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Stating the obvious, after a while
Lyle Denniston Reporter
Posted Tue, May 27th, 2014 3:17 pm
Illustrating that it can take some time for the Supreme Court just to state the obvious, the Justices on Tuesday — after their thirteenth opportunity to look at the case — decided an Illinois dispute by finding that a lower court’s error in it was ”manifest” and that the rule of law could not be clearer. Without full briefing and oral argument, the Court ruled summarily in Martinez v. Illinois – a case that had lingered since September.
The case is about a fracas that occurred in Illinois, in the summer of 2006, when Esteban Martinez was accused of “aggravated battery and mob action” against two Elgin residents, Avery Binion and Demarco Scott. After eight years, it is now over: the prosecution of Martinez failed the first time around, and the Supreme Court on Tuesday barred any new trial.
While the case kept getting put off, for one reason or another, things started to move in July 2009. But the prosecutor sought several delays, because it could not find Binion and Scott. Finally, the judge ordered the trial to begin in May 2010. The judge was exasperated, commenting that the two complaining witnesses were “convicted felons…well known in Elgin.”
Insisting on starting, the judge then was notified by the state’s prosecutors that they would not take any part in the trial. A jury was chosen and sworn in, but still the state held back. Given repeated opportunities to call witnesses, the prosecutors each time said they were not participating.
So, at the request of Martinez’s lawyer, the judge ruled that he was not guilty of either charge, and dismissed them. The prosecutors appealed, and first a middle-level appeals court and then the Illinois Supreme Court ruled that Martinez had never been put “in jeopardy” and that the judge should have delayed the trial further. Because the prosecutors never put on a case against him, the state supreme court found, Martinez was never “at risk.”
That is the ruling the Supreme Court unanimously struck down Tuesday. The Illinois Supreme Court, it said, had “manifestly erred” in allowing the state to appeal, because Martinez had been ruled not guilty by the trial judge.
In the unsigned Supreme Court opinion, it remarked: “There are few if any rules of criminal procedure clearer than the rule that jeopardy attaches when the jury is empaneled and sworn.” That has been very clear, it said, since at least 1963. That, the opinion added, is a “bright line” rule.
And, the opinion went on, it was just as clear that, once Martinez had been acquitted by the trial judge, he could not be subjected to retrial. That, it remarked, is “perhaps the most fundamental rule in the history of double jeopardy jurisprudence.”
What Martinez got, it noted, was “a textbook acquittal.”
Perhaps out of deference to a state’s highest court, the Court took eleven pages to declare the case over, after they had studied it repeatedly.
Stating the obvious . . .
There are few if any rules of criminal procedure clearer than the rule that jeopardy attaches when the jury is empaneled and sworn.” That has been very clear, it said, since at least 1963. That, the opinion added, is a “bright line” rule.
[AND]
And, the opinion went on, it was just as clear that, once Martinez had been acquitted by the trial judge, he could not be subjected to retrial. That, it remarked, is “perhaps the most fundamental rule in the history of double jeopardy jurisprudence.”
The Supreme Court Sides with Hobby Lobby on Contraceptive Mandate Challenge
ABBY OHLHEISER
1 HR AGO
Update: In a 5-4 decision penned by conservative Justice Alito, the Supreme Court ruled that "closely held" corporations can't be required to provide contraceptive coverage, thanks to the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
The Supreme Court Sides with Hobby Lobby on Contraceptive Mandate Challenge
ABBY OHLHEISER
1 HR AGO
Update: In a 5-4 decision penned by conservative Justice Alito, the Supreme Court ruled that "closely held" corporations can't be required to provide contraceptive coverage, thanks to the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
A look at some of the noteworthy cases the Supreme Court will hear this term, which begins Monday:
—Mistaken traffic stop: A broken brake light led a North Carolina police officer to pull over a car in which cocaine was later found. Turns out, the state requires only one functioning brake light. The court is weighing a case about whether a defendant's constitutional protection against unreasonable searches was violated because of the officer's mistaken understanding of the law.
—Prison beards: An Arkansas inmate is challenging a prison policy that prevents him from growing a short beard in accordance with his Muslim religious beliefs. Prison officials say the policy prevents inmates from concealing contraband or quickly changing their appearance in an escape.
—Teeth whitening: The North Carolina Board of Dental Examiners is challenging a Federal Trade Commission order that said the dentist-filled board is trying to kill off competition from day spas and tanning booths that offer teeth-whitening.
—Dishonest juror: Claims that a juror's comments during trial deliberations over a South Dakota traffic accident raise questions about her impartiality and possibly could result in a new trial.
—Born in Jerusalem: The case of an American born in Jerusalem who wants his passport to list his birthplace as Israel underlies a major dispute between Congress and the president, with Middle Eastern politics as the backdrop. The United States has never recognized any nation's sovereignty over Jerusalem, believing the city's status should be resolved in peace negotiations. The administration says a 2002 law passed by Congress allowing Israel to be listed as the birthplace of Jerusalem-born Americans would in essence be seen as a U.S. endorsement of Israeli control of the city.
—Alabama redistricting: Democrats and black lawmakers contend that Republican leaders in Alabama drew a new legislative map that illegally packed black voters into too few voting districts to limit minority political power. Republicans say they complied with the law by keeping the same number of districts in which black voters could elect candidates of their choice.
— Facebook threats: A Pennsylvania man challenges his conviction for making threats on Facebook. He says his online rants about killing his estranged wife, shooting up a school and slitting an FBI agent's throat were simply rap lyrics, and that he didn't mean to threaten anyone.
— Pregnancy discrimination: A United Parcel Service employee says the company failed to accommodate her pregnancy when it refused to give her light-duty work. But UPS contends its policies are "pregnancy-neutral," allowing light-duty assignments only in cases where employees are injured on the job or have certain medical conditions.
—Housing discrimination: For the third time, the court has agreed to hear a challenge from Texas to an important tool the government is increasingly using to fight discrimination in housing. Two earlier cases settled before the justices could weigh in on the legality of determining discrimination from the results of a policy that disproportionately affects minorities, rather than by showing any intent to discriminate.
—Religious discrimination: Retailer Abercrombie and Fitch is defending its denial of a job to a woman wearing a Muslim headscarf by arguing that she did not say during her interview that she wears the hijab for religious reasons.
Supreme Court: Should ban on juvenile life sentences be retroactive? The Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that mandatory life sentences for juveniles constituted 'cruel and unusual punishment.' On Friday, it agreed to take up a case that will decide whether that earlier decision should be applied retroactively, thereby giving 'hundreds' of prisoners a shot at parole.
