be said to be overrepresented was lawyers of Asian heritage. Seven men — three in private practice, Deputy Solicitor General Sri Srinivasan and two others at the Justice Department and a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union — made 17 arguments to the court. There has never been an Asian-American justice.

In cases before the Supreme Court, there are at least two and sometimes more parties who are granted time to argue their positions. In the current term, the justices heard 193 separate presentations.

When Debo Adegbile stepped to the lectern in defense of a landmark voting rights law in February, he was the first — and as it turned out, the only — African-American to make a high court argument this term.

Adegbile until recently worked for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the famed public-interest law firm that mounted generations of civil rights challenges, including the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case that outlawed official segregation in public schools.

Before he became a justice, Marshall was the organization's top lawyer and argued several high court cases.

Adegbile represented six African-American residents of Shelby county, Ala., which is challenging a key provision of federal voting rights law. Following Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr.'s more legalistic presentation, Adegbile pointed to recent examples of intentional voting discrimination in the South to highlight the ongoing need for the measure.

"This statute is in part about our march through history to keep promises that our Constitution says for too long were unmet," he said.

Voting rights was the second of two high-profile cases about race at the court this term.

In the first, three white men made the arguments when the justices considered the fate of the University of Texas program that takes account of race in admissions.

Civil rights cases have historically given minority lawyers the greatest chance to argue before the court, but those cases have been in decline for some time at the Supreme Court.

"The more problematic question is, why is civil rights litigation one of the few pathways available to African-American litigators when clearly they have distinguished themselves?" Jenkins said.

Women in the legal profession have faced a similar problem, but lately have had more opportunities.

Lisa Blatt of the Arnold and Porter law firm in Washington has written that over the years most women arguing at the court have been public-interest lawyers, public defenders or government attorneys. "Translation: women are doing the same work but for less pay," she wrote in the Green Bag, a legal journal.

This term, Blatt made three arguments, the only woman in private practice to make more than one. There were 10 men in private practice with multiple arguments.

"This is a problem of today but not tomorrow," Blatt said, referring to the many women who are gaining experience representing the government at the court. She said some of them will enter private practice, as she did after many years in the Justice Department.

http://news.yahoo.com/entire-court-term-justices-see-1-black-lawyer-115121072.html
 
Court: Police can take DNA swabs from arrestees

Court: Police can take DNA swabs from arrestees
Associated Press – 22 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — A divided Supreme Court says police can legally take DNA without a warrant from those arrested in hopes of using it to solve old cases.

The justices, on a 5-4 vote, say taking DNA samples from people who have been arrested for various crimes, long before their guilt or innocence has been proven, does not violate the Constitution.

At least 28 states and the federal government now take DNA swabs after arrests. But a Maryland court said it was illegal for that state to take Alonzo King's DNA without approval from a judge. That court said King had "a sufficiently weighty and reasonable expectation of privacy against warrantless, suspicionless searches."

But Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the Supreme Court, called DNA cheek swabs "a legitimate police booking procedure" like fingerprinting or photographing.

http://news.yahoo.com/court-police-dna-swabs-arrestees-141629414.html
 
Scorecard: June Supreme Court decisions with wide-ranging impacts

Scorecard: June Supreme Court decisions with wide-ranging impacts
By NCC Staff | National Constitution Center
1 hr 12 mins ago

The Supreme Court will be handing down some big decisions in June that affect everything from equality rights to if you own your own genes. Here’s an overview of the decisions, with an easy-to-understand description and key web links.

Constitution Daily will update this list as decisions are announced. You can also use this list to go directly to decisions on the court’s website.

Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin
Subject: affirmative action
Description: The Supreme Court will decide if a public university violates the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment by considering race in its admissions process. Decision could update or overturn parts of the historic 2003 Grutter v. Bollinger decision.

Windsor v. U.S.
Subject: Defense of Marriage Act, same-sex marriage
Description: Does the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) violate the Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection for people of the same sex who are legally married under the laws of their state? Decision may be announced at the same time as the decision on California’s law that bars same-sex marriage.

Hollingsworth v. Perry
Subject: Proposition 8, same-sex marriage
Description: The justices will decide if the state of Californian can define marriage as the union of only a man and a woman without violating the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.

Shelby County v. Holder
Subjects: voting rights and voting ID laws
Description: The Supreme Court will decide if parts of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 are still needed, which require states and local governments with a history of discrimination to get pre-clearance from the federal government before making any changes to voting laws.

Association for Molecular Pathology v. United States Patent and Trademark Office
Subject: gene patents
Description: Can a company hold a patent on human genes? This potential landmark decisions involves BRCA genes, the ones used in the tests that diagnosed actress Angelina Jolie’s propensity to develop breast cancer.

Maryland v. King
Subject: DNA evidence
Description: Can states collect and analyze DNA from people arrested, but not convicted of crimes? The court will decide the ability to collect DNA versus a person’s right against unreasonable searches as guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment.
Outcome: Maryland

Arizona v. ITCA
Subject: Proof of citizenship, voter ID
Description: The court will consider Arizona’s decision to require voters to furnish proof of citizenship as it relates to the federal National Voter Registration Act, in a question of state versus federal jurisdiction over voting qualifications.

Federal Trade Commission v Actavis
Subject: generic drug payments
Description: The court will decide if brand-name drug companies can legally make payments to keep generic competitors’ products off the market for a limited time.

Supreme Court link (after decision is announced): http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/slipopinions.aspx

http://news.yahoo.com/scorecard-jun...-133811854.html;_ylt=A2KJ2PaTraxRjywAp.HQtDMD
 
Court says human genes cannot be patented

Association for Molecular Pathology v. United States Patent and Trademark Office
Subject: gene patents
Description: Can a company hold a patent on human genes? This potential landmark decisions involves BRCA genes, the ones used in the tests that diagnosed actress Angelina Jolie’s propensity to develop breast cancer.

Supreme Court link (after decision is announced): http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/slipopinions.aspx
Court says human genes cannot be patented
By JESSE J. HOLLAND | Associated Press
46 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that companies cannot patent parts of naturally-occurring human genes, a decision with the potential to profoundly affect the emerging and lucrative medical and biotechnology industries.

The high court's unanimous judgment reverses three decades of patent awards by government officials. It throws out patents held by Salt Lake City-based Myriad Genetics Inc. on an increasingly popular breast cancer test brought into the public eye recently by actress Angelina Jolie's revelation that she had a double mastectomy because of one of the genes involved in this case.

Justice Clarence Thomas, who wrote the court's decision, said that Myriad's assertion — that the DNA it isolated from the body for its proprietary breast and ovarian cancer tests were patentable — had to be dismissed because it violates patent rules. The court has said that laws of nature, natural phenomena and abstract ideas are not patentable.

"We hold that a naturally occurring DNA segment is a product of nature and not patent eligible merely because it has been isolated," Thomas said.

Patents are the legal protection that gives inventors the right to prevent others from making, using or selling a novel device, process or application. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has been awarding patents on human genes for almost 30 years, but opponents of Myriad Genetics Inc.'s patents on the two genes linked to increased risk of breast and ovarian cancer say such protection should not be given to something that can be found inside the human body.

The company has used its patent to come up with its BRACAnalysis test, which looks for mutations on the breast cancer predisposition gene, or BRCA. Those mutations are associated with much greater risks of breast and ovarian cancer. Women with a faulty gene have a three to seven times greater risk of developing breast cancer and also have a higher risk of ovarian cancer.

Myriad sells the only BRCA gene test. Opponents of its patents say the company can use the patents to keep other researchers from working with the BRCA gene to develop other tests.

"Today, the court struck down a major barrier to patient care and medical innovation," said Sandra Park, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union Women's Rights Project. "Myriad did not invent the BRCA genes and should not control them. Because of this ruling, patients will have greater access to genetic testing and scientists can engage in research on these genes without fear of being sued."

Jolie revealed last month that her mother died of ovarian cancer and that her maternal grandmother also had the disease. She said she carries a defective BRCA1 gene that puts her at high risk of developing breast and ovarian cancers, and her doctor said that the test that turned up the faulty gene link led Jolie to have both of her healthy breasts removed to try to avoid the same fate.

Companies have billions of dollars of investment and years of research on the line in this case. Their advocates argue that without the ability to recoup their investment through the profits that patents bring, breakthrough scientific discoveries to combat all kinds of medical maladies wouldn't happen.

But "genes and the information they encode area not patent eligible ... simply because they have been isolated from the surrounding genetic material," Thomas said.

In a concurring opinion, Justice Antonin Scalia said "the portion of the DNA isolated from its natural state sought to be patented is identical to that portion of the DNA in its natural state."

A Myriad spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The court did rule that synthetically created DNA, known as cDNA, can be patented "because it is not naturally occurring," Thomas said.

And Thomas noted there are still ways for Myriad to make money off its discovery. "Had Myriad created an innovative method of manipulating genes while searching for the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, it could possibly have sought a method patent," he said. And he noted that the case before the court did not include patents on the application of knowledge about the two genes.

The case is 12-398, Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, Inc.

http://news.yahoo.com/court-says-human-genes-cannot-patented-143605456.html
 
Re: Court says human genes cannot be patented

Court says human genes cannot be patented
By JESSE J. HOLLAND | Associated Press
46 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that companies cannot patent parts of naturally-occurring human genes, a decision with the potential to profoundly affect the emerging and lucrative medical and biotechnology industries.

The high court's unanimous judgment reverses three decades of patent awards by government officials. It throws out patents held by Salt Lake City-based Myriad Genetics Inc. on an increasingly popular breast cancer test brought into the public eye recently by actress Angelina Jolie's revelation that she had a double mastectomy because of one of the genes involved in this case.

Justice Clarence Thomas, who wrote the court's decision, said that Myriad's assertion — that the DNA it isolated from the body for its proprietary breast and ovarian cancer tests were patentable — had to be dismissed because it violates patent rules. The court has said that laws of nature, natural phenomena and abstract ideas are not patentable.

"We hold that a naturally occurring DNA segment is a product of nature and not patent eligible merely because it has been isolated," Thomas said.

Patents are the legal protection that gives inventors the right to prevent others from making, using or selling a novel device, process or application. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has been awarding patents on human genes for almost 30 years, but opponents of Myriad Genetics Inc.'s patents on the two genes linked to increased risk of breast and ovarian cancer say such protection should not be given to something that can be found inside the human body.

The company has used its patent to come up with its BRACAnalysis test, which looks for mutations on the breast cancer predisposition gene, or BRCA. Those mutations are associated with much greater risks of breast and ovarian cancer. Women with a faulty gene have a three to seven times greater risk of developing breast cancer and also have a higher risk of ovarian cancer.

Myriad sells the only BRCA gene test. Opponents of its patents say the company can use the patents to keep other researchers from working with the BRCA gene to develop other tests.

"Today, the court struck down a major barrier to patient care and medical innovation," said Sandra Park, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union Women's Rights Project. "Myriad did not invent the BRCA genes and should not control them. Because of this ruling, patients will have greater access to genetic testing and scientists can engage in research on these genes without fear of being sued."

Jolie revealed last month that her mother died of ovarian cancer and that her maternal grandmother also had the disease. She said she carries a defective BRCA1 gene that puts her at high risk of developing breast and ovarian cancers, and her doctor said that the test that turned up the faulty gene link led Jolie to have both of her healthy breasts removed to try to avoid the same fate.

Companies have billions of dollars of investment and years of research on the line in this case. Their advocates argue that without the ability to recoup their investment through the profits that patents bring, breakthrough scientific discoveries to combat all kinds of medical maladies wouldn't happen.

But "genes and the information they encode area not patent eligible ... simply because they have been isolated from the surrounding genetic material," Thomas said.

In a concurring opinion, Justice Antonin Scalia said "the portion of the DNA isolated from its natural state sought to be patented is identical to that portion of the DNA in its natural state."

A Myriad spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The court did rule that synthetically created DNA, known as cDNA, can be patented "because it is not naturally occurring," Thomas said.

And Thomas noted there are still ways for Myriad to make money off its discovery. "Had Myriad created an innovative method of manipulating genes while searching for the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, it could possibly have sought a method patent," he said. And he noted that the case before the court did not include patents on the application of knowledge about the two genes.

The case is 12-398, Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, Inc.

http://news.yahoo.com/court-says-human-genes-cannot-patented-143605456.html

They finally got one right.
 
Supreme Court strikes down Arizona voter ID citizenship law

Arizona v. ITCA
Subject: Proof of citizenship, voter ID
Description: The court will consider Arizona’s decision to require voters to furnish proof of citizenship as it relates to the federal National Voter Registration Act, in a question of state versus federal jurisdiction over voting qualifications.

Supreme Court link (after decision is announced): http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/slipopinions.aspx

Supreme Court strikes down Arizona voter ID citizenship law
By Liz Goodwin, Yahoo! News | The Ticket
39 mins ago

The Supreme Court has struck down an Arizona law that required voters to provide documentary proof of citizenship before registering to vote.

In Arizona v. Inter Tribal Council, seven of the Supreme Court justices agreed that the Arizona law oversteps the state's authority by essentially invalidating the federal voter registration form. The form, established by a 1993 law, lets people register to vote by sending in a uniform form accepted by all states. Voters must swear they are citizens on the form, and all states are required to accept the form by law. In a 2004 ballot initiative, Arizona voters decided they wanted to go beyond that requirement, by asking for proof of citizenship--such as a birth certificate, passport, or tribal ID card--at the point of voter registration.

Critics of the law argued that the law stripped some voters of their ability to vote, since some civil rights groups estimate that about 13 million citizens do not have documentary proof of their citizenship. The law's supporters said it would guard against any attempts by non-citizens to vote in federal elections. Three other states had similar laws and joined in on the case.

The opinion was written by Justice Antonin Scalia, one of the court's conservatives. Justice Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, both part of the court's conservative wing, disagreed with the ruling.

A year ago, the Supreme Court struck down several parts of Arizona's SB1070 law, which sought to give the state broader enforcement powers against unauthorized immigrants. The court argued that the federal government's immigration laws preempted the state's, and that Arizona was interfering with federal power. The court did let a key aspect of the law stand, however, giving local and state police the power to inquire into immigration status during routine stops.

The court has yet to release its decision in Shelby County v. Holder, a case that will decide whether some Southern and other states with a history of voter discrimination must continue to get federal approval to change voting related laws. The decision could have a big effect on whether laws that require voters to show identification at polls in these states will pass legal muster.

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/...-arizona-voter-citizenship-law-144253348.html
 
Re: Supreme Court strikes down Arizona voter ID citizenship law

The court has yet to release its decision in Shelby County v. Holder, a case that will decide whether some Southern and other states with a history of voter discrimination must continue to get federal approval to change voting related laws. The decision could have a big effect on whether laws that require voters to show identification at polls in these states will pass legal muster.

I'm (reluctantly) awaiting the decision in this one.
 
Court: 'pay to delay' generic drugs can be illegal

Federal Trade Commission v Actavis
Subject: generic drug payments
Description: The court will decide if brand-name drug companies can legally make payments to keep generic competitors’ products off the market for a limited time.

Supreme Court link (after decision is announced): http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/slipopinions.aspx
Court: 'pay to delay' generic drugs can be illegal
By JESSE J. HOLLAND | Associated Press
3 hrs ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court ruled Monday that deals between pharmaceutical corporations and their generic drug competitors, which government officials say keep cheaper forms of medicine off the market, can be sometimes be illegal and therefore challenged in court.

The justices voted 5-3 to allow the government to inspect and challenge what it calls "pay-for-delay" deals or "reverse payment settlements."

"This court's precedents make clear that patent-related settlement agreements can sometimes violate anti-trust law," said Justice Stephen Breyer, who wrote the court's opinion.

Reverse payment settlements arise when generic companies file a challenge at the Food and Drug Administration to the patents that give brand-name drugs a 20-year monopoly. The generic drugmakers aim to prove the patent is flawed or otherwise invalid, so they can launch a generic version well before the patent ends.

Brand-name drugmakers then usually sue the generic companies, which sets up what could be years of expensive litigation. When the two sides aren't certain who will win, they often reach a compromise deal that allows the generic company to sell its cheaper copycat drug in a few years — but years before the drug's patent would expire. Often, that settlement comes with a sizable payment from the brand-name company to the generic drugmaker.

Drugmakers say the settlements protect their interests but also benefit consumers by bringing inexpensive copycat medicines to market years earlier than they would arrive in any case generic drugmakers took to trial and lost. But federal officials counter that such deals add billions to the drug bills of American patients and taxpayers, compared with what would happen if the generic companies won the lawsuits and could begin marketing right away.

"This decision makes clear that drug companies can be sued to stop anticompetitive pay-for-delay agreements,' said New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman. " It will be an important weapon in the fight for affordable drug prices and quality healthcare for every citizen."

But Steve Reed, a lawyer at Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP, said the decision could delay the entry of generics into the market.

"The upshot of the decision is that, with the exception of settlements limited to compromises on the patent term itself — with modest payments to avoid the cost of litigation — there will be increased uncertainty about whether particular settlements will pass antitrust scrutiny," Reed said. "This may have a chilling effect on parties' willingness to settle, and thus forego guaranteed early entry by generics."

Chief Justice John Roberts, who wrote the dissent for himself and Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, said ordinarily the high court would say that any deal that would end costly and time-consuming litigation would be thought of as a good thing.

"The majority's rule will discourage settlement of patent litigation," Roberts said. "Simply put, there would be no incentive to settle if, immediately after setting, the parties would have to litigate the same issue — the question of patent validity — as part of a defense against an antitrust suit."

The Justice Department asked the court to rule that all reverse payment settlements were illegal, but Breyer said that was going too far. The deals' "complexities lead us to conclude that the FTC must prove its case," he said.

Paul Bisaro, president and CEO of Actavis, said he was glad the court did not rule "settlement agreements are presumptively unlawful."

"Rather, the court has established that the 'rule of reason' be applied, and left it to the lower courts to determine if the benefits of the settlement outweigh harm to consumers," Bisaro said. "We believe this decision continues to provide for a lawful and legitimate pathway for resolving patent challenge litigation in a manner that is pro-competitive and beneficial to American consumers."

Justice Samuel Alito did not take part in the case.

The case is Federal Trade Commission vs. Actavis, Inc., 12-416.

http://news.yahoo.com/court-pay-delay-generic-drugs-illegal-141756768.html
 
Re: Court: 'pay to delay' generic drugs can be illegal

<IFRAME SRC="http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/06/19/194346/supreme-court-2012-decisions.html#.UcLf3VAo7IU" WIDTH=760 HEIGHT=1300>
<A HREF="http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/06/19/194346/supreme-court-2012-decisions.html#.UcLf3VAo7IU">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 
The Supreme Court's Decision In Salinas v. Texas: Implications For White Collar Inves

The Supreme Court's Decision In Salinas v. Texas: Implications For White Collar Investigations
Richard F. Albert, Contributor
6/19/2013 @ 11:26AM

At the outset of a white collar investigation, counsel will invariably advise the client that if a government investigator unexpectedly appears seeking to “just ask a few questions,” the client should politely decline and direct the investigator to counsel. Although the Supreme Court’s decision this past Monday, June 17, 2013 in Salinas v. Texas relates to police questioning in the context of a murder investigation, it has implications for this common aspect of white collar investigations.

In Salinas, two individuals were shot and killed, and the police recovered six shotgun shell casings at the scene. The police paid a visit to Salinas, whom they had begun to suspect, and he agreed to accompany the officers to the station. The police questioned Salinas for an hour, during which he was free to leave—in legal terms the questioning was “non-custodial”—and thus Miranda warnings were neither required nor given.

For most of the interview, Salinas answered the police’s questions. But when the officer asked Salinas whether his own shotgun would match the shell casings recovered at the scene, he fell silent, and according to the police, looked down, shuffled his feet and bit his lip. After a few moments of silence, the officer asked Salinas additional questions, which he answered. At trial, during closing argument, the prosecutor pointed out to the jury how Salinas had remained silent when asked about the shotgun, arguing that an innocent person would not have done so.

The Supreme Court accepted review of the case to resolve a split in the lower courts on whether the prosecution may use evidence that a defendant asserted the privilege against self-incrimination during a non-custodial police interview. But the Supreme Court’s plurality decision did not reach that issue. Instead, three justices, Alito, Kennedy and Chief Justice Roberts, found that Salinas’s challenge to his conviction failed because he did not expressly invoke the Fifth Amendment privilege. The plurality relied on prior decisions holding that to ensure that the Fifth Amendment was not being asserted too broadly and to allow the government to challenge an assertion or overcome it by granting immunity, a witness must expressly invoke the right to obtain its benefits. The plurality reasoned that there could be many explanations for silence in the face of questioning, and if the witness’s reason was the Fifth Amendment, he was obligated to say so. The plurality’s view carried the day because two other justices, Scalia and Thomas, took an even narrower view of the protections of the Fifth Amendment.

In a vigorous dissent joined by three other justices, Justice Breyer pointed out that the Court had repeatedly held that “no ritualistic formula is necessary to invoke the privilege,” and that whether the right was invoked turned on the circumstances. The particular circumstances in this case — questioning of an unrepresented suspect in a criminal investigation at the police station – made it obvious that Salinas was invoking his fundamental Constitutional right to remain silent.

Other than the simple oddness of the results seeming to turn on whether or not the individual uses the magic words “Fifth Amendment,” another initial observation about Salinas is its apparent reach. There is nothing about the decision or its reasoning that would seem to limit its application to police questioning at the station house, or would prevent it from applying to any law enforcement or other questioning where the witness is not in custody. In short, it would seem to apply to any witness interview by the government.

Salinas also would seem to be contrary to the expectation of many lawyers, much less laypersons, that the government cannot comment at all on a suspect’s silence or failure to respond to questions. Under the rationale of Salinas, if investigators show up unannounced at a witness’s house, and the witness declines to speak to them, or worse starts to speak and then stops the interview, if the witness does not expressly refer to the Fifth Amendment the government would appear to be free to argue at a later trial that the refusal to answer questions was an indication of guilt.

Of course, depending on the circumstances, the inference that declining to speak to investigators suggests guilt can be stronger or weaker. If the witness says that now that she thinks about it, her company would not want her to answer any further questions without first speaking to company officials, the inference might be weak enough that a prosecutor would not make the argument, even if it is permissible under Salinas. But if the witness decides to follow company procedure only when the questioning approaches a sensitive area, it would seem that Salinas would give a prosecutor the option to later argue that the termination of the questioning at that particular point is an indication of guilt.

As the Salinas dissent points out, because of its focus, the plurality’s ruling seems to open up future dispute regarding whether the individual’s words or actions are clear enough to invoke the privilege. Decisions in this area suggest that if a witness mentions the word “lawyer” in declining to speak to investigators, courts are more likely to view that as an invocation that cannot be commented upon. Future decisions might also limit Salinas’s rule to cases where the witness was silent on only one question or a limited number of questions in the midst of an interview, viewing an express refusal to answer any further questions as clear enough notice that the witness is invoking the Constitutional privilege.

Of course the most basic and obvious lesson of Salinas is that a potential law enforcement target should never speak to an investigator without counsel. The less than intuitive rule announced in Salinas provides yet another argument for the wisdom of this oft repeated but not invariably followed advice.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/insider...implications-for-white-collar-investigations/
 
Anti-Prostitution Rule Violates Speech Rights, Court Says

Anti-Prostitution Rule Violates Speech Rights, Court Says
By Greg Stohr
Jun 20, 2013 10:09 AM CT

The U.S. Supreme Court bolstered the speech rights of federal grant recipients, ruling that groups receiving money for overseas anti-HIV and AIDS programs can’t be required to take a stance against prostitution.

The justices, voting 6-2, today rejected Obama administration contentions that the restriction was a legitimate condition on the use of federal funds.

“The policy requirement goes beyond preventing recipients from using private funds in a way that would undermine the federal program,” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the majority. “It requires them to pledge allegiance to the government’s policy of eradicating prostitution.”

The dispute centered on a provision in a 2003 law that increased U.S. efforts against infectious diseases around the world. Congress has authorized spending of more than $60 billion under the program.

Groups including Pathfinder International and InterAction challenged the provision, arguing that their work in disease-ravaged countries in Africa and Asia would be compromised if they adopted anti-prostitution policies. The organizations say they work with prostitutes to educate them about HIV and AIDS and to encourage prevention.

The Obama administration contended the provision, which also requires recipients to oppose sex trafficking, is designed to reduce behavior that fosters the spread of HIV and AIDS.

Scalia Dissent

Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas dissented. The requirement “is nothing more than a means of selecting suitable agents to implement the government’s chosen strategy to eradicate HIV/AIDS,” Scalia wrote.

The Supreme Court has said Congress generally can place conditions on the receipt of federal funds. The majority today ruled that Congress went too far by trying to control private speech beyond the scope of the government program. The ruling upholds a federal appeals court decision.

The disputed provision exempted some groups, including the World Health Organization and any United Nations agency.

The case is U.S. Agency for International Development v. Alliance for Open Society, 12-10.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...-violates-speech-rights-high-court-rules.html
 
High court sends back Texas race-based plan

Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin
Subject: affirmative action
Description: The Supreme Court will decide if a public university violates the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment by considering race in its admissions process. Decision could update or overturn parts of the historic 2003 Grutter v. Bollinger decision.

Supreme Court link (after decision is announced): http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/slipopinions.aspx

High court sends back Texas race-based plan
By MARK SHERMAN | Associated Press
1 min 18 secs ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court has sent a Texas case on race-based college admissions back to a lower court for another look.

The court's 7-1 decision Monday leaves unsettled many of the basic questions about the continued use of race as a factor in college admissions.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the court, said a federal appeals court needs to subject the University of Texas admission plan to the highest level of judicial scrutiny.

The compromise ruling throws out the decision by the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which upheld the Texas admission plan.

Kennedy said the appeals court did not test the Texas plan under the most exacting level of judicial review.

He said such a test is required by the court's 2003 decision upholding affirmative action in higher education.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was the lone dissenter.

Justice Clarence Thomas, alone on the court, said he would have overturned the high court's 2003 ruling.
Justice Elena Kagan stayed out of the case, presumably because she had some contact with it at an earlier stage when she worked in the Justice Department.

Abigail Fisher, a white Texan, sued the university after she was denied a spot in 2008. She has since received her undergraduate degree from Louisiana State University.

The challenge to the Texas plan gained traction in part because the makeup of the court has changed since the last time the justices ruled on affirmative action in higher education in 2003. Then, Justice Sandra O'Connor wrote the majority opinion that held that colleges and universities can use race in their quest for diverse student bodies.

O'Connor retired in 2006, and her replacement, Justice Samuel Alito, has shown himself to be more skeptical of considerations of race in education.

Another factor fueling Fisher's lawsuit was that the university has produced significant diversity by automatically offering about three-quarters of its spots to graduates in the top 10 percent of their Texas high schools, under a 1990s state law signed by then-Gov. George W. Bush. The admissions program has been changed so that now only the top 8 percent gain automatic admission.

More than 8 in 10 African-American and Latino students who enrolled at the flagship campus in Austin in 2011 were automatically admitted, according to university statistics. Even among the rest, both sides acknowledge that the use of race is modest.

In all, black and Hispanic students made up more than a quarter of the incoming freshmen class. White students constituted less than half the entering class when students with Asian backgrounds and other minorities were added in.

The university said the extra measure of diversity it gets from the slots outside automatic admission is crucial because too many of its classrooms have only token minority representation, at best. At the same time, Texas argued that race is one of many factors considered and that whether race played the key role in any applicant's case was impossible to tell.

The Obama administration, 57 of the Fortune 100 companies and large numbers of public and private colleges that feared a broad ruling against affirmative action backed the Texas program. Among the benefits of affirmative action, the administration said, is that it creates a pipeline for a diverse officer corps that it called "essential to the military's operational readiness." In 2003, the court cited the importance of a similar message from military leaders.

http://news.yahoo.com/high-court-sends-back-texas-race-based-plan-142424792.html
 
Supreme Court's Recess Appointments Case Could Upend White House History

Supreme Court's Recess Appointments Case Could Upend White House History
By Philip Bump | The Atlantic Wire
20 hrs ago

The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a case that, at its heart, is a question of semantics: When is a Senate recess actually a Senate recess? Stemming from a January 2012 Obama appointment of three officials to the National Labor Relations Board, the case of NLRB v. Noel Canning could now to stand to jeopardize months of work by the agency — and potentially many other administrative decisions of the distant past and uncertain future.

The Constitution gives the president the ability to make appointments without Senate approval when the Senate is out of session. The goal is obvious: If the Senate were on an extended break and the president needed a Secretary of Defense, for example, Article II, Section 2 gives the president the ability to name one. It reads:

The President shall have Power to fill up all Vacancies that may happen during the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next Session.

Pretty straightforward. Except that how and when Congress is on recess can be surprisingly subjective.

In January of last year, despite most members being out of town, the House held "pro forma" sessions during which one or two members would appear on the floor every few days to quickly open and close business. Even though no business was conducted, Republican members meant to meet the minimum standard to keep an official recess from beginning. (This was a tactic developed by Democratic senators in 2007.) During one of the short breaks during that period, the president, frustrated, made the NLRB appointments after arguing that the Congress was in recess.

This January, the D.C. District Court of Appeals threw those appointments out, arguing, in the words of one judge, that allowing the president to decide when Senate was in recess "would demolish the checks and balances inherent in the advice-and-consent requirement." But two of the three-judge appeals court's members went further than simply stating that the pro forma sessions were enough to block the president's constitutional authority. Instead, as The New York Times reported, they asserted that any intrasession recess appointment was invalid. In other words, that the only point at which Article II, Section 2 applied was after the Senate had adjourned a session and before it had begun another one. This upends centuries of precedent, and could have significant reverberations for recent administrations.

Nearly all [appointments under Obama, Bush, and Clinton] would be unconstitutional under the rationale of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. It ruled that presidents may bypass the confirmation process only during the sort of recess that occurs between formal sessions of Congress, a gap that generally arises just once a year and sometimes is skipped, rather than other breaks throughout the year. Two of the three judges on the panel also ruled that presidents may fill only vacancies that arise during that same recess.

That comprises some 342 appointments — far more than the three NLRB appointments originally at issue. In April, the administration asked the Supreme Court to consider the case; today, it agreed to do so. It will consider not only the broader question of intrasession appointments, but also those conducted during pro forma breaks.

Multiple attorneys general have written in support of the constitutionality of intrasession recess appointments, including Harry Daugherty in 1921 and a current assistant AG.

The decision, which could have massive repercussions for administrative decision-making, stems from a rather mundane dispute. Noel Canning, a Pepsi distributor in Washington state, sued the NLRB after the board ruled that the company had committed an unfair labor practice. If the pro forma session argument is upheld, the NLRB will not have had a quorum to make any decisions since January of 2012, since three of its members would never have been appointed. The anti-labor National Right to Work Foundation outlines hundreds of subsequent decisions involving those members, all of which might be at risk.

If, however, the Supreme Court invalidates all previous intrasession appointments, the repercussions are almost incalculable. The power of the Constitution, as always, lies in its interpretation.

http://news.yahoo.com/supreme-courts-recess-appointments-case-could-upend-white-153846599.html
 
High court voids key part of Voting Rights Act

Shelby County v. Holder
Subjects: voting rights and voting ID laws
Description: The Supreme Court will decide if parts of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 are still needed, which require states and local governments with a history of discrimination to get pre-clearance from the federal government before making any changes to voting laws.

Supreme Court link (after decision is announced): http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/slipopinions.aspx
High court voids key part of Voting Rights Act
By MARK SHERMAN | Associated Press
2 mins 5 secs ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a key provision of the landmark Voting Rights Act cannot be enforced unless Congress comes up with a new way of determining which states and localities require federal monitoring of elections.

The justices said in 5-4 vote that the law Congress most recently renewed in 2006 relies on 40-year-old data that does not reflect racial progress and changes in U.S. society.

The court did not strike down the advance approval requirement of the law that has been used, mainly in the South, to open up polling places to minority voters in the nearly half century since it was first enacted in 1965. But the justices did say lawmakers must update the formula for determining which parts of the country must seek Washington's approval, in advance, for election changes.

Chief Justice John Roberts said for the conservative majority that Congress "may draft another formula based on current conditions."

The decision comes five months after President Barack Obama, the nation's first black chief executive, started his second term in the White House, re-elected by a diverse coalition of voters.

The high court is in the midst of a broad re-examination of the ongoing necessity of laws and programs aimed at giving racial minorities access to major areas of American life from which they once were systematically excluded. The justices issued a modest ruling Monday that preserved affirmative action in higher education and will take on cases dealing with anti-discrimination sections of a federal housing law and another affirmative action case from Michigan next term.

The court warned of problems with the voting rights law in a similar case heard in 2009. The justices averted a major constitutional ruling at that time, but Congress did nothing to address the issues the court raised. The law's opponents, sensing its vulnerability, filed several new lawsuits.

The latest decision came in a challenge to the advance approval, or preclearance, requirement, which was brought by Shelby County, Ala., a Birmingham suburb.

The lawsuit acknowledged that the measure's strong medicine was appropriate and necessary to counteract decades of state-sponsored discrimination in voting, despite the Fifteenth Amendment's guarantee of the vote for black Americans.

But it asked whether there was any end in sight for a provision that intrudes on states' rights to conduct elections, an issue the court's conservative justices also explored at the argument in February. It was considered an emergency response when first enacted in 1965.

The county noted that the 25-year extension approved in 2006 would keep some places under Washington's oversight until 2031 and seemed not to account for changes that include the elimination of racial disparity in voter registration and turnout or the existence of allegations of race-based discrimination in voting in areas of the country that are not subject to the provision.

The Obama administration and civil rights groups said there is a continuing need for it and pointed to the Justice Department's efforts to block voter ID laws in South Carolina and Texas last year, as well as a redistricting plan in Texas that a federal court found discriminated against the state's large and growing Hispanic population.

Advance approval was put into the law to give federal officials a potent tool to defeat persistent efforts to keep blacks from voting.

The provision was a huge success because it shifted the legal burden and required governments that were covered to demonstrate that their proposed changes would not discriminate. Congress periodically has renewed it over the years. The most recent extension was overwhelmingly approved by a Republican-led Congress and signed by President George W. Bush.

The requirement currently applies to the states of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia. It also covers certain counties in California, Florida, New York, North Carolina and South Dakota, and some local jurisdictions in Michigan. Coverage has been triggered by past discrimination not only against blacks, but also against American Indians, Asian-Americans, Alaska Natives and Hispanics.

Towns in New Hampshire that had been covered by the law were freed from the advance approval requirement in March. Supporters of the provision pointed to the ability to bail out of the prior approval provision to argue that the law was flexible enough to accommodate change and that the court should leave the Voting Rights Act intact.

On Monday, the Justice Department announced an agreement that would allow Hanover County, Va., to bail out.

http://news.yahoo.com/high-court-voids-key-part-voting-rights-act-141637132.html
 
Re: High court voids key part of Voting Rights Act


Greed, your side won.

:hmm:

I wondered if you believed the sensationalist headline you posted but decided to give you the benefit of the doubt. I'm not really shocked by the result.
 
Re: High court voids key part of Voting Rights Act

I wondered if you believed the sensationalist headline you posted but decided to give you the benefit of the doubt. I'm not really shocked by the result.

What about the "sensationalist headline" do you disagree ???
 
Re: High court voids key part of Voting Rights Act

What about the "sensationalist headline" do you disagree ???
The law hasn't been gutted.

The whole point of the case was whether the federal government had authority over the state's constitutional duty to maintain elections.

The federal government does and in the specific way laid out in the VRA.
 
High Court Allows California Gay Marriage, Voids U.S. Law

Windsor v. U.S.
Subject: Defense of Marriage Act, same-sex marriage
Description: Does the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) violate the Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection for people of the same sex who are legally married under the laws of their state? Decision may be announced at the same time as the decision on California’s law that bars same-sex marriage.

Hollingsworth v. Perry
Subject: Proposition 8, same-sex marriage
Description: The justices will decide if the state of Californian can define marriage as the union of only a man and a woman without violating the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.

Supreme Court link (after decision is announced): http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/slipopinions.aspx
High Court Allows California Gay Marriage, Voids U.S. Law
By Greg Stohr
Jun 26, 2013 11:22 AM CT

A divided U.S. Supreme Court gave a landmark victory to the gay-rights movement, striking down a federal law that denies benefits to same-sex married couples and clearing the way for weddings to resume in California.

The court stopped short of declaring a constitutional right for gays to marry, or even ruling directly on California’s voter-approved ban, as the justices considered the issue for the first time. California Governor Jerry Brown said counties will begin issuing same-sex marriage licenses as soon as an appeals court implements today’s ruling.

The decisions sustain the momentum that has grown behind same-sex marriage over the past decade. With a 5-4 procedural ruling in the California case, the court reinstated a judge’s order allowing gay marriages there. By striking down the core of the U.S. Defense of Marriage Act by a different 5-4 majority, the court rejected many of the justifications for treating same-sex and heterosexual couples differently.

That law “places same-sex couples in an unstable position of being in a second-tier marriage,” Kennedy wrote for the court in the federal marriage case. “The differentiation demeans the couple, whose moral and sexual choices the Constitution protects, and whose relationship the state has sought to dignify.”

The historic cases reached the justices as the gay marriage movement was achieving unprecedented success. Twelve states and the District of Columbia have legalized same-sex marriage, six of them in the last year.

Unprecedented Success

“After years of struggle, the U.S. Supreme Court today has made same-sex marriage a reality in California,” Brown said in a statement. It will take about a month before same-sex marriages can begin in California, according to San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera’s office.

“It’s been a long road, many years, but gosh, it feels good to have love triumph over ignorance, to have equality triumph over discrimination,” San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee told a cheering crowd at City Hall.

The Supreme Court “made clear today that you have a right to marry, that there is no basis for discrimination,” David Boies, one of the lawyers representing the challengers to California’s Proposition 8, said outside the high court.

The Supreme Court said the sponsors of Proposition 8, the 2008 ballot initiative that banned gay marriage, lacked legal standing to appeal the trial judge’s order. California officials had refused to defend the measure.

Unusual Split

The justices split along unusual lines in that case, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Antonin Scalia, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan in the majority.

Justices Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Sonia Sotomayor said the court should have ruled on the constitutionality of the California ban.

The decisions drew hundreds of demonstrators, many carrying pro-gay marriage signs and rainbow colored flags, to the steps of the Supreme Court, where members of the media camped out for three days to await the final rulings of the court’s term.

Supporters crowded around the two California couples challenging the ban, chanting “thank you” and “we love you.” Tourists on buses and on foot slowed to take pictures of the scene.

When Kennedy announced the outcome in the Defense of Marriage Act case, one audience member squealed and several began crying, wiping their eyes with tissues.

Divided Court

The Defense of Marriage Act case divided the court along familiar lines. Joining Kennedy in the majority were Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor and Kagan. Dissenting were Roberts, Scalia, Thomas and Alito.

Scalia, in a dissenting opinion joined by Thomas, said Congress can constitutionally draw distinctions between heterosexual and same-sex marriage.

“The Constitution does not forbid the government to enforce traditional moral and sexual norms,” Scalia wrote. “The Constitution neither requires nor forbids our society to approve of same-sex marriage, much as it neither requires nor forbids us to approve of no-fault divorce, polygamy or the consumption of alcohol.”

In a statement issued from Air Force One, President Barack Obama applauded the court for striking down the Defense of Marriage Act and called it a “victory for couples who have long fought for equal treatment under the law.” Obama made his comments as he flew to Africa for a weeklong visit.

Obama telephoned to congratulate the four people who challenged the California ban. “Paul invited him to our wedding; he said OK,” Jeff Zarrillo of Burbank told reporters outside the Supreme Court, referring to his partner Paul Katami.

Apple Support

Companies including Apple Inc. and Morgan Stanley urged the Supreme Court to back gay-marriage rights.

More than 18,000 same-sex couples got marriage licenses in California in the five months between a state Supreme Court ruling that gay marriages were legal and the 2008 passage of Proposition 8, the ballot initiative that effectively overturned that decision.

Support for gay marriage has soared in recent years. A Bloomberg National Poll released this month found that 52 percent of adults supported legalization, with 41 percent opposed. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

In challenging Proposition 8, former Republican U.S. Solicitor General Theodore Olson joined forces with Boies, his opponent from the Bush v. Gore case, which resolved the 2000 presidential election deadlock. The pair, representing two same-sex couples, set out to win a Supreme Court ruling establishing gay marriage as a constitutional right.

Narrower Ruling

At the appeals court level, they instead won a narrower ruling with limited applicability beyond California’s borders. The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Proposition 8 violated the constitutional guarantee of equal protection by stripping same-sex couples of a right they once had -- and that heterosexual couples would continue to possess.

Californians now back gay marriage by double-digit numbers, with 56 percent supporting it and 38 percent opposed, according to a poll released last month by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California. That survey had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.

California officials until now enforced Proposition 8, refusing to issue same-sex marriage licenses even while opposing the ballot initiative in court.

Federal Benefits

Obama’s lawyers joined a New York widow in urging the court to strike down the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act, known as DOMA. Under the law, gay spouses couldn’t claim the federal benefits available to other married couples, including the rights to file a joint tax return and receive Social Security survivor benefits.

Congressional Republicans led by House Speaker John Boehner defended DOMA. They contended it promoted traditional marriage and, by extension, made it more likely that children will grow up in a nurturing environment.

The high court case concerned Edie Windsor, a New York resident. Windsor was fighting a $363,000 federal estate tax bill, imposed after the 2009 death of her same-sex spouse, saying that she wouldn’t have to pay if she were married to someone of the opposite sex. Windsor and Thea Clara Spyer were married in Canada in 2007.

Almost 300 employers urged the court to strike down DOMA, arguing that the law costs businesses by forcing them to set up parallel benefits systems for gay and heterosexual married employees. The group included Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Citigroup Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Pfizer Inc.

DOMA was approved 342-67 in the House of Representatives and 85-14 in the Senate before President Bill Clinton signed the measure into law. Clinton now opposes DOMA.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...ing-may-allow-gay-marriage-in-california.html
 
Re: High Court Allows California Gay Marriage, Voids U.S. Law




5rWtW.SlMa.91.jpeg




 
Re: High court voids key part of Voting Rights Act

The law hasn't been gutted.

Oh it was gutted. Striking down Section 4 made the preclearance provisions of Section 5 inoperable, hence, before the ink had dried the shenanigans have begun in Texas, Alabama and some other jurisdiction near you, if not near me.


The whole point of the case was whether the federal government had authority over the state's constitutional duty to maintain elections.

The federal government does and in the specific way laid out in the VRA.

You'll need to explain and expound on this. I don't follow.
 
Re: High court voids key part of Voting Rights Act

Oh it was gutted. Striking down Section 4 made the preclearance provisions of Section 5 inoperable, hence, before the ink had dried the shenanigans have begun in Texas, Alabama and some other jurisdiction near you, if not near me.




You'll need to explain and expound on this. I don't follow.

The law is valid. They didn't strike down any reasoning regarding the federal government's authority over the states. The formula having to change isn't some gross miscarriage of justice and doesn't invalidate any part of the law. Section 4 and 5 can still be applied once the formula is updated, which wouldn't even be the first time it changed.
 
Paula Deen Uses Prop 8 Ruling to Seek Partial Dismissal of N-Word Case

Paula Deen Uses Prop 8 Ruling to Seek Partial Dismissal of N-Word Case (Exclusive)
By Tim Molloy | The Wrap
Tue, Jul 2, 2013 6:11 AM PDT

Paula Deen is pressing for the partial dismissal of the lawsuit that has toppled her empire -- and she's using the Supreme Court's Proposition 8 ruling to do it.

Attorneys for Deen and her brother, Bubba Hiers, contend that a woman suing them on the grounds of racial discrimination, among other claims, doesn't have legal standing to file the claim because she is white.

In a filing Monday, the attorneys pointed to the Supreme Court's court's ruling in the Prop 8 case, Hollingsworth v. Perry, in which the court said anyone suing in federal court must have standing.

The attorneys contend that plaintiff Lisa T. Jackson cannot, as a white woman, claim racial discrimination. That would mean that the line of questioning that led to Deen's admission that she has used the N word in the past shouldn't even have been part of the case.

It's hard to imagine how the lawsuit could do more damage to Deen than it already has -- her N- word admission already cost Deen her relationship with the Food Network and half a dozen endorsement deals, and the planned publication of a book has been canceled. Even if a judge agrees that the case should be partially dismissed, that won't undo the harm to Deen's image.

But attorneys for Hiers and the restaurant he and Deen own are pressing on. They quoted a part of the Prop 8 ruling that read, "for a federal court to have authority under the Constitution to settle a dispute, the party before it must seek a remedy for a personal and tangible harm."

Jackson has claimed that she was offended by racial slurs she heard while working at the restaurant, and that she has "bi-racial nieces" whose father is African-American. Because of this, she contends, "derogatory remarks regarding African Americans are even more personally offensive to Ms. Jackson than they would be to another white citizen."

But the attorneys for Deen and Hiers contend that according to depositions in the case, there was only one "bi-racial" niece, who was related to Jackson's partner. The niece was half Hispanic, not half African-American, and Jackson's partner has had no relationship with her in five years, according to the defense.

Attorneys for the two sides did not immediately return calls for comment Monday.

In last week's Prop 8 ruling, the Supreme Court ruled that the sponsors of Prop 8 did not have standing to appeal a lower court ruling that overturned the ballot measure, which barred same-sex marriages in California. The Supreme Court ruling cleared the way for the marriages to resume.

Jackson filed her lawsuit against Deen and Hiers in the U.S. District Court in the Southern District of Georgia. In addition to claiming racial discrimination, Jackson also accuses Hiers of sexist and violent behavior.

http://tv.yahoo.com/news/paula-deen-uses-prop-8-ruling-seek-partial-212010794.html
 
Another possible Supreme Court case involving religion and gay rights

Another possible Supreme Court case involving religion and gay rights
By NCC Staff | National Constitution Center
Thu, Sep 12, 2013

A recent court case in New Mexico could find its way to the Supreme Court as a test of several First Amendment freedoms.

New Mexico neither allows gay marriage nor prohibits it, but since the Supreme Court’s summer rulings on the Defense of Marriage Act and the California referendum on gay marriage, New Mexico has become a testing ground for related issues.

On Wednesday, the Alliance Defending Marriage said it will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review an August ruling of the New Mexico Supreme Court in Elane Photography v. Willock.

In the case, the court unanimously upheld a trial court imposition of a $7,000 fine on a photographer and a finding that she violated the state’s Human Rights Act when she refused to photograph a same-sex wedding on grounds that the assignment would conflict with her Christian beliefs.

The state law forbids businesses operated as places of “public accommodation” and open to serve the general public, to refuse to provide services to gays and lesbians.

The criticism of the ruling by the ADM is that it infringes on the photographer’s free religious practice. The criticism by the Cato Institute and leading scholars, including Eugene Volokh of UCLA and Dale Carpenter of Minnesota, is that it compels the photographer to take a point of view, or compels speech.

The photographer argues both: She says that requiring her to take photos of a same-sex wedding compels her to express approval of same-sex marriage, which she disapproves of, and interferes with her free exercise of religion through her business.

In general, the criticism is that the ruling means private businesses can’t make private decisions.

If the Supreme Court decides to hear this case, it would be the second major church-state case of the term, along with Town of Greece v. Galloway.

The highly watched Greece case is about whether it violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment for a town council to open its legislative meetings with a prayer because by mostly choosing Christian pastors to lead the prayer, the town is endorsing a relief or whether the prayer is acceptable because it doesn’t coerce anyone to prayer or adopt the belief of the prayer.

And there is another possible case working its way toward the Court, in dozens of lawsuits challenging the requirement of the Affordable Care Act that businesses with more than 50 employees provide health-care insurance that covers contraception and screening for reproductive health.

Federal circuits have reached conflicting views about whether private corporations have a right to the free exercise of religion under the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment, with the Tenth Circuit saying yes and the Third Circuit saying no.

As Lyle Denniston reported on Scotusblog, “The Supreme Court has never ruled on a case involving ‘free exercise’ claims by a profit-making company organized for ordinary business activity.”

http://news.yahoo.com/another-possible-supreme-court-case-involving-religion-gay-144207122.html
 
Supreme Court term begins with contentious topics

Supreme Court term begins with contentious topics
By MARK SHERMAN | Associated Press
4 hrs ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court is beginning a new term with controversial topics that offer the court's conservative majority the chance to move aggressively to undo limits on campaign contributions, undermine claims of discrimination in housing and mortgage lending, and allow for more government-sanctioned prayer.

Assuming the government shutdown doesn't get in their way, the justices also will deal with a case that goes to the heart of the partisan impasse in Washington: whether and when the president may use recess appointments to fill key positions without Senate confirmation.

The court was unaffected for the first few days of the government shutdown and there was no expectation that arguments set for October would have to be rescheduled.

The new term that starts Monday may be short on the sort of high-profile battles over health care and gay marriage that marked the past two years. But several cases ask the court to overrule prior decisions — bold action in an institution that relies on the power of precedent.

"There are an unusual number of cases going right to hot-button cultural issues and aggressive briefing on the conservative side asking precedents to be overruled," said Georgetown University law professor Pamela Harris, who served in President Barack Obama's Justice Department.

Paul Clement, a frequent advocate before the court and the top Supreme Court lawyer under President George W. Bush, agreed that the opportunity exists for dramatic precedent-busting decisions. But Clement said each case also offers the court "an off-ramp," a narrower outcome that may be more in keeping with Chief Justice John Roberts' stated desire for incremental decision-making that bridges the court's ideological divide.

There is a familiar ring to several cases the justices will take up.

Campaign finance, affirmative action, legislative prayer and abortion clinic protests all are on the court's calendar. The justices also will hear for the second time the case of Carol Anne Bond, a woman who was convicted under an anti-terrorism law for spreading deadly chemicals around the home of her husband's mistress.

The justices probably will decide in the fall whether to resolve competing lower court decisions about the new health care law's requirement that employer-sponsored health plans include coverage of contraceptives.

An issue with a good chance to be heard involves the authority of police to search the contents of a cellphone found on someone they arrest. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said over the summer that the right to privacy in the digital age "is bound to come up in many forms" in the years ahead.

The court may hear its first abortion case since 2007, a review of an Oklahoma law that would restrict the use of certain abortion-inducing drugs such as RU-486.

The campaign finance argument on Tuesday is the first major case on the calendar. The 5-4 decision in the Citizens United case in 2010 allowed corporations and labor unions to spend unlimited sums in support of or opposition to candidates, as long as the spending is independent of the candidates.

The new case, McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, is a challenge to the overall limits on what an individual may give to candidates, political parties and political action committees in a two-year federal election cycle, currently $48,600 to candidates and $123,600 in total. The $2,600 limit on contributions to a candidate is not at issue.

Since the Buckley v. Valeo decision in 1976, the court has looked more favorably on contribution limits than on spending restrictions because of the potential for corruption in large contributions. The big issue in the current case is whether the justices will be just as skeptical of limits on contributing as on spending.

Three justices, Anthony Kennedy, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, have signaled their willingness to do so. It remains to be seen whether Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito, the other two members of the Citizens United majority, are willing to go along.

Among other top cases already set for review:

—Greece, N.Y., a suburb of Rochester, is asking the court to uphold its practice of opening town council meetings with a prayer, despite an appeals court ruling that found the invocations a violation of the First Amendment because they almost always were Christian prayers. The court could use the case to rule that courts should take a more hands-off approach to religion in the public square or it could hold more narrowly that the town's practice is consistent with a 1983 decision upholding prayer at the start of government meetings.

—Mount Holly, N.J., is defending a plan to demolish and redevelop a rundown neighborhood against claims that it discriminates because it disproportionately affects African-American and Latino residents. At issue is whether there also must be an intent to discriminate under federal housing law. The issue affects a range of transactions involving real estate and applies to banks and mortgage companies as well as governments, such as the one involved in this case.

—Michigan is fighting to preserve a constitutional amendment that bans the use of racial preferences in education after a federal appeals court ruled that the constitutional ban is itself discriminatory. This case, unlike last term's look at a University of Texas admissions plan, does not involve the viability of affirmative action, but rather whether opponents of racial preferences can enshrine that ban in the state constitution.

—Massachusetts is defending a law that creates a 35-foot buffer zone at abortion clinics to limit protesters' ability to interact with patients. The court upheld a buffer zone law in Colorado in 2000, but Roberts and Alito have replaced members of that majority and are considered more sympathetic to the free-speech claims of the protesters.

While several cases call into question high court precedents, the justices will be writing on a blank slate when they take up the president's recess appointment power under the Constitution.

In that case, the court will confront an appeals court ruling that effectively would end the president's ability to make such appointments, if it is left standing.

Former Justice Department official Peter Keisler said that justices often ask a lawyer for the best case in support of his argument. "No one is going to ask that question because 't'aint none.' No Supreme Court decisions are material here," said Keisler, a partner at the Sidley, Austin law firm in Washington.

The impasse that led Obama to install members of the National Labor Relations Board and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau director Richard Cordray in office without Senate confirmation has been resolved. So what remains of the issue is whether Obama and his successors will be constrained in the future.

The topic splits Democrats and Republicans, but their view of the matter is almost entirely dependent on which party controls the White House.

In another area, little drama is expected. Four justices are over the age of 75, but none is expected to retire in the coming year.

Ginsburg, at 80, is the oldest member of the court. Scalia and Kennedy are 77, and Justice Stephen Breyer is 75.

Ginsburg made clear in a series of media interviews this summer that she will stay on the court as long as she is able to do the work. Before the summer, Ginsburg had said she wanted to emulate Justice Louis Brandeis and stay on the bench as long as he did, 22 years. She will reach that mark in 2015, which also coincides with what is widely believed to be Obama's last opportunity to name her replacement because the presidential election year of 2016 is an unlikely time to fill a high court vacancy, especially in the eighth and final year of a presidency.

http://news.yahoo.com/supreme-court-term-begins-contentious-topics-114427529--politics.html
 
Factbox: Major business cases before the U.S. Supreme Court

Factbox: Major business cases before the U.S. Supreme Court
Reuters
Fri, Oct 4, 2013 1:19 AM EDT

(Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court begins its new term on Monday with oral arguments on a fresh set of cases. Among them are a number of cases of special interest to the business community. Despite the current federal government shutdown, the court is scheduled to function normally until at least October 11, the court said on Thursday.

Cases of note include (with oral argument date, if set):

DaimlerChrysler AG v. Bauman: On whether a lawsuit can proceed against Daimler AG over allegations the company was guilty of human rights violations against workers at a plant in Argentina in the 1970s (October 15).

Mississippi ex rel. Hood v. AU Optronics: A dispute between states and electronics manufacturers, including AU Optronics Corp, LG Display Co Ltd and LG Electronics Inc, over whether restitution claims based on alleged price-fixing in the market for liquid crystal display panels should be heard in state or federal court (November6).

Mount Holly v. Mount Holly Gardens Citizens in Action: A case watched closely by lenders and insurance companies on whether the Fair Housing Act, a law that prohibits race discrimination in the sale or rental of housing, allows for claims based on seemingly neutral practices that have a discriminatory effect (December 4).

Environmental Protection Agency v. EME Homer City Generation and American Lung Association v. EME Homer City Generation: A case in which utilities, including American Electric Power Co Inc and Entergy Corp have challenged whether the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency overstepped its authority when it issued a rule regulating air pollution that crosses state lines (December 10).

National Labor Relations Board v. Noel Canning Corp: On whether appointments President Barack Obama made to the National Labor Relations Board were constitutional.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/factbox-major-business-cases-u-supreme-court-051642107--finance.html
 
Supreme Court: Is new campaign finance case another 'Citizens United'? Supreme Court

Supreme Court: Is new campaign finance case another 'Citizens United'?
Supreme Court justices will hear oral arguments Tuesday over whether certain limits on individuals' campaign contributions are justified in the wake of the Citizens United decision.
By Warren Richey | Christian Science Monitor
Mon, Oct 7, 2013

In 2010, the US Supreme Court sent shockwaves through the community of campaign finance reformers when it handed down its decision in the Citizens United case.

Now, nearly four years later, the justices are set to hear oral argument on Tuesday in a new case that some analysts warn could become “the next Citizens United.”

At issue in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission (12-536) are aggregate contribution limits that restrict the total amount of money an individual can give a candidate and committees during a two-year election cycle.

Supporters of the limits say they are necessary to prevent crafty contributors from circumventing other campaign finance restrictions to funnel huge amounts of money from one donor to one candidate.

Opponents of the limits say they are unnecessary and lack any constitutional justification in the wake of the high court’s Citizens United decision.

The 5-4 opinion in Citizens United v. FEC declared that corporations and unions have a First Amendment right to spend unlimited amounts of money on independent issue advertisements during election season.

In reaching that decision, the high court’s conservative wing jettisoned the underlying rationale for such regulations – that government could limit the political speech of some to ensure a level political playing field for all.

Instead, the conservative justices said the only justification for congressional regulation of campaign contributions and expenditures was to prevent quid-pro-quo corruption or the appearance of such corruption.

It is against that backdrop that the McCutcheon case arises.

The central issue is whether a government cap on the total amount of money an individual can contribute to a candidate, party, or political committee violates the would-be contributor’s free speech rights.

Under federal campaign law, there are two levels of restrictions on how much money an individual can give to candidates and committees during a two-year election cycle.

First there are base limits. Contributors may not give more than $2,600 per candidate or $32,400 per party or other committee.

Federal campaign law imposes a second tier of restrictions, setting an aggregate limit for the total amount that can be given to various candidates and committees in an election cycle. That total limit is $123,200.

The key question in the case is whether the second level of restriction – the aggregate limit – is necessary and constitutionally justified.

Shaun McCutcheon is an Alabama businessman and a supporter of Republican causes. In 2012 he made political contributions to 15 different candidates and various political committees. But he wanted to give more. Specifically, he wanted to contribute to 12 additional candidates and to three national political committees.

The problem was that although the extra contributions would comply with the base limits, they would push his overall contribution total above the aggregate limit.

Lawyers challenging the law argue that the aggregate limit serves no purpose significant enough to justify the burden placed on the free speech rights of would-be contributors.

Under US Supreme Court precedent, the government is entitled to limit the amount of money a person can contribute to a political candidate because such a restriction helps protect American politics and US elections from the corrupting influence of large campaign contributions from a single donor.

The fear is that candidates or office holders who receive substantial campaign contributions from an individual may be inclined to grant special access and other favors to that person in gratitude for the contributions.

That concern justifies the first level of restrictions, the base limits.

But what the challenging lawyers want to know is how the second level of restriction – the aggregate limit – contributes to protecting American politics from corruption or the appearance of corruption.

“There is no quid-pro-quo risk from candidate Z knowing that an individual contributed the base-level amount to candidates A-Y,” wrote James Bopp, a Terre Haute, In., lawyer, in his brief on behalf of the Republican National Committee.

“Whether a person contributes that permissible amount to one candidate or 20 candidates makes no constitutional difference,” added Michael Morley, a Cranford, N.J., lawyer in his brief to the court on behalf of Mr. McCutcheon.

At the time the campaign finance law was written in the 1970s, the aggregate limit was imposed to prevent large contributions from being diverted to political committees to circumvent the individual limits, Mr. Morley said. But that loophole was closed in subsequent amendments to the campaign finance law.

The current aggregate limits “serve no purpose other than to ‘equalize’ the relative ability of individuals to participate in the political process,” Morley wrote.

That’s a reference to an old – jettisoned – justification for campaign finance regulations. In other words, after the Citizens United decision did away with the level playing field rationale, there is no justification for aggregate limits, Morley argued.

The Obama administration disagrees. The president has made no secret of his distaste for the Citizens United decision. He famously used his State of the Union address in 2010 to criticize members of the court (who were in attendance) for what he denounced as a misguided opinion.

Now the administration is trying to respond to the fallout from Citizens United.

In defending the aggregate limit, government lawyers argue that the Supreme Court upheld similar limits in the 1976 landmark campaign finance case, Buckley v. Valeo.

“The burdens imposed by the current aggregate contribution limits are indistinguishable in both kind and degree from the aggregate limit the court in Buckley upheld against a similar First Amendment challenge,” wrote US Solicitor General Donald Verrilli in his brief to the court.

Mr. Verrilli wrote that changes to federal election law since 1976 had not removed the threat of a contributor funneling substantial contributions to a single candidate.

“Under the current statutory regime as well, a contributor could potentially funnel massive amounts of money to a favored candidate or set of candidates if the aggregate limits were held to be unconstitutional,” Verrilli wrote.

“Even if the money were not funneled to a specific candidate or set of candidates, the solicitation and contribution of multi-million dollar sums … can cause precisely the sort of actual and apparent corruption that Congress is empowered to prevent,” Verrilli said.

Advocates of strong campaign finance laws agree.

“The court really doesn’t have a legitimate basis for striking down the overall contribution limits,” Fred Wertheimer, president of Democracy 21, told reporters at a recent briefing.

“If they do, however, they will recreate the system of legalized bribery that existed prior to the Watergate campaign finance scandals,” he said.

http://news.yahoo.com/supreme-court-campaign-finance-case-another-citizens-united-191324599.html
 
Supreme Court dismisses fair housing case

Supreme Court dismisses fair housing case
By Lawrence Hurley | Reuters
Fri, Nov 15, 2013

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Supreme Court on Friday formally dismissed a closely watched housing case that settled earlier in the week.
The move was expected after the township council in Mount Holly, New Jersey, voted on Wednesday to settle the case, less than a month before the high court was due to hear oral arguments.

The settlement, which has been approved by the township and the citizen group that originally filed the lawsuit, marks the second time in two years that civil rights advocates and others have worked to keep a housing-discrimination case away from a Supreme Court dominated by conservatives.

In June, the court agreed to consider whether Mount Holly's plan to demolish lower-income housing and replace it with new units, some available at market rates, violated the 1968 Fair Housing Act because it would be less affordable for minorities.

The lawsuit had been closely watched because of its possible effect on other cases involving so-called "disparate impact" claims, which target seemingly neutral practices that have a discriminatory effect.

The Obama administration had asked the court not to take the Mount Holly case, just as it had asked the court not to take another housing discrimination case which involved a dispute between landlords and the city of St. Paul, Minnesota. That case also settled before the high court could rule.

The case is Mount Holly v. Mount Holly Gardens Citizens, U.S. Supreme Court, No. 11-1507.

http://news.yahoo.com/supreme-court-dismisses-fair-housing-case-223707265.html
 
Union Fees Debated in Supreme Court Case Over Labor Power

Union Fees Debated in Supreme Court Case Over Labor Power
By Greg Stohr
Jan 21, 2014 1:57 PM CT

The U.S. Supreme Court debated whether public employees can constitutionally be forced to pay fees to a union, weighing a politically tinged case with the potential to undercut the power of organized labor.

Hearing arguments today in Washington, several justices voiced skepticism about Illinois rules requiring union dues from people who provide in-home care for disabled Medicaid recipients. More than 20,000 home-care workers pay such fees in Illinois, totaling $3.6 million each year, according to lawyers for workers who filed the case.

Other justices suggested they didn’t see any infringement of the First Amendment rights of workers who object. Justice Elena Kagan said the arguments made by those workers would “radically restructure the way workplaces across this country are run.”

The justices are considering whether to overturn a 1977 decision that said public employees could be compelled to pay for union representation as long as they don’t have to cover the cost of political or ideological activities. The purpose is to finance the expense of union negotiations over pay and working conditions.

The dispute pits labor unions and the Obama administration against right-to-work advocates. About half the U.S. states let workers be forced to pay union dues even if they don’t belong.

The court separately heard arguments today in a clash over the rights to the 1980 Oscar-winning movie “Raging Bull.” The daughter of a man who worked with boxer Jake LaMotta on the screenplay is seeking to press copyright claims against units of MGM Holding Inc. (MGMB) and Twenty-First Century Fox Inc.

Worker Rights

The rights of public workers have been a hot political and legal topic in recent years, highlighted by Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker’s successful 2011 effort to curb collective-bargaining rights there.

That political reality seeped into the high court debate today. Justice Samuel Alito said the Illinois rules at the center of the fight were enacted after the Service Employees International Union made a “huge campaign contribution” to former Governor Rod Blagojevich.

“Virtually as soon as he got into office he took out his pen and signed an executive order that had the effect of putting -- what was it -- $3.6 million into the union coffers?” Alito said.

Governor Quinn

The Illinois fight stems from a series of laws and executive orders backed by Blagojevich and current Governor Pat Quinn, both Democrats. The rules are being challenged by eight caregivers, seven of whom provide in-home services to their own family members.

Justice Antonin Scalia emerged as a central figure in the case today, hinting through his questions that he might agree with the court’s Democratic appointees and back the Illinois rules. He said mandatory fees prevented someone from becoming a “free rider” -- benefiting from union representation without paying part of the cost.

“You’re essentially destroying not just the closed shop, but you’re destroying the ability of the union to get money even from the people” who agree with its actions, Scalia told the lawyer for the objecting workers, William Messenger of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation.

2012 Opinion

Those comments were in contrast to a 2012 opinion written by Alito and joined by Scalia. That opinion called agency fees a “significant impingement on First Amendment rights” and questioned whether preventing free riders was an adequate justification.

Messenger told the justices that “the purpose of this mandatory association is inherently expressive.”

He found an ally in Justice Anthony Kennedy, who asked about a hypothetical union that fights for larger pension benefits against the wishes of a young worker who would prefer a higher salary.

“Suppose the young person thinks that the state is squandering his heritage on unnecessary and excessive payments or benefits and wages,” Kennedy said. “Is that not a political belief of the highest order?”

Paul Smith, the lawyer defending the Illinois rules, told the justices that unions have a “duty of fair representation” that requires them to take divergent views into account.

Pay Increase

In court papers, the state says its 2003 collective bargaining agreement increased the pay of home-care workers from $7 to $13 an hour.

U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli told the justices that the First Amendment rights of public employees are limited when they are dealing with issues connected to their employment.

“The context we are dealing with here is the government as proprietor and manager of its own operations,” Verrilli said.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg pressed Messenger to say whether his challenge was limited to mandatory dues or whether he was also arguing that a union can’t be designated as the exclusive representative for a group of public workers. Messenger said that, for now, his group was challenging only the fees.

The case is Harris v. Quinn, 11-681.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...d-in-supreme-court-case-over-labor-power.html
 
Businesses Win Twice as U.S. High Court Rejects Lawsuits

Businesses Win Twice as U.S. High Court Rejects Lawsuits
By Greg Stohr
Jan 27, 2014 1:25 PM CT

Companies won two unanimous U.S. Supreme Court rulings, averting what they said might have been billions of dollars in new liability.

The court today gave airlines greater immunity from lawsuits when they report potential security threats, throwing out a jury verdict won by an Air Wisconsin pilot. The justices also ruled for U.S. Steel Corp. (X) by saying companies in many cases don’t have to pay workers for time spent putting on and taking off safety gear.

In the airline case, the court said companies can’t be sued when they report threats to the Transportation Security Administration as long as the information the carriers provide is “materially true.”

“Congress wanted to ensure that air carriers and their employees would not hesitate to provide the TSA with the information it needed,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote for the court. The decision overturned a lower court ruling that airlines said would have left them legally vulnerable.

The justices threw out a $1.4 million award won by the pilot, William L. Hoeper. He sued the airline for telling federal officials as he was preparing to board a flight that he was “unstable” and possibly armed.

Three of the nine justices -- Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Elena Kagan -- dissented from that part of the ruling. They said the high court should have let the lower courts decide whether the airline’s report met the “materially true” standard.

Administration Backing

Closely held Air Wisconsin Airlines Corp. flies for US Airways Group Inc., which joined with AMR Corp. in December to create American Airlines Group Inc.

President Barack Obama’s administration backed the industry in the case. The case tested the 2001 Aviation and Transportation Security Act, a law enacted two months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Vaughn Jennings, a spokesman for Washington trade group Airlines for America, said in an e-mail that the court “recognized the importance of immunizing prompt reports by airlines of suspicious activity and potential security threats.”

Hoeper’s attorney, Scott McGath, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

In the wage case, the justices said the U.S. Steel employees are bound by their collective bargaining agreement, which says they get paid only for time at their work stations. The workers argued that a federal wage-and-hour law entitled them to additional wages no matter what the union agreement said.

Grocery Manufacturers

Corporate trade groups said a ruling in the workers’ favor would have been costly. The Grocery Manufacturers Association, whose 300-plus members include Coca Cola Co. and Kraft Foods Group Inc. (KRFT), said a Supreme Court defeat would have forced companies to pay millions of employees more than $1,500 each.

Pittsburgh-based U.S. Steel was being sued by workers at its Gary, Indiana, facility. The workers said they spend as much as an hour before and after their shifts donning protective gear, including flame-retardant clothing and steel-toed boots, and then traveling to their work stations.

The union that represents 4,500 workers at the Gary facility, the United Steelworkers of America, wasn’t involved in the case. Since 1947, the union’s contracts with U.S. Steel have said workers don’t get paid for changing time.

The case turned on a provision in the federal law that says a collective bargaining agreement governs whether workers get paid for time spent “changing clothes.” The workers said their gear isn’t “clothes” because its primary function is to protect against workplace hazards.

Justice Scalia

Writing for the court, Scalia rejected that interpretation. “We see no basis for the proposition that the unmodified term ‘clothes’ somehow omits protective clothing,” he wrote.

The case is Sandifer v. United States Steel, 12-417. The airline case is Air Wisconsin v. Hoeper, 12-315.

Earlier this month, the court gave multinational companies a stronger shield against lawsuits, throwing out a case against Daimler AG over a company unit’s alleged collaboration in torture and killings in Argentina. The justices said the parent company didn’t have enough ties to California to give courts there the authority to hear the case.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...twice-as-u-s-high-court-rejects-lawsuits.html
 
High court voids overall contribution limits

High court voids overall contribution limits
By MARK SHERMAN | Associated Press
1 hr 6 mins ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court struck down limits Wednesday in federal law on the overall campaign contributions the biggest individual donors may make to candidates, political parties and political action committees.

The justices said in a 5-4 vote that Americans have a right to give the legal maximum to candidates for Congress and president, as well as to parties and PACs, without worrying that they will violate the law when they bump up against a limit on all contributions, set at $123,200 for 2013 and 2014. That includes a separate $48,600 cap on contributions to candidates.

But their decision does not undermine limits on individual contributions to candidates for president or Congress, now $2,600 an election.

Chief Justice John Roberts announced the decision, which split the court's liberal and conservative justices. Roberts said the aggregate limits do not act to prevent corruption, the rationale the court has upheld as justifying contribution limits.

The overall limits "intrude without justification on a citizen's ability to exercise 'the most fundamental First Amendment activities,'" Roberts said, quoting from the court's seminal 1976 campaign finance ruling in Buckley v. Valeo.

Justice Clarence Thomas agreed with the outcome of the case, but wrote separately to say that he would have gone further and wiped away all contribution limits.

Justice Stephen Breyer, writing for the liberal dissenters, took the unusual step of reading a summary of his opinion from the bench.

Congress enacted the limits in the wake of Watergate-era abuses to discourage big contributors from trying to buy votes with their donations and to restore public confidence in the campaign finance system.

But in a series of rulings in recent years, the Roberts court has struck down provisions of federal law aimed at limiting the influence of big donors as unconstitutional curbs on free speech rights.

Most notably, in 2010, the court divided 5 to4 in the Citizens United case to free corporations and labor unions to spend as much as they wish on campaign advocacy, as long as it is independent of candidates and their campaigns. That decision did not affect contribution limits to individual candidates, political parties and political action committees.

Republican activist Shaun McCutcheon of Hoover, Ala., the national Republican party and Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky challenged the overall limits on what contributors may give in a two-year federal election cycle. The total is $123,200, including a separate $48,600 cap on contributions to candidates, for 2013 and 2014.

Limits on individual contributions, currently $2,600 per election to candidates for Congress, are not at issue.

Relaxed campaign finance rules have reduced the influence of political parties, McConnell and the GOP argued.

McCutcheon gave the symbolically significant $1,776 to 15 candidates for Congress and wanted to give the same amount to 12 others. But doing so would have put him in violation of the cap.

Nearly 650 donors contributed the maximum amount to candidates, PACs and parties in the last election cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

The court did not heed warnings from Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr. and advocates of campaign finance limits that donors would be able to funnel large amounts of money to a favored candidate in the absence of the overall limit.

The Republicans also called on the court to abandon its practice over nearly 40 years of evaluating limits on contributions less skeptically than restrictions on spending.

The differing levels of scrutiny have allowed the court to uphold most contribution limits, because of the potential for corruption in large direct donations to candidates. At the same time, the court has found that independent spending does not pose the same risk of corruption and has applied a higher level of scrutiny to laws that seek to limit spending.

If the court were to drop the distinction between contributions and expenditures, even limits on contributions to individual candidates for Congress, currently $2,600 per election, would be threatened, said Fred Wertheimer, a longtime supporter of stringent campaign finance laws.

The case is McCutcheon v. FEC, 12-536.

http://news.yahoo.com/high-court-voids-overall-contribution-limits-141339263--finance.html
 
Back
Top