When the Chief Stands Alone

On Monday, the Supreme Court decided Uzuegbunam v. Preczewski. The Justices split 8-1. Justice Thomas assigned himself the majority opinion. And Chief Justice was the lone dissenter. Never before had Roberts been the lone dissenter in an 8-1 decision. Indeed, since Roberts joined the Court in 2005, he has only written four solo dissents. Three of them have been in the past four months. After a term at the pinnacle of his power, the Chief stands alone.

First, Roberts wrote a solo dissent in United States v. Windsor (2013). That case split 5-4. Remember this prescient observation from the Chief’s dissent?

The Court does not have before it, and the logic of its opinion does not decide, the distinct question whether the States, in the exercise of their “historic and essential authority to define the marital relation,” ante, at 2692, may continue to utilize the traditional definition of marriage.

ObergefeLOL.

Roberts would not write another solo dissent again until November 2020. Roman Catholic Diocese v. Cuomo split 5-4 a few days after Justice Barrett joined the bench. Of course, that decision reversed Roberts’s super-duper South Bay precedent. Roberts’s third solo dissent came in Agudath Israel v. Cuomo, the companion case to Roman Catholic Diocese. And the fourth solo dissent came in Uzuegbunam.

Over the past 15 years, the Chief has rarely stood alone. Going forward, as the Court shifts to Roberts’s right, I think we will see more and more solo Roberts dissents. The liberals no longer have any incentive to join his idiosyncratic approach. Four does not make five.

Robert’s predecessor, and former boss, wrote far more lone dissents. By my count, Rehnquist had five in two decades. Four of these lone dissents came shortly after Rehnquist became Chief: (1) Hobbie v. Unemployment Appeals Com’n of Florida (1987);  (2) Bendix Autolite Corp. v. Midwesco Enterprises, Inc. (1988); (3) Tulsa Professional Collection Services, Inc. v. Pope (1988); and (4) Penson v. Ohio (1988). Rehnquist’s fifth lone dissent came four years later in Chemical Waste Management, Inc. v. Hunt (1992). Five more years would elapse before the sixth lone dissent in Chandler v. Miller (1997). Rehnquist’s final lone dissent came in Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, Inc. v. Village of Stratton (2002).

One final observation about Roberts’s dissent. He really, really likes citing Chief Justice Jay’s famous “Correspondences of the Justices.” Here is the passage from Uzuegbunam:

Five years after Hamilton wrote Federalist No. 78, Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson sent a letter on behalf of President George Washington to Chief Justice John Jay and the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, asking for advice about the Nation’s rights and obligations regarding the ongoing war in Europe. Washington’s request must have struck him as reasonable enough, since English sovereigns regularly sought advice from their courts. Yet the Justices declined the entreaty, citing “the lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of the government.” 3 Correspondence and PublicPapers of John Jay 488 (H. Johnston ed. 1891). For over two centuries, the Correspondence of the Justices has stood as a reminder that federal courts cannot give answers simply because someone asks. 

Roberts included the same citation in his dissent from Campbell-Ewald Co. v. Gomez (2016):

In 1793, President George Washington sent a letter to Chief Justice John Jay and the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, asking for the opinion of the Court on the rights and obligations of the United States with respect to the war between Great Britain and France. The Supreme Court politely—but firmly—refused the request, concluding that “the lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of the government” prohibit the federal courts from issuing such advisory opinions. 3 Correspondence and Public Papers of John Jay 486–489 (H. Johnston ed. 1890–1893).

And Roberts included the same citation in U.S. v. Windsor (2013):

In other words, declaring the compatibility of state or federal laws with the Constitution is not only not the “primary role” of this Court, it is not a separate, free-standing role at all. We perform that role incidentally—by accident, as it were—when that is necessary to resolve the dispute before us. Then, and only then, does it become “‘the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.'” That is why, in 1793, we politely declined the Washington Administration’s request to “say what the law is” on a particular treaty matter that was not the subject of a concrete legal controversy. 3 Correspondence and Public Papers of John Jay 486–489 (H. Johnston ed. 1893). And that is why, as our opinions have said, some questions of law will never be presented to this Court, because there will never be anyone with standing to bring a lawsuit.

In case you were wondering, Roberts managed to cite John Marshall twice. Once as a member of Congress:

As John Marshall emphasized during his one term in the House of Representatives, “[i]f the judicial power extended to every question under the constitution” or “to every question under the laws and treaties of the United States,” then “[t]he division of power [among the branches of Government] could exist no longer, and the other departments would be swallowed up by the judiciary.” 4 Papers of John Marshall 95 (C. Cullen ed. 1984) (quoted in Daimler Chrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 547 U. S. 332, 341 (2006)) [Roberts, J.]. 

And of course, Marbury.

The Judiciary is authorized “to say what the law is” only because “[t]hose who apply [a] rule to particular cases, must of necessity expound and interpret the rule.” Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137, 177 (1803) (emphasis added). Today’s decision abandons that principle. 

The Chief is nothing if not predictable.

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A lot of cybersecurity ideas that don’t work, and a few that might

We’re mostly back to our cybersecurity roots in this episode, for good reasons and bad. The worst of the bad reasons is a new set of zero-day vulnerabilities in Microsoft’s Exchange servers. They’ve been patched, Bruce Schneier tells us, but that seems to have inspired the Chinese government hackers to switch their campaign from Stealth to Promiscuous Mode. Anyone who hasn’t already installed the Microsoft patch is at risk of being compromised today for exploitation tomorrow.

Nick Weaver and Dmitri Alperovitch weigh in on the scope of the disaster and later contribute to our discussion of what to do about our ongoing cyberinsecurity. We’re long on things that don’t work. Bruce has pointed out that the market for software products, unfortunately, makes it entirely rational for industry to skimp on security while milking a product’s waning sales. Voluntary information sharing has also failed, Dmitri notes. In fact, as OODA Loop showed in a devastating chart, information sharing is one of half a dozen standard recommendations made in the last dozen commission recommendations for cybersecurity. They either haven’t been implemented or they don’t work.

Dmitri is hardly an armchair quarterback on cybersecurity policy. He’s putting his money where his mouth is, in the form of the Silverado Policy Accelerator, which we discuss during the interview segment of the episode. Silverado is focused on moving the cybersecurity policy debate forward in tangible, sometimes incremental, ways. It will be seeking new policy ideas in cybersecurity, international trade and industrial security, and ecological and economic security (what the group is calling Eco2Sec).  (The unifying theme is the challenge to the US posed by the rise of China and the inadequacy of our past response to that challenge.) But ideas are easy; implementation is hard. Dmitri expects Silverado to focus its time and resources both on identifying novel policy ideas and on ensuring those ideas are transformed into concrete outcomes.

Whether artificial intelligence would benefit from some strategic decoupling sparks a debate between me, Nick, Jane Bambauer, and Bruce, inspired by the final AI commission report. We shift from that to China’s version of industrial policy, which seems to reflect Chinese politics in its enthusiasm not just for AI and chips but also for keeping old leaders alive longer.

Jane and I check in on the debate over social media speech suppression, including the latest developments in the Facebook Oversight Board and the unusual bedfellows that the issue has inspired. I mock Google for YouTube’s noblesse oblige promise that it will stop suppressing President Trump’s speech when it no longer sees a threat of violence on the Right. And then I mock it again for its silly refusal to return search results for “BlueAnon”—the Right’s label for the Left’s wackiest conspiracy theories. (If you think there aren’t any, just google “blue anon” … oh, wait, you can’t.)

In quick hits, Bruce and Dmitri explore a recent Atlantic Council report on hacked access as a service and what to do about it. Bruce thinks the problem (most often associated with the Israeli firm NSO) is real and the report’s recommendations plausible. Dmitri argues that trying to stamp out a trade in zero days is solving the wrong part of the problem, since reverse engineering of software patches, not zero days, is the source of most successful attacks.  Speaking of NSO, Nick reminds us of the rumors that they have been under criminal investigation and that the investigation has been revived recently.

Jane notes that Virginia has become the second state with a consumer data protection law, and one that resembles California’s CCPA.

Jane also notes the Israeli Supreme Court decision ending (sort of) Shin Bet’s use cellphone data for coronavirus contact tracing. Ironically, it turns out to have been more effective than most implementations of the Gapple privacy-crippled app.

Bruce and Dmitri celebrate the hacking of three Russian cybercrime forums for the rich array of identity clues the doxxing is likely to offer researchers like Bellingcat (whose founder will be our interview guest on Episode 353 of the Cyberlaw Podcast).

And more!

Download the 352nd Episode (mp3)

You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@steptoe.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug!

The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.

 

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A lot of cybersecurity ideas that don’t work, and a few that might

We’re mostly back to our cybersecurity roots in this episode, for good reasons and bad. The worst of the bad reasons is a new set of zero-day vulnerabilities in Microsoft’s Exchange servers. They’ve been patched, Bruce Schneier tells us, but that seems to have inspired the Chinese government hackers to switch their campaign from Stealth to Promiscuous Mode. Anyone who hasn’t already installed the Microsoft patch is at risk of being compromised today for exploitation tomorrow.

Nick Weaver and Dmitri Alperovitch weigh in on the scope of the disaster and later contribute to our discussion of what to do about our ongoing cyberinsecurity. We’re long on things that don’t work. Bruce has pointed out that the market for software products, unfortunately, makes it entirely rational for industry to skimp on security while milking a product’s waning sales. Voluntary information sharing has also failed, Dmitri notes. In fact, as OODA Loop showed in a devastating chart, information sharing is one of half a dozen standard recommendations made in the last dozen commission recommendations for cybersecurity. They either haven’t been implemented or they don’t work.

Dmitri is hardly an armchair quarterback on cybersecurity policy. He’s putting his money where his mouth is, in the form of the Silverado Policy Accelerator, which we discuss during the interview segment of the episode. Silverado is focused on moving the cybersecurity policy debate forward in tangible, sometimes incremental, ways. It will be seeking new policy ideas in cybersecurity, international trade and industrial security, and ecological and economic security (what the group is calling Eco2Sec).  (The unifying theme is the challenge to the US posed by the rise of China and the inadequacy of our past response to that challenge.) But ideas are easy; implementation is hard. Dmitri expects Silverado to focus its time and resources both on identifying novel policy ideas and on ensuring those ideas are transformed into concrete outcomes.

Whether artificial intelligence would benefit from some strategic decoupling sparks a debate between me, Nick, Jane Bambauer, and Bruce, inspired by the final AI commission report. We shift from that to China’s version of industrial policy, which seems to reflect Chinese politics in its enthusiasm not just for AI and chips but also for keeping old leaders alive longer.

Jane and I check in on the debate over social media speech suppression, including the latest developments in the Facebook Oversight Board and the unusual bedfellows that the issue has inspired. I mock Google for YouTube’s noblesse oblige promise that it will stop suppressing President Trump’s speech when it no longer sees a threat of violence on the Right. And then I mock it again for its silly refusal to return search results for “BlueAnon”—the Right’s label for the Left’s wackiest conspiracy theories. (If you think there aren’t any, just google “blue anon” … oh, wait, you can’t.)

In quick hits, Bruce and Dmitri explore a recent Atlantic Council report on hacked access as a service and what to do about it. Bruce thinks the problem (most often associated with the Israeli firm NSO) is real and the report’s recommendations plausible. Dmitri argues that trying to stamp out a trade in zero days is solving the wrong part of the problem, since reverse engineering of software patches, not zero days, is the source of most successful attacks.  Speaking of NSO, Nick reminds us of the rumors that they have been under criminal investigation and that the investigation has been revived recently.

Jane notes that Virginia has become the second state with a consumer data protection law, and one that resembles California’s CCPA.

Jane also notes the Israeli Supreme Court decision ending (sort of) Shin Bet’s use cellphone data for coronavirus contact tracing. Ironically, it turns out to have been more effective than most implementations of the Gapple privacy-crippled app.

Bruce and Dmitri celebrate the hacking of three Russian cybercrime forums for the rich array of identity clues the doxxing is likely to offer researchers like Bellingcat (whose founder will be our interview guest on Episode 353 of the Cyberlaw Podcast).

And more!

Download the 352nd Episode (mp3)

You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@steptoe.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug!

The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.

 

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Classes #14: Compulsory Expression and

First Amendment Class #14: Freedom of Association: Compulsory Expression and Association

  • Roberts v. Jaycees (1540-1551) / (812-823)
  • Boy Scouts v. Dale (1551-1561) / (823-833)

Property I: Future Interests II: Executory Interests

  • Notes and Questions, bottom of 321-322
  • Executory Interests, 327-333
  • Problems, 334
  • Review Problems, 334-335
  • Notes, 335-337
  • The System of Estates Chart, 338

 

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Classes #14: Compulsory Expression and

First Amendment Class #14: Freedom of Association: Compulsory Expression and Association

  • Roberts v. Jaycees (1540-1551) / (812-823)
  • Boy Scouts v. Dale (1551-1561) / (823-833)

Property I: Future Interests II: Executory Interests

  • Notes and Questions, bottom of 321-322
  • Executory Interests, 327-333
  • Problems, 334
  • Review Problems, 334-335
  • Notes, 335-337
  • The System of Estates Chart, 338

 

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What Have We Done?

spnphotosten183785-2

In today’s Reason Roundtable, Matt Welch, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Peter Suderman, and Nick Gillespie discuss the last year of pandemic life and what the next year may look like. They also break down the unprecedentedly large spending bill that just passed through the Senate.

Discussed in the show:

0:52: The Senate passed the largest spending bill in U.S. history.

20:39: Dr. Seuss is distracting the GOP from any intelligent debate about the largest spending bill in U.S. history.

33:49: Reflection on the one-year anniversary of coronavirus.

45:13: Weekly Listener Question: Is it more important to be principled or effective? What is the point of maintaining your “principles” if you lose literally every political battle?

49:14: Media recommendations for the week.

This week’s links:

Send your questions either by email to roundtable@reason.com or by voicemail to 213-973-3017. Be sure to include your social media handle and the correct pronunciation of your name.

Today’s sponsors:

  • If you feel something interfering with your happiness or holding you back from your goals, BetterHelp is an accessible and affordable source for professional counseling. BetterHelp assesses your needs and matches you with a licensed therapist you can start talking to in under 24 hours, all online.

Audio production by Ian Keyser.
Assistant production by Regan Taylor.
Music: “Angeline,” by The Brothers Steve.

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What Have We Done?

spnphotosten183785-2

In today’s Reason Roundtable, Matt Welch, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Peter Suderman, and Nick Gillespie discuss the last year of pandemic life and what the next year may look like. They also break down the unprecedentedly large spending bill that just passed through the Senate.

Discussed in the show:

0:52: The Senate passed the largest spending bill in U.S. history.

20:39: Dr. Seuss is distracting the GOP from any intelligent debate about the largest spending bill in U.S. history.

33:49: Reflection on the one-year anniversary of coronavirus.

45:13: Weekly Listener Question: Is it more important to be principled or effective? What is the point of maintaining your “principles” if you lose literally every political battle?

49:14: Media recommendations for the week.

This week’s links:

Send your questions either by email to roundtable@reason.com or by voicemail to 213-973-3017. Be sure to include your social media handle and the correct pronunciation of your name.

Today’s sponsors:

  • If you feel something interfering with your happiness or holding you back from your goals, BetterHelp is an accessible and affordable source for professional counseling. BetterHelp assesses your needs and matches you with a licensed therapist you can start talking to in under 24 hours, all online.

Audio production by Ian Keyser.
Assistant production by Regan Taylor.
Music: “Angeline,” by The Brothers Steve.

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Overbroad Injunctions Against Speech: “Stop Talking About Plaintiff” Injunctions

(For the full PDF, with footnotes and an Appendix listing the cases I’m discussing, see here; all the posts in this series will be available here.)

Some injunctions in libel cases categorically ban defendant from speaking about plaintiff (or at least from doing so online or on some particular site), for instance, “Defendant Leo Joseph is hereby permanently restrained from publishing future communications to any third-parties concerning or regarding the Plaintiffs in either their professional, personal or political lives.” I collect many such cases in the Appendix; they include injunctions entered restricting speech about the prime minister of Haiti (the one I just quoted), a controversial billionaire Chinese businessman, as well as local professionals, businesspeople, and more.

Similar injunctions are sometimes entered in claims brought under statutes that authorize “harassment prevention orders,” “personal protective orders,” or “antistalking orders.” Those statutes were originally designed to require defendants to stay away from plaintiffs whom they had attacked or threatened, or to stop talking to the plaintiff rather than about the plaintiff. And the statutes generally call on courts to focus on whether the defendant has annoyed, harassed, or substantially distressed the plaintiff, not on whether defendant has published defamatory statements. But the laws are increasingly used to order defendants to stop speaking about the plaintiff, based on speech that is likely annoying, distressing, or harassing precisely because it “damages [the plaintiff’s] reputation.”

Here are a few examples; because such orders may be less familiar than libel cases, I offer a few more details on each:

  • The state senator: Florida state senator Lauren Book got an injunction “prohibit[ing]” a persistent critic, Derek Logue, “from posting anything related to [Sen. Book], even statements that would unquestionably constitute pure political speech.” Logue is an advocate for the rights of released sex offenders (and himself a released sex offender); Book is a prominent backer of sex offender registration laws. The injunction was based on Logue’s having protested against a march that Book had organized, having asked an aggressive question at a screening of a documentary in which both Book and Logue were featured, and having set up a web site that sharply criticized Book (and posted a picture of her home, together with its address and purchase price, drawn from public records).
  • The judge: Michigan state trial judge Cheryl Matthews got an injunction apparently barring Richard Heit from making any online statements about her. Heit, whose fiancée had earlier lost a case before Judge Matthews, had harshly criticized the judge online, saying this like, “They are all liars,” “We will take [Judge] Matthews [Petitioner] out. She has had it in for you from the start. She is only one step over a traffic cop. She will be in jail,” “We will get this to appeals and take them all down,” “A farce! A mockery! A FUCKING JOKE! Dishonest Judge,” and “DO NOT VOTE FOR JUDGE CHERYL MATTHEWS if that is where you vote.”
  • The forensics expert and former state board member: Stacy David Bernstein was a prominent forensic psychology expert, a sometime instructor for the FBI, and a gubernatorially appointed member of the Connecticut Board of Firearms Permit Examiners. Bernstein got an order forbidding Robert Serafinowicz from posting “any information, whether adverse or otherwise, pertaining to [Bernstein] on any website for any purpose.” Serafinowicz had earlier criticized Bernstein online, and pointed to a past abuse prevention order entered against Bernstein, a past judgment apparently entered against Bernstein for unpaid debts, and a possible arrest of Bernstein 30 years before. Serafinowicz had also sent letters to various government agencies that had dealings with Bernstein.
  • The planning board member: Planning board member Colleen Stansfield got an order forbidding Ronald Van Liew from, among other things, mentioning Stansfield’s “name in any ’email, blog, [T]witter or any document.'” Van Liew had earlier run for town council member against Stansfield, and had called Stansfield “a liar and corrupt”; he had also had some personal run-ins with her.
  • The commission member (and her brother the mayor): Norma Kleem, a town commission member and the sister of mayor Cyrus Kleem got an order barring Johanna Hamrick—who runs a local blog and had been candidate for mayor and city council president of the town —from “posting any information/comments/threats/or any other data on any internet site, regarding the petitioner and any member of her immediate or extended family,” which would have barred comments about the mayor as well.
  • The police officer: Police officer Philip Lanoue got a court order barring Patrick Neptune from, among other things, “posting anything on the Internet regarding the officer.” Neptune had earlier criticized Lanoue on the site org based on a what Neptune thought was an improper traffic stop, sent public officials several letters criticizing Lanoue, and sent three letters to Lanoue’s home address.

  • The anti-vaccination activist: Kimberly McCauley got a court order providing that fellow activist Matthew Phillips “[n]ot post photographs, videos, or information about [McCauley] to any internet site.” Phillips had argued that McCauley had sold out to pro-vaccination forces, and included photographs of McCauley’s daughter (which she had earlier posted herself), apparently to suggest that McCauley was endangering her own daughter by vaccinating her.
  • The fake immigration lawyer: Nelly Gabueva got a restraining order requiring lawyer Andrei Romanenko to “take down all harassment material on website related to Nelly A. Gabueva.” The “harassment material,” according to the petition for the restraining order, consisted of Romanenko’s allegations that Gabueva was practicing immigration law without a license. Several months later, the California Bar seized Gabueva’s practice on the grounds that she “led clients to believe that she was an attorney and qualified to practice immigration law,” even though she had “never been admitted to the State Bar of California”; and a federal criminal complaint was filed against her on similar grounds, though that case was later dismissed.
  • The copyright owner: Poet Linda Ellis got a court order requiring a site run by Matthew Chan to remove “all posts relating to Ms. Ellis.” There were about 2000 posts on the site mentioning Ellis, and generally criticizing her practice of demanding thousands of dollars from people who had posted copies of one of Ellis’s poems.
  • The ex-girlfriend and successful video game developer: Prominent video game developer Zoë Quinn got a court order forbidding her ex-boyfriend Eron Gjoni from “post[ing] any further information about [Quinn] or her personal life on line or … encourag[ing] ‘hate mobs.'” Gjoni had posted a Web page describing his romantic relationship with Quinn, and claiming that she had emotionally mistreated him. This led to a torrent of online criticism of Quinn by others, including some threats of violence, partly because Gjoni’s post was interpreted as suggesting that some of the favorable reviews of Quinn’s games were written by reviewers who were themselves romantically involved with Quinn. That in turn led to an ongoing debate between Quinn’s supporters and opponents, labeled the Gamergate controversy.
  • The condominium association: The Hamptons Metrowest Condominium Association got an order barring resident Howard Fox from “post[ing] anything related to The Hamptons [condo complex],” and requiring him to “take down all such information” from his existing blogs. Fox had “utilized the internet to voice his displeasure over the quality of life at the Hamptons.”
  • The businessman with an arrest record: Christopher Fuller got a court order “prohibit[ing] [Frank] Craft from posting anything about Fuller on the internet” for five years. Fuller had been arrested for caller ID spoofing several times; Craft, his former business associate, then posted a dozen tweets with the hashtag (“#spoofingschmuck”) but without using Fuller’s name. Fuller claimed the posts would be understood to be about him, and sought a restraining order—which a judge granted,
  • The political consultant: Jason Miller got a court order forbidding his ex-girlfriend Arlene Delgado, with whom he had a child from “engag[ing] in any social media … which comments … on the [Miller’s] emotional or mental health or personal behavior.” Miller was an adviser to the 2016 and 2020 Trump campaigns, who was slated to be President Trump’s White House Communication Director but withdrew when his affair with Delgado (a political commentator) came to light.

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State Revenue Is ‘Virtually Flat.’ Local Government Revenue Is Up Slightly. Congress Wants To Give Them $350 Billion Anyway.

reason-100s

Congress is inching closer to passing a $1.9 trillion COVID bill. If it becomes law, it will shower billions of dollars on local and state governments whose revenues have been minimally affected by the pandemic.

Over the weekend, the Senate voted along party lines to approve the Democrat-backed bill, whose provisions include $350 billion in support for state, local, and tribal governments.

States will get $195 billion of that money, with each state receiving $500 million at a minimum, plus additional funds based on their numbers of unemployed workers. Local governments will get another $130 billion. Territories and tribal governments will recieve another $25 billion.

This aid comes on top of the additional transit and education funding the legislation sends to states and localities. When that’s included, roughly $510 billion—a quarter of the package—will go toward state and local aid. Past pandemic relief bills have already provided state and local governments with some $310 billion, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

That incredible sum—which is in spitting distance of the Defense Department’s budget—is gaining approval even though overall state revenues fell by only about .1 percent in 2020, according to a recent analysis by the Reason Foundation (which publishes this website). An analysis from J.P. Morgan similarly found that tax revenues were “virtually flat” for the 47 states that report their incomes on a monthly basis.

This isn’t the case everywhere. Falling oil prices led to steep revenue declines in Alaska and Texas. The lack of tourism hit the Florida and Hawaii state budgets pretty hard. The fiscal year 2021, which ends in June, is also supposed to be leaner, with revenues expected to decline by about 4.4. percent.

The overall picture is nevertheless much rosier than earlier in the pandemic, when analysts were predicting state revenue declines of some $500 billion.

Indeed, an analysis from the National Taxpayers Union’s Andrew Lautz has found that when accounting for states’ rainy day funds and steady revenues, only about $6 to $16 billion (not the proposed $195 billion) would be needed to make those governments whole.

Lautz also argues it’s inappropriate to divvy up money to states based only on their number of unemployed residents, given that the jobless are already receiving targeted benefits and that those benefits are themselves helping to prop up states’ tax revenues.

“Individuals who want a job and don’t have one are certainly struggling right now, but the [$900 billion] December bill and the proposed COVID-19 relief package support them with a $300 or $400 per week boost to their regular unemployment benefits,” writes Lautz. “The $600-per-week benefit from the CARES Act helped prevent major state revenue dropoffs in part because it allowed unemployed people to continue spending at rates similar to before they lost their jobs.”

Local tax revenues, while harder to measure given that most local governments don’t report their revenues as frequently, appear to have risen year-over-year by about $60 billion during the first three quarters of 2020, according to a separate Reason Foundation analysis.

That aggregate number obscures a lot of variation between local governments. New York City saw its revenues go up during 2020, while other places like Philadelphia and Houston saw their incomes fall.

Nevertheless, a steady climb in property values during 2020, and thus the property taxes most local governments rely on, firmly in the black.

“For now, it appears that the most pessimistic revenue scenarios outlined at the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis are failing to materialize for most local governments,” writes Mark Joffe, a senior policy analyst at the Reason Foundation. That suggests that the $130 billion in aid to local governments included in this most recent bill is also wildly overgenerous.

The need of recipients, however, seems to be a distant concern for the White House and Congressional Democrats backing the $1.9 trillion relief proposal. The bill is chalk full of spending that has little to do with combating the pandemic, and everything to do with rewarding liberal constituencies.

More concerning still is the seemingly muted reaction from most Americans, including many Republicans, at the price tag.

As The Washington Post‘s Jeff Stein noted Sunday, a much smaller $800 billion stimulus bill provoked a furious reaction from Republican voters and politicians, and criticism from more moderate Democrats. There doesn’t appear to be any similar fiscally conservative backlash to the $1.9 trillion packages moving through Congress.

Having passed the Senate this weekend, the spending legislation goes to the Democrat-controlled House for approval. Proponents hope it’ll pass quickly in that chamber and land on Biden’s desk by the end of the week.

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Overbroad Injunctions Against Speech: “Stop Talking About Plaintiff” Injunctions

(For the full PDF, with footnotes and an Appendix listing the cases I’m discussing, see here; all the posts in this series will be available here.)

Some injunctions in libel cases categorically ban defendant from speaking about plaintiff (or at least from doing so online or on some particular site), for instance, “Defendant Leo Joseph is hereby permanently restrained from publishing future communications to any third-parties concerning or regarding the Plaintiffs in either their professional, personal or political lives.” I collect many such cases in the Appendix; they include injunctions entered restricting speech about the prime minister of Haiti (the one I just quoted), a controversial billionaire Chinese businessman, as well as local professionals, businesspeople, and more.

Similar injunctions are sometimes entered in claims brought under statutes that authorize “harassment prevention orders,” “personal protective orders,” or “antistalking orders.” Those statutes were originally designed to require defendants to stay away from plaintiffs whom they had attacked or threatened, or to stop talking to the plaintiff rather than about the plaintiff. And the statutes generally call on courts to focus on whether the defendant has annoyed, harassed, or substantially distressed the plaintiff, not on whether defendant has published defamatory statements. But the laws are increasingly used to order defendants to stop speaking about the plaintiff, based on speech that is likely annoying, distressing, or harassing precisely because it “damages [the plaintiff’s] reputation.”

Here are a few examples; because such orders may be less familiar than libel cases, I offer a few more details on each:

  • The state senator: Florida state senator Lauren Book got an injunction “prohibit[ing]” a persistent critic, Derek Logue, “from posting anything related to [Sen. Book], even statements that would unquestionably constitute pure political speech.” Logue is an advocate for the rights of released sex offenders (and himself a released sex offender); Book is a prominent backer of sex offender registration laws. The injunction was based on Logue’s having protested against a march that Book had organized, having asked an aggressive question at a screening of a documentary in which both Book and Logue were featured, and having set up a web site that sharply criticized Book (and posted a picture of her home, together with its address and purchase price, drawn from public records).
  • The judge: Michigan state trial judge Cheryl Matthews got an injunction apparently barring Richard Heit from making any online statements about her. Heit, whose fiancée had earlier lost a case before Judge Matthews, had harshly criticized the judge online, saying this like, “They are all liars,” “We will take [Judge] Matthews [Petitioner] out. She has had it in for you from the start. She is only one step over a traffic cop. She will be in jail,” “We will get this to appeals and take them all down,” “A farce! A mockery! A FUCKING JOKE! Dishonest Judge,” and “DO NOT VOTE FOR JUDGE CHERYL MATTHEWS if that is where you vote.”
  • The forensics expert and former state board member: Stacy David Bernstein was a prominent forensic psychology expert, a sometime instructor for the FBI, and a gubernatorially appointed member of the Connecticut Board of Firearms Permit Examiners. Bernstein got an order forbidding Robert Serafinowicz from posting “any information, whether adverse or otherwise, pertaining to [Bernstein] on any website for any purpose.” Serafinowicz had earlier criticized Bernstein online, and pointed to a past abuse prevention order entered against Bernstein, a past judgment apparently entered against Bernstein for unpaid debts, and a possible arrest of Bernstein 30 years before. Serafinowicz had also sent letters to various government agencies that had dealings with Bernstein.
  • The planning board member: Planning board member Colleen Stansfield got an order forbidding Ronald Van Liew from, among other things, mentioning Stansfield’s “name in any ’email, blog, [T]witter or any document.'” Van Liew had earlier run for town council member against Stansfield, and had called Stansfield “a liar and corrupt”; he had also had some personal run-ins with her.
  • The commission member (and her brother the mayor): Norma Kleem, a town commission member and the sister of mayor Cyrus Kleem got an order barring Johanna Hamrick—who runs a local blog and had been candidate for mayor and city council president of the town —from “posting any information/comments/threats/or any other data on any internet site, regarding the petitioner and any member of her immediate or extended family,” which would have barred comments about the mayor as well.
  • The police officer: Police officer Philip Lanoue got a court order barring Patrick Neptune from, among other things, “posting anything on the Internet regarding the officer.” Neptune had earlier criticized Lanoue on the site org based on a what Neptune thought was an improper traffic stop, sent public officials several letters criticizing Lanoue, and sent three letters to Lanoue’s home address.

  • The anti-vaccination activist: Kimberly McCauley got a court order providing that fellow activist Matthew Phillips “[n]ot post photographs, videos, or information about [McCauley] to any internet site.” Phillips had argued that McCauley had sold out to pro-vaccination forces, and included photographs of McCauley’s daughter (which she had earlier posted herself), apparently to suggest that McCauley was endangering her own daughter by vaccinating her.
  • The fake immigration lawyer: Nelly Gabueva got a restraining order requiring lawyer Andrei Romanenko to “take down all harassment material on website related to Nelly A. Gabueva.” The “harassment material,” according to the petition for the restraining order, consisted of Romanenko’s allegations that Gabueva was practicing immigration law without a license. Several months later, the California Bar seized Gabueva’s practice on the grounds that she “led clients to believe that she was an attorney and qualified to practice immigration law,” even though she had “never been admitted to the State Bar of California”; and a federal criminal complaint was filed against her on similar grounds, though that case was later dismissed.
  • The copyright owner: Poet Linda Ellis got a court order requiring a site run by Matthew Chan to remove “all posts relating to Ms. Ellis.” There were about 2000 posts on the site mentioning Ellis, and generally criticizing her practice of demanding thousands of dollars from people who had posted copies of one of Ellis’s poems.
  • The ex-girlfriend and successful video game developer: Prominent video game developer Zoë Quinn got a court order forbidding her ex-boyfriend Eron Gjoni from “post[ing] any further information about [Quinn] or her personal life on line or … encourag[ing] ‘hate mobs.'” Gjoni had posted a Web page describing his romantic relationship with Quinn, and claiming that she had emotionally mistreated him. This led to a torrent of online criticism of Quinn by others, including some threats of violence, partly because Gjoni’s post was interpreted as suggesting that some of the favorable reviews of Quinn’s games were written by reviewers who were themselves romantically involved with Quinn. That in turn led to an ongoing debate between Quinn’s supporters and opponents, labeled the Gamergate controversy.
  • The condominium association: The Hamptons Metrowest Condominium Association got an order barring resident Howard Fox from “post[ing] anything related to The Hamptons [condo complex],” and requiring him to “take down all such information” from his existing blogs. Fox had “utilized the internet to voice his displeasure over the quality of life at the Hamptons.”
  • The businessman with an arrest record: Christopher Fuller got a court order “prohibit[ing] [Frank] Craft from posting anything about Fuller on the internet” for five years. Fuller had been arrested for caller ID spoofing several times; Craft, his former business associate, then posted a dozen tweets with the hashtag (“#spoofingschmuck”) but without using Fuller’s name. Fuller claimed the posts would be understood to be about him, and sought a restraining order—which a judge granted,
  • The political consultant: Jason Miller got a court order forbidding his ex-girlfriend Arlene Delgado, with whom he had a child from “engag[ing] in any social media … which comments … on the [Miller’s] emotional or mental health or personal behavior.” Miller was an adviser to the 2016 and 2020 Trump campaigns, who was slated to be President Trump’s White House Communication Director but withdrew when his affair with Delgado (a political commentator) came to light.

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