The Volokh Conspiracy

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent | Est. 2002

The Volokh Conspiracy

My Prediction For The Birthright Citizenship Cases: The Court Will Rule Against Trump On The Merits And Bypass All Other Procedural Issues

There are certainly five votes on the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment, but there are not five votes about nationwide injunctions.

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On Thursday, the Supreme Court will hear oral argument in the birthright citizenship cases. The government's emergency application presents several significant issues about the scope of the nationwide injunctions and other pressing procedural issues. Will the Court settle any of these long-standing, nagging issues? I doubt it. There are certainly five votes, and probably seven votes, and maybe even eight votes, to declare the executive order unconstitutional on its face. That ruling would bring all litigation to a halt. But I doubt there are five votes to reach a consensus about nationwide injunctions. That's why the Court rushed oral arguments: to put together a merits ruling against Trump, and make this case vanish. Chief Justice Roberts has bigger fish to fry in his quest to save democracy from itself.

I think the Court will do something similar with the Alien Enemies Act cases. There are a host of complex procedural issues. Can you certify a class under Rule 23 for a TRO? What is the interaction between the APA and Habeas Corpus? What level of deference is due when the President declares an invasion? And so on. It is far simpler to find that Trump's order was invalid because reasons. The Chief will make up some rationale that does not foreclose a future president from exercising his statutory powers. I offered this prediction a few weeks ago:

I actually think the Court will bypass the 5th Circuit and all of the procedural issues by simply ruling against Trump on the merits.

Meanwhile, deep in the heart of Texas, Judge Hendrix declined to certify a class of the aliens in Abilene Division, even though the Supreme Court's granted relief to the "putative" class on a temporary basis nearly a month ago. I doubt the Supreme Court will ever let a case arrive from the Fifth Circuit. Far easier to affirm a ruling from one the sensible judges in the Beltway who orders planes to turn around.

The Foreign Emoluments Clause, A Qatari Jet, and Honorary Irish Citizenship

More than 100 days into the new administration, the Foreign Emoluments Clause returns to the fore.

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Shortly after President Trump's inauguration in 2017, he was sued for violating the Constitution's Foreign Emoluments Clause. That litigation stretched the entirety of Trump's first term in office, but did not reach a clear resolution. After Trump's term concluded, all of those cases fizzled out. Now, we are more than 100 days into Trump's second term. And, to my surprise, there has been zero litigation about the Foreign Emoluments Clause. Likewise, there has been no litigation following Trump v. Anderson about whether Section 3 disqualifies Trump from office. I suppose these were not the constitutional crises that we were told.

Yet, the Foreign Emoluments has still returned to the fore. ABC News reports that the royal family of Qatar will gift a 747-8 jumbo jet to the Air Force for its use as Air Force One. And at the end of Trump's term, the plane will be transferred to the Trump Presidential library foundation. ABC reports that White House Counsel, David Warrington, asked the Department of Justice for an opinion on the gift. The opinion has not (yet) been made public, but ABC offers this account:

Anticipating those questions, sources told ABC News that lawyers for the White House counsel's office and the Department of Justice drafted an analysis for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth concluding that is legal for the Department of Defense to accept the aircraft as a gift and later turn it over to the Trump library, and that it does not violate laws against bribery or the Constitution's prohibition (the emoluments clause) of any U.S. government official accepting gifts "from any King, Prince or foreign State."

Sources told ABC News that Attorney General Pam Bondi and Trump's top White House lawyer David Warrington concluded it would be "legally permissible" for the donation of the aircraft to be conditioned on transferring its ownership to Trump's presidential library before the end of his term, according to sources familiar with their determination.

The sources said Bondi provided a legal memorandum addressed to the White House counsel's office last week after Warrington asked her for advice on the legality of the Pentagon accepting such a donation. . . .

Both the White House and DOJ concluded that because the gift is not conditioned on any official act, it does not constitute bribery, the sources said. Bondi's legal analysis also says it does not run afoul of the Constitution's prohibition on foreign gifts because the plane is not being given to an individual, but rather to the United States Air Force and, eventually, to the presidential library foundation, the sources said.

It would be useful to see this opinion at some point. It is not presently posted on the OLC web site.

Still, I can imagine what one of the leading authorities might be.

In 1963, there was discussion whether Ireland could confer honorary Irish Citizenship on President Kennedy. The Office of Legal Counsel provided an opinion on this potential gift. Seth Barrett Tillman and I discussed the gift in Part V of our ten-part series. Here is an excerpt:

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Trump Administration

Have You Ever Seen an Emolument Fly?

From Qatar, with love, a "palace in the sky."

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ABC News reports:

In what may be the most valuable gift ever extended to the United States from a foreign government, the Trump administration is preparing to accept a super luxury Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet from the royal family of Qatar -- a gift that is to be available for use by President Donald Trump as the new Air Force One until shortly before he leaves office, at which time ownership of the plane will be transferred to the Trump presidential library foundation, sources familiar with the proposed arrangement told ABC News.

The gift is expected to be announced next week, when Trump visits Qatar on the first foreign trip of his second term, according to sources familiar with the plans.

Trump toured the plane, which is so opulently configured it is known as "a flying palace," while it was parked at the West Palm Beach International Airport in February.

One might think this gift raises legal issues. Administration lawyers apparently have those bases covered:

sources told ABC News that lawyers for the White House counsel's office and the Department of Justice drafted an analysis for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth concluding that is legal for the Department of Defense to accept the aircraft as a gift and later turn it over to the Trump library, and that it does not violate laws against bribery or the Constitution's prohibition (the emoluments clause) of any U.S. government official accepting gifts "from any King, Prince or foreign State."

Sources told ABC News that Attorney General Pam Bondi and Trump's top White House lawyer David Warrington concluded it would be "legally permissible" for the donation of the aircraft to be conditioned on transferring its ownership to Trump's presidential library before the end of his term, according to sources familiar with their determination. . . .

Both the White House and DOJ concluded that because the gift is not conditioned on any official act, it does not constitute bribery, the sources said. Bondi's legal analysis also says it does not run afoul of the Constitution's prohibition on foreign gifts because the plane is not being given to an individual, but rather to the United States Air Force and, eventually, to the presidential library foundation, the sources said.

One might also think a gift of this sort could raise security concerns, particularly given the Qatari government's efforts to influence U.S. policy (and universities). Apparently such concerns will be addressed when the plane is modified to meet the requirements for presidential use.

According to the story, the plane is to be transferred to the Trump Presidential Library Foundation no later than January 1, 2029, at the federal government's expense. The story estimates the value of the plane at approximately $400 million.

In unrelated news, the Associated Press reported on April 30:

The Trump family company struck a deal Wednesday to build a luxury golf resort in Qatar in a sign it has no plans to hold back from foreign dealmaking during a second Trump administration, despite the danger of a president shaping U.S. public policy for personal financial gain.

The project, which features Trump-branded beachside villas and an 18-hole golf course to be built by a Saudi Arabian company, is the first foreign deal by the Trump Organization since Donald Trump took office and unlike any done in his first term. Back then, he forswore foreign deals in an extraordinary press conference surrounded by stacks of legal documents as he pledged to avoid even the appearance of conflict of interest.

Discrimination

Virginia McDonald's Bars Under-21-Year-Olds from Eating Inside. Is That Legal?

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WJLA (Ida Domingo) reports that a Virginia McDonald's put up a sign that states,

Due to repeated incidents of student violence, this McDonald's location is temporarily closed for dine-in service to anyone under 21 years of age. This decision was made to protect our staff, our guests, and our community.

According to the story,

To enter, customers must ring a doorbell to be allowed entry by an employee. A spokesperson for the franchise said student violence and disrespectful behavior occur at least once a week, causing frustration among staff and customers.

"The fighting is a problem and they're pretty brazen. The management tries to step in and these kids are pretty violent," said longtime customer Robert Hancasky, who said he has frequented this McDonald's for nearly 50 years. "They're just trying to stop the violence because it's not fair to any other customer who comes in for the sandwich, a hard-working person, they got to put up with a bunch of idiots."

Despite the restrictions, customers under 21 can still use the drive-thru, order via a mobile app for curbside pickup, and dine inside if accompanied by a chaperone.

I sympathize with the management's concerns, and with the concerns of the quoted customers. But my tentative thinking is that this violates Virginia public accommodations law, which provides,

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Climate Change

Can the EPA Rescind the Endangerment Finding? Should It Even Try?

A recent Federalist Society webinar on one of the Trump EPA"s top agenda items.

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Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin has announced that the agency will reconsider the so-called endangerment finding, which triggers the regulation of greenhouse gases under various provisions of the Clean Air Act. For reasons I explained in this post, I believe this is a fool's errand, no matter what one thinks about the threat posed by climate change or the utility of federal regulation.

On Friday, I participated in a webinar discussing the legal and practical issues concerning an attempted rescission of the endangerment finding with regulatory analyst Richard Belzer and attorney Michael Buschbacher of Boyden Gray.  The program was moderated by Laura Stanley of Gibson Dunn. The webinar was sponsored by the Regulatory Transparency Project of the Federalist Society and is viewable below.

Supreme Court

Remembering Justice Souter

The justices reflect on their former colleague.

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As has become traditional, the sitting and retired justices of the Supreme Court have issued statements regarding the death of Justice David Souter. All of the justices participated, including those who did not serve with him on the Court. The statements may be found here.

For those interested in Justice Souter's jurisprudence, beyond what is found in his opinions, here is the commencement speech he delivered at Harvard in 2010.

Politics

"This Case Has Ended Up in a Rather Confusing Procedural Neverland," "in a Peter Pan-esque State of Immaturity,"

"preventing any court from adjudicating on the merits." (Lawyers' true superpower: The power to turn every question into a question about procedure.)

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From Westenbroek v. Kappa Kappa Gamma Fraternity, decided by Judge Alan Johnson (D. Wyo.):

The matter before us concerns a lawsuit that was filed in March of 2023 by six women against their sorority and against Artemis Langford, a member of that sorority who had been admitted through normal procedures the previous fall. {… KKG considers itself a "fraternity" in its governing documents. However, emulating Plaintiffs and our national discourse, the Court refers to KKG as a "sorority."}

Plaintiffs, upset by the fact that Ms. Langford is transgender, asked this Court to void her admission, find that the President of Kappa Kappa Gamma (KKG) violated her fiduciary obligations to the sorority, and prevent other transgender women from joining the sorority nationwide. We dismissed the complaint without prejudice in August of 2023, holding, inter alia, that KKG's freedom of expressive association allows it to interpret the word "woman" in its bylaws however it wishes.

In June of 2024, Plaintiffs' appeal to the Tenth Circuit was also dismissed, on the grounds that our dismissal without prejudice was not a final judgment because we implicitly gave Plaintiffs leave to amend.

The Tenth Circuit clarified:

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Immigration

Only Congress May Suspend the Writ of Habeas Corpus

Lessons from Hamdi v. Rumsfeld

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As my co-blogger Ilya Somin notes below, White House aide Stephen Miller commented today that the Trump Administration is "actively looking at" whether it would be possible to suspend the writ of habeas corpus on the grounds that the country is suffering an "invasion" by illegal immigrants.

My own view is that the White House can look at this question all it wants, but it is ultimately up to Congress whether the writ should be suspended (at least during times of peace). This is clear form the Constitution's text and structure. The suspension clause is in Article I, section 9, as among several enumerated constraints on legislative power. It is an interesting question whether Courts can review a legislative suspension of the writ, but I think it is relatively clear that the Executive cannot do so unilaterally.

I also think that the Supreme Court has fairly consistently operated under this assumption. Consider Hamdi v. Rumsfeld. In that case there was unanimous agreement that Congress had not suspended the writ, and so the question was whether the federal government could detain Hamdi (an American citizen alleged to be an enemy combatant captured in Afghanistan) in the United States without putting him on trial.

Justice Scalia, joined by Justice Stevens, concluded that the answer was "no," absent suspension of the writ of habeas corpus by Congress.

Where the Government accuses a citizen of waging war against it, our constitutional tradition has been to prosecute him in federal court for treason or some other crime. Where the exigencies of war prevent that, the Constitution's Suspension Clause, Art. I, § 9, cl. 2, allows Congress to relax the usual protections temporarily. Absent suspension, however, the Executive's assertion of military exigency has not been thought sufficient to permit detention without charge.

In other words, the Constitution's full procedural protections apply unless and until Congress suspends the writ.

While other justices did not agree with Justice Scalia on the merits, a majority of the justices indicated that they too believe it is for Congress to determine whether the writ should be suspended.

Justice O'Connor's plurality opinion, for example, noted that the write exists as a check on executive power unless and until Congress suspends it. Consider these two passages:

Though they reach radically different conclusions on the process that ought to attend the present proceeding, the parties begin on common ground. All agree that, absent suspension, the writ of habeas corpus remains available to every individual detained within the United States. U.S. Const., Art. I, § 9, cl. 2 ("The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it"). Only in the rarest of circumstances has Congress seen fit to suspend the writ. See, e.g., Act of Mar. 3, 1863, ch. 81, § 1, 12 Stat. 755; Act of Apr. 20, 1871, ch. 22, § 4, 17 Stat. 14. At all other times, it has remained a critical check on the Executive, ensuring that it does not detain individuals except in accordance with law.

Unless Congress suspends the writ, it remains a check on the Executive. This is a claim that would be nonsensical if the Executive could suspend the writ unilaterally. As she wrote later in her opinion:

Likewise, we have made clear that, unless Congress acts to suspend it, the Great Writ of habeas corpus allows the Judicial Branch to play a necessary role in maintaining this delicate balance of governance, serving as an important judicial check on the Executive's discretion in the realm of detentions. See St. Cyr, 533 U.S., at 301, 121 S.Ct. 2271 ("At its historical core, the writ of habeas corpus has served as a means of reviewing the legality of Executive detention, and it is in that context that its protections have been strongest"). Thus, while we do not question that our due process assessment must pay keen attention to the particular burdens faced by the Executive in the context of military action, it would turn our system of checks and balances on its head to suggest that a citizen could not make his way to court  with a challenge to the factual basis for his detention by his Government, simply because the Executive opposes making available such a challenge. Absent suspension of the writ by Congress, a citizen detained as an enemy combatant is entitled to this process.

Even Justice Thomas, who embraced an incredibly expansive view of the Executive Branch's authority to detain enemy combatants in an armed conflict, wrote as if it is solely up to Congress whether the writ should be suspended. Indeed, this formed part of the basis for his disagreement with Justice Scalia, as if suspension of the writ was necessary to detain Hamdi, Justice Thomas wrote, Congress would have to violate the Constitution (by suspending the writ absent the required predicate) to achieve the desired result.

Justice SCALIA apparently does not disagree that the Federal Government has all power necessary to protect the Nation. If criminal processes do not suffice, however, Justice SCALIA would require Congress to suspend the writ. See ante, at 2673. But the fact that the writ may not be suspended "unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it," Art. I, § 9, cl. 2, poses two related problems. First, this condition might not obtain here or during many other emergencies during which this detention authority might be necessary. Congress would then have to choose between acting unconstitutionally4 and depriving the President of the tools he needs to protect the Nation. Second, I do not see how suspension would make constitutional otherwise unconstitutional detentions ordered by the President. It simply removes a remedy.

So even if the White house is convinced that the United States is currently subject to an "invasion" (a view I reject), I believe there is broad (if not universal) agreement that it would be solely up to Congress to suspend the writ.

UPDATE: On the original meaning of the suspension clause, see John Harrison, "The Original Meaning of the Habeas Corpus Suspension Clause, the Right of Natural Liberty, and Executive Discretion."

Supreme Court

Homer Nodded in the U.S. Reports

How the phrase ended up in an opinion after it had been omitted.

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The phrase "Homer nodded" appears four times in the U.S. Reports.  The first time was in Justice Douglas' concurrence in Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969) (quoting Judge Learned Hand as it happens).

The phrase would not appear in another Supreme Court decision until 1992's Lee v. Weisman, when Justice Souter included it in a footnote. Yet as Mark Tushnet recounts on Balkinization, while the phrase had been included in the original slip opinion, it was omitted by the Reporter's office--apparently because no one there recognized the phrase and they thought it was an error. As a consequence, it did not appear in the official bound volume for several years. Indeed, it was only after Tushnet contacted Souter about the omission that Souter realized what had occurred, and the language was restored by a subsequent erratum.

Tushnet writes:

 "Homer nodded" comes to us from the Roman poet Horace via two English poets from the turn of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, John Dryden and Alexander Pope. It's been widely observed that Justice Souter seems to have been more comfortable in some earlier century, though the seventeenth seems to me a bit too far back. Justice Souter's writing style was more ornate, more nineteenth century, than the pared down (Hemingway-influenced?) contemporary opinion style.

"Homer nodded" was part of Justice Souter's store of cultural knowledge—but not, apparently, part of the store of such knowledge in the Reporter's office. Justice Souter could write "Homer nodded" as easily as Justice Scalia could refer without citation to Broadway lyrics or Justice Kagan (with citation!) to Dr. Seuss. When I retired from classroom teaching I had just about played out my string on cultural allusions that my students could understand ("The Princess Bride" was hanging in there by a thread), and my guess is that that experience is near-universal (we age, the students we deal with in the classroom remain young).

If there's a larger point here, and maybe there isn't, it is something like this: We all carry cultural knowledge with us but what that knowledge is changes—not for any individual, but for the population composing our institutions—and analysis may go at least a bit off the rails if "we" (the older among us) use our cultural knowledge as the predicate for our evaluation of the performance of today's institutions. Or, I suppose, for our evaluation of the performance of yesterday's.

For what it is worth, "Homer nodded" has appeared in two more Supreme Court opinions: McCreary County, Kentucky v. American Civil Liberties Union (2005) (citing Lee v. Wiesman) and Justice Gorsuch's concurrence in Kisor v. Wilkie (2019).

Invasion

White House May Try to Suspend the Writ of Habeas Corpus in Order to Facilitate Deportation of Migrants

I have long warned of this dangerous implication of the argument that illegal migration qualifies as "invasion."

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White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller recently said the Trump Administration is "actively looking" into suspending the writ of habeas corpus in order to prevent immigrants from challenging their deportation in court:

White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller said Friday that President Trump and his team are "actively looking at" suspending habeas corpus as part of the administration's immigration crackdown.

"Well, the Constitution is clear — and that of course is the supreme law of the land — that the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus can be suspended in a time of invasion," Miller told reporters at the White House.

A writ of habeas corpus compels authorities to produce an individual they are holding and to justify their confinement.

It's been a key avenue migrants have used to challenge pending deportations under the Alien Enemies Act, a rarely-used 18th-century power Trump cited to deport Venezuelan nationals he's accused of being gang members to a notorious megaprison in El Salvador.

If the writ of habeas corpus is suspended, the consequences would not be limited to supposedly illegal migrants. Legal immigrants and US citizens could be detained without due process, as well.

I have been warning about this implication of the argument that illegal migration is "invasion" for a long time. See, e.g., here and here.

If illegal migration and cross-border drug smuggling are "invasion," that means we are in a state of invasion at virtually all times, since these activities have been ubiquitous for so long as we have had the War on Drugs and significant migration restrictions. That is both dangerous, and  an additional reason to conclude that this broad interpretation of "invasion" is at odds with the original meaning of the Constitution. Given the importance that the Founders assigned to the writ of habeas corpus (British violations of the writ were among the major grievances that led to the American Revolution), they would not have created a system where the federal government could suspend it at any time.

Fortunately, courts (including both liberal and conservative judges) have so far uniformly rejected the administration's claims about the meaning of "invasion" in ongoing litigation over the Alien Enemies Act. Multiple earlier court decisions have reached the same conclusion with respect to the meaning of "invasion" in the Constitution. Those rulings were in cases involving state governments, and their claims to be able to "engage in war" in response to "invasion," as  Article I, Section 10, Clause 3, of the Constitution authorizes them to do.

Hopefully, that judicial trend will continue. And if the administration tries to suspend the writ based on bogus claims of "invasion," courts should reject it.

In addition, there is longstanding disagreement over the issue of whether the President can suspend the writ of habeas corpus on his own, or whether only Congress can do so. Most legal scholars hold the latter view, since the Suspension Clause is listed in Article I among the powers of Congress, not Article II (which outlines those of the executive branch). But even if the president can suspend the writ without congressional authorization, the Suspension Clause says he can only do so "when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it." There is no such "Rebellion or Invasion" going on, and therefore suspension would be illegal.

UPDATE: Steve Vladeck has additional (I think well-taken) criticisms of Miller's statements here.

Politics

Short Circuit: An inexhaustive weekly compendium of rulings from the federal courts of appeal

Non-citizen soldiers, habeas runarounds, and all federal law.

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Please enjoy the latest edition of Short Circuit, a weekly feature written by a bunch of people at the Institute for Justice.

State courts often follow bad federal precedent in interpreting their own state constitutions. How best to litigate against this? Over at the Brennan Center's State Court Report, IJ's Anthony Sanders suggests that lawyers should make originalist arguments using their own states' history. Even if they're not originalists themselves.

New on the Short Circuit podcast: Jury trial rights and a very general search.

  1. In 2017, the Trump administration put the brakes on the expedited path to citizenship that's been available to non-citizen soldiers since World War I. After the district court strikes down some of the changes, the Biden administration rescinds the policy (while continuing to litigate the case and formulating a new policy that never materializes). Trump II administration: We're bringing the policy back, and we want to appeal the district court's opinion. D.C. Circuit: No can do. The case is moot, and also, since the recission was not an attempt to evade judicial review, the district court's opinion is vacated.
  2. If you want to pilot commercial vessels on the St. Lawrence Seaway, you need a license from the Coast Guard. The Coast Guard, however, has fully turned over its licensing authority to a private, for-profit business. When one captain—who has completed a lengthy apprenticeship but not yet received his license—raises concerns that the business is mismanaging its financial affairs, he's blackballed on a variety of pretexts. He sues the Coast Guard, arguing, among other things, that delegating its regulatory authority to a private business is unconstitutional. D.C. Circuit: And we won't get to the merits of any of it because we're not sure he completed the training, even though he did the exact same training as everyone else who received licenses. (This is an IJ case.)
  3. Over a dissent from Justice Breyer, the First Circuit says a federal prisoner in New Hampshire who complains of intolerable knee pain cannot sue prison officials for deliberate indifference to his medical needs. Because knee pain is an entirely different context than untreated asthma. Read More

Free Speech

Hate Crime Hoax Could Be Constitutionally Unprotected True Threat

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Photo from the indictment.

From today's decision by Judge Regina M. Rodriguez (D. Colo.) in U.S. v. Bernard:

Colorado Springs, Colorado, held an election for mayor …. CANDIDATE 1 [Yemi Mobolade -EV] is black and CANDIDATE 2 [Wayne W. Williams -EV] is white…. Defendants supported CANDIDATE 1. The Indictment alleges that the Defendants devised a plan to help CANDIDATE 1 win the runoff election. In the early morning hours [three weeks before the election], the Defendants defaced a political sign with CANDIDATE 1's name on it by using red spray paint to write the N-word on it. The Defendants then staged a burning cross in front of the sign and videotaped it.

Later that same day, the Defendants created a fake email account, posing as a concerned citizen, and sent the video, along with an email referring to hate crimes, to media outlets and CANDIDATE 1's campaign. {The email described what was depicted in the video—"To my surprise and disgust it was a cross on fire in front of running candidate's sign for Mayor. Looking past the flames I see it's Yemi Mobalade's sign with the word sprayed painted across in red 'NIGGER'!" The email also included language regarding hate-crime tactics used to harass and intimidate candidates and voters in elections.} According to Defendant Bernard, Defendants' actions were "specifically designed to generate voter outrage and support for a candidate" they actively backed….

Defendants were charged with conspiracy and with "using instrumentalities of interstate commerce to maliciously convey false information to intimidate someone by means of fire," and the court rejected defendants' motion to dismiss the charge:

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Free Speech

Free Speech Unmuted: Can AI Companies Be Sued For What AI Says?

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A mother sues Character.AI, claiming that a conversation between her teenage son and a Character.AI chatbot led him to commit suicide. A conservative activist sues Meta, claiming that its AI generated false accusations about him. Jane and I analyze these cases, and more broadly, discuss lawsuits against AI companies, and possible First Amendment defenses to those lawsuits.

See also our past episodes:

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Justice Souter's Papers Will Be Available In The Year 2075

The Justice was "emphatic" that his papers would be available only fifty years after his death.

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Today the Supreme Court announced that Justice David H. Souter passed away at his home in New Hampshire. I expect there will be many remembrances of the Justice. But today does mark something of a countdown.

In 2015, Justice Souter told my colleague Gerard Magliocca that his papers would become available fifty years after his death:

"I have given such papers as I've retained to the New Hampshire Historical Society, to be opened for inspection after the 50th anniversary of my death. By that time, they will be of interest only to the historians taking the long view."

Tony Mauro offered more details at the defunct Blog of the Legal Times:

Bill Veillette, the historical society's executive director in 2009, also confirmed on Wednesday that Souter's wish all along was for release of his papers 50 years after his death, not his retirement.

"He was very emphatic about it," Veillette recalled. "He told me, 'I've got an incinerator outside my house, and either you agree to 50 years after my death, or they go into the incinerator.'" Since many papers are donated by families decades or centuries after a notable person's death, Veillette said Souter's 50-year delay seemed relatively brief. Veillette is now the executive director of the Northeast Document Conservation Center in Massachusetts.

(I miss BLT.)

Start the clock. Souter's papers will be available at the earliest in the year 2075--just in time for the Tricentennial. If I am still on planet earth then, I would be about 90 years old. I am skeptical anyone in the year 2075 will have much interest in those papers, as all of Souter's other colleagues will have likely released their papers by then.

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