Odd Denver Post Editorial About Abortion

From the Denver Post:

In a strikingly clear message to those who would erode abortion rights in this nation, nearly 59% of Colorado voters struck down a proposed ban on abortions after 22 weeks of gestation.

Women and doctors should be making these medical decisions, not politicians. More voters cast their ballots against the ban than voted for Joe Biden, a testament to Colorado’s strong libertarian streak. Biden won by 13 points. Proposition 115 was rejected by 18 points.

Anyone who knows the history of abortion in Colorado is not surprised. We were among the first states (many say the very first) to decriminalize abortion in certain cases in 1967.

We worried that Proposition 115, sold as a reasonable ban prohibiting abortions during the second half of pregnancy, would have a chance in a purple state like Colorado. We are relieved that it did not pass. Women from across the nation come to Colorado seeking abortion care when their home state denies them the medical care they need. Bravely, some of the women who have had late-term abortions came forward to share their heartbreaking stories of love and loss. These women reclaimed the narrative surrounding abortion, helping to remove stigma and shame and replace it with human faces.

Opponents of abortion should take this loss for what it is and refocus their efforts on supporting pregnant women, especially teens, promoting access to birth control and comprehensive sexual education, and boosting adoption programs and foster care services. There is so much need.

So far, it’s a policy argument about abortion; but then the newspaper goes on:

And U.S. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett should reconsider her position about abortion and stare decisis. Roe v. Wade is now a decades-old decision that laid the foundation for women’s rights in a country that at the time was ruled by men. Women for generations have relied upon the guarantee that the government (local, state or federal) will not and can not interfere with their personal medical choices. To rip that foundation out from under women now, would erode this nation’s commitment to freedom and our faith in time-honored institutions like the Supreme Court. Yes, Justice Coney Barrett, Roe v. Wade is a super precedent that should remain in place. When states bring ill-conceived restrictions on abortion, our justices should follow the lead of Colorado voters and strike them down.

That’s what three Republican-nominated justices did in 1992 with Planned Parenthood v. Casey. The court weighed in on abortion restrictions, not a ban, and declared that abandoning the liberties afforded in Roe would come “at the cost of both profound and unnecessary damage to the court’s legitimacy.” Laws surrounding abortions performed before the point of viability, the court ruled, must not pose an “undue burden” to women seeking abortion care.

But why should the decision of voters in one state to reject one proposed restriction one year be used by the Supreme Court to bind all states in all years to reject restrictions more broadly? The Post doesn’t explain. It does write:

The court must consider the constitutional crisis that would occur in a state like Colorado, in which a healthy majority of voters have definitively said abortion care is an inalienable right, were the court to open the door to a national abortion ban at any point of gestation.

Colorado has spoken and our justices should listen.

I appreciate the concern about a national abortion ban interfering with local citizens’ choices; but it seems to me the solution to that would be to say that Congress may not limit abortions, not that states may not limit them. Indeed, why isn’t the Court’s nationalizing the abortion debate create even more of a “constitutional crisis … in a state like,” say, Louisiana, “in which a healthy majority of voters have definitively said abortion … is [not] an alienable right”?

Of course, there are lots of plausible arguments to be made about abortion rights. Most obviously, one could argue that the Ninth Amendment or general notions of liberty secure a right to abortion (compare Roe and Casey themselves). One could argue for respecting precedent in this area for other reasons.

Indeed, if there were a broad and long nationwide consensus in favor of recognizing a right to abortion—rather than just one state’s voters invalidating one restriction—one could argue in favor of considering that consensus in determining the meaning of the federal constitution (for instance, in deciding what the Ninth Amendment’s phrase “rights … retained by the people” means). And of course there are familiar counterarguments to all these arguments, which I won’t get into here.

But the Post‘s argument seems unusually weak, indeed almost beside the point. There are many reasonable, if controversial, arguments about how the Supreme Court should make its decisions about the federal Constitution. The Post‘s argument doesn’t seem to be one of them.

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World’s Largest Iceberg On Collision Path With South Georgia

World’s Largest Iceberg On Collision Path With South Georgia

Tyler Durden

Wed, 11/04/2020 – 19:40

The world’s largest iceberg, nearly the size of a small country, is headed towards the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia, according to the British Antarctic Survey (BAS).

Known as A68a, the massive iceberg broke off the Larsen C ice shelf in the northwest part of the Weddell Sea, along the Antarctic Peninsula’s east coast. 

Comparing A68a’s Size Too Small Islands 

BAS warned A68a has the potential to collide with South Georgia, an island in the southern Atlantic Ocean that belongs to the British Overseas territories. They said there’s a strong possibility the berg “could disrupt the local wildlife that forages in the food-rich ocean.”

A68a’s Path 

A-68a broke off the Larsen C ice shelf in July 2017 and is about the same size as South Georgia, measuring 93 miles long and 30 miles wide and has since drifted 870 miles north through “iceberg alley” and is about 310 miles from the island. 

A68a Approaching South Georgia 

BAS remote-sensing and mapping specialist Dr. Peter Fretwell said satellite imagery suggests A68a could be on a direct path for South Georgia: 

“Whether it grounds and gets stuck or drifts past the island is in the balance,” Fretwell said. “The currents should take it on what looks like a strange loop around the south end of South Georgia, before then spinning it along the edge of the continental shelf and back off to the northwest. But it’s very difficult to say precisely what will happen.”

BAS Remote Sensing Manager Andrew Fleming said the idea that the berg “is in one large piece is actually remarkable, particularly given the huge fractures you see running through it in the radar imagery.”

“I’d fully expected it to have broken apart by now. If it spins around South Georgia and heads on northwards, it should start breaking up. It will very quickly get into warmer waters, and wave action especially will start killing it off,” Fleming said. 

It’s only a matter of time before Greta Thunberg and her gang of social media climate change trolls point at the massive iceberg, suggesting it has to do with climate change. 

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“Meeting In A Storm”: FOMC Preview

“Meeting In A Storm”: FOMC Preview

Tyler Durden

Wed, 11/04/2020 – 19:20

By Philip Marey of Rabobank

You’re fired!

  • The FOMC meeting on November 4-5 will take place in a volatile environment, just after Election Day, while the country is dealing with another resurgence of Covid-19. What’s more, we are still waiting for an extension of the fiscal stimulus.

  • The election outcome could determine whether the Fed will have to provide more monetary policy accommodation to offset any shortfall in fiscal policy support to the economic recovery.

  • For Fed Chairman Powell there is more at stake than fiscal stimulus in this election week. After all, his first term as Chair expires on 5 February 2022.

Meeting in a storm

The next meeting of the FOMC is on November 4-5, just after Election Day (November 3), however it appears that Trump is now contesting the election results which show Biden in the lead across most battleground states. This means that the Fed will meet in a volatile environment. In addition to the elections, the country is dealing with another resurgence of Covid-19. What’s more, we are still waiting for an extension of the fiscal stimulus that expired at the end of July. Still, the FOMC may not be inclined to take any action before the election uncertainty subsides, unless there is some kind of market panic. Instead, in his press conference Powell is likely to stress again the importance of additional fiscal stimulus, and of getting Covid-19 under control. There will be no update of the economic projections.

Fiscal policy dependencies

The minutes of the September meeting showed that the economic outlook (and thus the FOMC projections) assumed additional fiscal support and that if future fiscal support was significantly smaller or arrived later than expected the FOMC thought the pace of the recovery could be slower than anticipated. Participants viewed fiscal support from the CARES Act as having been very important in bolstering the financial situations of millions of families, and a number of participants judged that the absence of further support would exacerbate economic hardship in minority and lower-income communities. District contacts indicated that fiscal policy had helped support small businesses, while federal aid payments had helped support farm incomes.

This means that the election outcome could determine whether the Fed will have to provide more monetary policy accommodation to offset any shortfall in fiscal policy support to the economic recovery. Until Tuesday, it was generally accepted that a Biden victory in combination with a Blue Wave in Congress would lead to a large fiscal policy package in the first quarter of 2021, followed by expansive fiscal policy during Biden’s first term. This would have been welcomed by the FOMC and allow the central bank to keep its monetary policy stance unchanged for now. In contrast, it now appears that we will get a “Divided Government” (the White House, the Senate and the House of Representatives are not controlled by the same arty) and we are likely to see gridlock at least until the midterm elections of 2022. This would mean only limited and delayed fiscal stimulus, possibly only after the economic data start to deteriorate severely. If fiscal stimulus proves insufficient to keep the economic recovery going, the Fed will be forced to provide additional monetary policy accommodation. However, the Fed has little ammunition left.

Yield curve control

Given the Fed’s aversion to negative policy rates, a faltering economic recovery and insufficient fiscal stimulus could push the Fed into yield curve control. By capping rates for a sustained period some additional monetary stimulus could be provided to aggregate demand.However, given how low longer-term rates are already, this will provide only modest support to the recovery. Alternatively, yield curve control could come into play if a large fiscal stimulus pushes up longer-term rates so fast and so high that they become a threat to the economic recovery. In this case the Fed may want to cap longer-term rates to maintain the current dose of monetary policy accommodation.

Asset purchases

In addition to capping rates, the FOMC has the possibility to increase its asset purchases to provide monetary stimulus. In fact, much of the Fed’s plans regarding asset purchases has yet to be cleared up. From the minutes of the September meeting it was clear that the FOMC talked a lot about forward guidance on rates and very little on forward guidance on asset purchases. Some participants noted that in future meetings it would be appropriate to further assess and communicate how the asset purchase program could best support the achievement of the Committee’s maximum-employment and price-stability goals.

Another one term Chair?

For Fed Chairman Powell there is more at stake than fiscal stimulus in this election week. After all, his first term as Chair expires on 5 February 2022. While President Trump has become less critical of Powell after he cut rates to zero, he has a habit of replacing officials. For a President Biden the precedent of one term Chair Yellen will make it easier to change the Fed’s leadership after only four years. Keep in mind that Powell is a Republican, but more importantly there is likely to be pressure from the left to make the Fed more ‘socially activist’. In recent years the Fed appeared more concerned about limiting the downside risk of stock investors than about fostering income growth for ordinary Americans. While the ‘flexible average inflation targeting’ strategy (FAIT) that has been adopted recently is a step in the right direction, the wide dispersion of views regarding its implementation in the September statement suggests that we are heading for a chaotic exit strategy from the zero lower bound. And more importantly, it raises doubts about whether the FOMC will be able to resist the temptation to start hiking if inflation starts to pick up. Anyway, FAIT may not go far enough for the left wing of the Democratic Party. So Biden may replace Powell by a left-leaning economist who is eager to reshape the Fed’s strategy more radically.

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Court Upholds Preliminary Injunction Against Libel in Judicial Campaign

From Judge Joy Cossich Lobrano’s opinion Monday in Bruno v. Medley, joined by Judges Daniel L. Dysart & Dale N. Atkins; note that Judge Medley won Tuesday’s election:

In this judicial election case, … Jennifer M. Medley … appeal[s] the September 30, 2020 judgment of the district court granting a preliminary injunction in favor of … [Judge] Christopher J. Bruno …, which enjoins Medley from airing or publishing a certain campaign advertisement.

Medley and Judge Bruno are both candidates in the November 3, 2020 election for Judge, Division F, in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans. Judge Bruno is the incumbent, who currently presides over Division F.

On September 21, 2020, Judge Bruno learned through a media outlet that Medley intended to air a television commercial … that evening during Monday Night Football. The commercial stated, in pertinent part, that Judge Bruno “is called judge by some and a deadbeat dad by others” and that “for 13 years [he] refused to pay a single dime in child support for his son” or provide his former wife with discovery regarding his income…. The district court granted [a temporary restraining order] … and scheduled a preliminary injunction hearing on September 30, 2020.

At the preliminary injunction hearing, the district court heard testimony from Medley, Judge Bruno, and Judge Bruno’s expert witness, attorney Steven J. Lane. The commercial and portions of the record from Judge Bruno’s divorce were introduced into evidence.

On September 30, 2020, the district court found that the commercial contains falsities as Judge Bruno did not refuse to pay child support or to provide discovery in his divorce proceedings. The district court rendered judgment, granting the preliminary injunction and ordering that Medley and those acting on her behalf …

are restrained, enjoined, and prohibited from distributing printed material, airing television or radio commercials, publishing, or causing to be published advertisements, or to post on social media sites statements, ads, comments, statuses, which falsely state that CHRISTOPHER J. BRUNO is a deadbeat dad or that he failed or refused to pay child support, or that he refused to provide discovery to his former spouse regarding his income, or any statement of suggestion that would lead a person of average intelligence to conclude that any of the statements were true and any such advertisement or posting shall be immediately taken down or removed….

On appeal, Medley abandoned her original defense as to the truthfulness of her statements against Judge Bruno. She does not now dispute that the commercial contains falsities, particularly as to her allegations that Judge Bruno refused to pay child support. Medley argues nowhere on appeal that these statements in her commercial are true. She now alleges in her appeal that “with respect to the issue of child support, he [Judge Bruno] used every available tactic to delay the support of his child.”

Furthermore, Medley seems to allege that she can now disseminate the commercial containing falsities because she did not knowingly make a false statement against Judge Bruno nor recklessly make a false statement. Medley’s only substantive argument on appeal is that she claims that the district court did not address the nature of her knowledge of the falsities in the commercial as being knowing, reckless, and/or negligent….

The United States Supreme Court has recognized a lack of First Amendment protection for “calculated falsehoods” in political speech, that is, “knowing” or “reckless” false statements …. Thus, an injunction [against such speech] clearly does not violate a person’s First Amendment freedom of speech if the judicial-election speech is knowingly or recklessly false….

At the preliminary injunction hearing, portions of the record of Judge Bruno’s divorce proceedings were introduced into evidence, …. These … documents clearly set forth, [among other things], that there was never a judgment for child support during the 13 years that Medley claims Judge Bruno refused to pay child support.

The 2008 Memo [which had been filed by Judge Bruno’s ex-wife] contained the following statements:

  • “Despite 13 years of litigation, no judgment fixing child support has ever been rendered.”
  • “At all times during the thirteen years, [Judge Bruno] has paid no child support.”
  • “Previous to the 2007-2008 school year, [Judge Bruno] paid 50% of the tuition and for the child’s health insurance.”
  • “He only paid one half of the tuition …”

Judge Bruno’s opposition to the 2008 Memo states that both he and the former Mrs. Bruno are millionaires and that, per their extrajudicial agreement, neither parent paid child support to the other and both parents shared common expenses for the child, such as tuition.

In the 2009 Consent Judgment, the parties agreed that Judge Bruno was to pay to his former wife a lump sum of child support, representing both an arrearage retroactive to May 21, 2007 and future child support through the child’s graduation from high school. The 2009 Consent Judgment also set forth discovery proceedings between the parties.

The district court also heard the following testimony at the preliminary injunction hearing. Medley testified that she has held a license to practice law for 18 years. She understands that she is responsible for what her campaign does, and that as a judicial candidate, she is subject to the judicial canons. Medley testified that she has handled “a couple” of family law cases in her practice and she understands what “arrearage” means.

Medley testified that she reviewed the court record of Judge Bruno’s divorce, and she based the statements in her commercial on that court record. According to Medley, the commercial was created in September 2020. Fire on the Bayou, LLC, a film company, wrote the commercial’s text based on Medley’s dictation of her ideas for the commercial. Medley’s campaign paid for the commercial. Medley viewed the commercial once it was finished. She approved all statements made in the commercial.

Medley testified that without an order to pay child support, a litigant cannot refuse to pay child support; rather, child support must be ordered. In her testimony, Medley acknowledged that she could identify no order, other than the 2009 Consent Judgment, which ordered Judge Bruno to pay any child support. She could not testify to any court order finding that Judge Bruno refused to pay child support for 13 years.

Medley also testified that the definition of a “deadbeat dad” is a “male or female generally who does not support their child, does not pay child support.” … Medley testified that she relied on the 2008 Memo by the former Mrs. Bruno, which contained an argument that Judge Bruno had paid no child support. The 2008 Memo also stated, however, that Judge Bruno paid for the child’s health insurance and half of his child’s tuition. On cross-examination, Medley admitted that she had no reason to believe that the former Mrs. Bruno’s statements concerning these tuition and health insurance payments were false. Medley further acknowledged in her testimony that payments for a child’s tuition and health care expenses are child support….

Judge Bruno also testified at the hearing. According to Judge Bruno’s testimony, there was no judgment requiring him to pay child support between 1995 and 2007. Judge Bruno testified that the statement that he refused to pay child support for 13 years is a lie; it is also a lie that he tried to tie his former wife’s hands with respect to being paid child support. Pursuant to the 2009 Consent Judgment, Judge Bruno paid a lump sum to the former Mrs. Bruno, which was retroactive to May 21, 2007, the date on which the former Mrs. Bruno filed a rule to increase child support. The 2009 Consent Judgment resolved the former Mrs. Bruno’s rule to increase child support as well as discovery motions by both parties.

Judge Bruno tendered and the district court accepted attorney Steven J. Lane (“Lane”) as an expert in family law. Lane testified that, based on his review of the partial divorce record, the campaign commercial is “false.” Lane testified that the statement that Judge Bruno had not paid a dime in child support for 13 years cannot be correct. According to Lane’s testimony, child support is comprised of cash payments and other expenses, which include payments for education, medical insurance, or other extrajudicial in-kind payments. Lane pointed out that the 2008 Memo states that Judge Bruno paid half tuition and all health insurance. Lane opined in his testimony that an attorney reading the 2008 Memo would have to conclude that the statement that Judge Bruno refused to pay child support for 13 years is false.

In Lane’s opinion, the statement that Judge Bruno tied the hands of his former wife with respect to discovery was also incorrect. Lane testified that nothing in the pleadings he reviewed supported the statement that Judge Bruno refused to provide discovery regarding his income. Rather, Lane testified that the pleadings showed that both parties were very wealthy such that the financial documents at issue in their discovery dispute were not relevant to a child support calculation. The relevant issue was the child’s expenses, and Judge Bruno would be justified in objecting to producing documents concerning his personal financial position. Based on Lane’s review of the pleadings, the rule to increase child support contemplated that support was being paid pursuant to extrajudicial agreement and the former Mrs. Bruno was seeking an increase. Lane remarked that nothing in the 2009 Consent Judgment stated that no child support was paid for 13 years. In Lane’s reading, the 2009 Consent Judgment’s language regarding arrearages contemplated only the date the rule was filed until the date of judgment, and that the parties had reached an agreement to pay retroactively from the date the rule was filed.

The district court reviewed the campaign commercial, along with portions of the divorce record, as well as the testimony of all witnesses. In particular, the district court heard Medley admit in her testimony that she knew that tuition and health insurance are child support payments, that she could identify no judgment ordering 13 years of past due child support payments, and that she had no evidence or reason to doubt the former Mrs. Bruno’s statements that Judge Bruno made tuition and health insurance payments on the child’s behalf.

Based on our review of the entire record, we conclude that the district court correctly found and the evidence before the district court supported a finding of actual malice. We find nothing in the record that leads us to conclude that the district court failed to consider malice or manifestly erred in determining that Medley knew her commercial was false or at the very least acted with reckless disregard for whether her statements in the commercial were false….

Judge Lobrano would have gone so far as to award Bruno damages for a frivolous appeal, because “Medley’s appellate arguments are frivolous in that Medley abandoned her defenses originally advanced and adopted unfounded defenses and baseless relief requests on appeal”:

I can discern no other purpose in bringing this appeal than to further harass Judge Bruno with litigation to continue the promotion of a false campaign ad and the perpetration of the falsities in the media. Allowing judicial candidates carte blanche to defame opposing candidates is against public policy and an abuse to the First Amendment freedom of speech. Medley should be held responsible for such abuses that involve the improper use of the appellate process. Her actions are uniquely harmful when one considers the effects of social media, which allows publishers to disseminate false stories to mass audiences instantaneously, throughout this appeal process. Such Article 2164 damages will deter similar reckless conduct in the future, promote the integrity of judicial elections and the appellate process, and discourage the politicization of the judiciary resulting in increased judicial election expenses and eventually compromising judicial integrity and impartiality leading to a decreased public accountability of the courts.

The other two judges disagreed as to the appeal damages:

“[O]ur jurisprudence … reflects that ‘appeals are always favored and, unless the appeal is unquestionably frivolous, damages will not be granted’ due in part to the possible chilling effect on the appellate process.” … Accordingly, “[e]ven when an appeal lacks serious legal merit, frivolous appeal damages will not be awarded unless the appeal was taken solely for the purpose of delay or the appellant’s counsel is not serious in the position he advances.” … [T]he record does not support a finding that Medley’s counsel is not serious in the position Medley advances. Although we have determined that Medley’s positions in this appeal are ultimately incorrect, in applying the foregoing principles, I cannot say that Medley’s appeal is frivolous….

 

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Lawsuit Claims President Trump “Is Misleading People, Deceiving Them to Sin, and Dooming Them to Hell”

From Kelly v. Trump, decided Monday by Patricia W. Griffin, Master in Chancery, Delaware Court of Chancery:

Kelly’s main theory of her case is that Trump creates the illusion of being a devout Christian, while engaging in acts that Kelly contends are against the main tenets of Christianity. She claims that his actions substantially burden and injure her “free exercise of religion” causing her “eternal harm” and “chilling [her] free exercise of religion by [his] increased threat of government sponsored religious persecution and, or the actual government sponsored persecution for [her] attempts to freely exercise [her] religion.”

Kelly alleges that, through Trump’s deception, he is misleading people, deceiving them to sin, and dooming them to hell. The primary harm Kelly claims is that, because Trump is leading people to hell, Kelly will not be able to love them for eternity. She also alleges that she is persecuted, and her religious belief chilled, because of Trump’s support for one religious belief, and suppression of others, which substantially burdens her freedom to exercise her faith.

Three guesses about how the court resolves the case ….

Note also this:

Her claim that she will suffer eternal harm by her inability to have relationships with people if Trump’s actions cause people (including acquaintances/friends she mentions in her complaint) to go to hell is not a sufficiently concrete injury. It is impossible for this Court to determine what happens to people after they die and under what circumstances a person goes to hell. That determination is appropriately left to a higher power.

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Oregon Becomes First State To Decriminalize Cocaine, Heroin, & Meth; Legalizes Shrooms

Oregon Becomes First State To Decriminalize Cocaine, Heroin, & Meth; Legalizes Shrooms

Tyler Durden

Wed, 11/04/2020 – 19:00

While the results of the Presidential race drag on, one ballot initiative on election day has been made crystal clear: Oregon has become the first state to decriminalize small amounts of hard drugs, including cocaine, heroin and meth. 

The “Drug Addiction Treatment and Recovery Act” seeks to decriminalize drug usage and instead focus on a health care approach. The bill reads:

“People suffering from addiction are more effectively treated with health care services than with criminal punishments. A health care approach includes a health assessment to figure out the needs of people who are suffering from addiction, and it includes connecting them to the services they need.”

The ballot measure passed 59% to 41% on election day, according to Fox News

Those who are caught with hard drugs would now have the option of paying a $100 fine or attending new addiction recovery centers, paid for with taxes from retail marijuana sales.

“It’s going to be huge,” Haven Wheelock, a drug counselor for Portland nonprofit Outside In, told VICE.

 “It’s going to allow people to get the services they need without fear of arrest. It’s going to change how people who don’t use drugs think about drug use. It’s going to allow us to move into a health-based system and hopefully be a model for other places. We have an opportunity to show the rest of the country this is how it should be.”

Under the new measure, possession of less than 1 gram of heroin or meth, 2 grams of cocaine, 12 grams of psilocybin, 40 doses of LSD, oxycodone or methadone and 1 gram of MDMA is decriminalized. 

Countries like Portugal, the Netherlands and Switzerland have already implemented similar measures. In Portugal, the change saw “no surge” in new drug use. In fact, drug deaths fell while the number of people in the country treated for addiction rose 20% between 2001 and 2008. Then, the number stabilized. 

The U.N. Chief Executives Board for Coordination announced in 2019 that it would also “promote alternatives to conviction and punishment in appropriate cases, including the decriminalization of drug possession for personal use” in order to “address prison overcrowding and overincarceration by people accused of drug crimes.”

The new proposed measure in Oregon had the backing of “the Oregon Nurses Association, the Oregon chapter of the American College of Physicians and the Oregon Academy of Family Physicians,” according to ABC.

The groups contend that: “Punishing people for drug use and addiction is costly and hasn’t worked. More drug treatment, not punishment, is a better approach.” 

Arguing against the initiative were 24 district attorneys, who claimed the measure “recklessly decriminalizes possession of the most dangerous types of drugs (and) will lead to an increase in acceptability of dangerous drugs.”

Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schmidt argued last week in support of the bill, saying: “Misguided drug laws have created deep disparities in the justice system. Arresting people with addictions is a cruel punishment because it slaps them with a lifelong criminal record that can ruin lives.”

Jimmy Jones, executive director of Mid-Willamette Valley Community Action, a group that helps the homeless, concluded:

 “Every time that this happens, not only does that individual enter the criminal justice system but it makes it very difficult for us, on the back end, to house any of these folks because a lot of landlords won’t touch people with recent criminal history.”

Additionally, voters also made history by legalizing psilocybin or “magic” mushrooms by approving Measure 109 – the Psilocybin Mushroom Services Program Initiative – by 55.88 percent.

Under the measure, the state will become the first in the country legalize the use of the psychedelic fungus in controlled doses within the framework of a regulated system overseen by licensed clinicians and therapists.

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Court Upholds Preliminary Injunction Against Libel in Judicial Campaign

From Judge Joy Cossich Lobrano’s opinion Monday in Bruno v. Medley, joined by Judges Daniel L. Dysart & Dale N. Atkins; note that Judge Medley won Tuesday’s election:

In this judicial election case, … Jennifer M. Medley … appeal[s] the September 30, 2020 judgment of the district court granting a preliminary injunction in favor of … [Judge] Christopher J. Bruno …, which enjoins Medley from airing or publishing a certain campaign advertisement.

Medley and Judge Bruno are both candidates in the November 3, 2020 election for Judge, Division F, in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans. Judge Bruno is the incumbent, who currently presides over Division F.

On September 21, 2020, Judge Bruno learned through a media outlet that Medley intended to air a television commercial … that evening during Monday Night Football. The commercial stated, in pertinent part, that Judge Bruno “is called judge by some and a deadbeat dad by others” and that “for 13 years [he] refused to pay a single dime in child support for his son” or provide his former wife with discovery regarding his income…. The district court granted [a temporary restraining order] … and scheduled a preliminary injunction hearing on September 30, 2020.

At the preliminary injunction hearing, the district court heard testimony from Medley, Judge Bruno, and Judge Bruno’s expert witness, attorney Steven J. Lane. The commercial and portions of the record from Judge Bruno’s divorce were introduced into evidence.

On September 30, 2020, the district court found that the commercial contains falsities as Judge Bruno did not refuse to pay child support or to provide discovery in his divorce proceedings. The district court rendered judgment, granting the preliminary injunction and ordering that Medley and those acting on her behalf …

are restrained, enjoined, and prohibited from distributing printed material, airing television or radio commercials, publishing, or causing to be published advertisements, or to post on social media sites statements, ads, comments, statuses, which falsely state that CHRISTOPHER J. BRUNO is a deadbeat dad or that he failed or refused to pay child support, or that he refused to provide discovery to his former spouse regarding his income, or any statement of suggestion that would lead a person of average intelligence to conclude that any of the statements were true and any such advertisement or posting shall be immediately taken down or removed….

On appeal, Medley abandoned her original defense as to the truthfulness of her statements against Judge Bruno. She does not now dispute that the commercial contains falsities, particularly as to her allegations that Judge Bruno refused to pay child support. Medley argues nowhere on appeal that these statements in her commercial are true. She now alleges in her appeal that “with respect to the issue of child support, he [Judge Bruno] used every available tactic to delay the support of his child.”

Furthermore, Medley seems to allege that she can now disseminate the commercial containing falsities because she did not knowingly make a false statement against Judge Bruno nor recklessly make a false statement. Medley’s only substantive argument on appeal is that she claims that the district court did not address the nature of her knowledge of the falsities in the commercial as being knowing, reckless, and/or negligent….

The United States Supreme Court has recognized a lack of First Amendment protection for “calculated falsehoods” in political speech, that is, “knowing” or “reckless” false statements …. Thus, an injunction [against such speech] clearly does not violate a person’s First Amendment freedom of speech if the judicial-election speech is knowingly or recklessly false….

At the preliminary injunction hearing, portions of the record of Judge Bruno’s divorce proceedings were introduced into evidence, …. These … documents clearly set forth, [among other things], that there was never a judgment for child support during the 13 years that Medley claims Judge Bruno refused to pay child support.

The 2008 Memo [which had been filed by Judge Bruno’s ex-wife] contained the following statements:

  • “Despite 13 years of litigation, no judgment fixing child support has ever been rendered.”
  • “At all times during the thirteen years, [Judge Bruno] has paid no child support.”
  • “Previous to the 2007-2008 school year, [Judge Bruno] paid 50% of the tuition and for the child’s health insurance.”
  • “He only paid one half of the tuition …”

Judge Bruno’s opposition to the 2008 Memo states that both he and the former Mrs. Bruno are millionaires and that, per their extrajudicial agreement, neither parent paid child support to the other and both parents shared common expenses for the child, such as tuition.

In the 2009 Consent Judgment, the parties agreed that Judge Bruno was to pay to his former wife a lump sum of child support, representing both an arrearage retroactive to May 21, 2007 and future child support through the child’s graduation from high school. The 2009 Consent Judgment also set forth discovery proceedings between the parties.

The district court also heard the following testimony at the preliminary injunction hearing. Medley testified that she has held a license to practice law for 18 years. She understands that she is responsible for what her campaign does, and that as a judicial candidate, she is subject to the judicial canons. Medley testified that she has handled “a couple” of family law cases in her practice and she understands what “arrearage” means.

Medley testified that she reviewed the court record of Judge Bruno’s divorce, and she based the statements in her commercial on that court record. According to Medley, the commercial was created in September 2020. Fire on the Bayou, LLC, a film company, wrote the commercial’s text based on Medley’s dictation of her ideas for the commercial. Medley’s campaign paid for the commercial. Medley viewed the commercial once it was finished. She approved all statements made in the commercial.

Medley testified that without an order to pay child support, a litigant cannot refuse to pay child support; rather, child support must be ordered. In her testimony, Medley acknowledged that she could identify no order, other than the 2009 Consent Judgment, which ordered Judge Bruno to pay any child support. She could not testify to any court order finding that Judge Bruno refused to pay child support for 13 years.

Medley also testified that the definition of a “deadbeat dad” is a “male or female generally who does not support their child, does not pay child support.” … Medley testified that she relied on the 2008 Memo by the former Mrs. Bruno, which contained an argument that Judge Bruno had paid no child support. The 2008 Memo also stated, however, that Judge Bruno paid for the child’s health insurance and half of his child’s tuition. On cross-examination, Medley admitted that she had no reason to believe that the former Mrs. Bruno’s statements concerning these tuition and health insurance payments were false. Medley further acknowledged in her testimony that payments for a child’s tuition and health care expenses are child support….

Judge Bruno also testified at the hearing. According to Judge Bruno’s testimony, there was no judgment requiring him to pay child support between 1995 and 2007. Judge Bruno testified that the statement that he refused to pay child support for 13 years is a lie; it is also a lie that he tried to tie his former wife’s hands with respect to being paid child support. Pursuant to the 2009 Consent Judgment, Judge Bruno paid a lump sum to the former Mrs. Bruno, which was retroactive to May 21, 2007, the date on which the former Mrs. Bruno filed a rule to increase child support. The 2009 Consent Judgment resolved the former Mrs. Bruno’s rule to increase child support as well as discovery motions by both parties.

Judge Bruno tendered and the district court accepted attorney Steven J. Lane (“Lane”) as an expert in family law. Lane testified that, based on his review of the partial divorce record, the campaign commercial is “false.” Lane testified that the statement that Judge Bruno had not paid a dime in child support for 13 years cannot be correct. According to Lane’s testimony, child support is comprised of cash payments and other expenses, which include payments for education, medical insurance, or other extrajudicial in-kind payments. Lane pointed out that the 2008 Memo states that Judge Bruno paid half tuition and all health insurance. Lane opined in his testimony that an attorney reading the 2008 Memo would have to conclude that the statement that Judge Bruno refused to pay child support for 13 years is false.

In Lane’s opinion, the statement that Judge Bruno tied the hands of his former wife with respect to discovery was also incorrect. Lane testified that nothing in the pleadings he reviewed supported the statement that Judge Bruno refused to provide discovery regarding his income. Rather, Lane testified that the pleadings showed that both parties were very wealthy such that the financial documents at issue in their discovery dispute were not relevant to a child support calculation. The relevant issue was the child’s expenses, and Judge Bruno would be justified in objecting to producing documents concerning his personal financial position. Based on Lane’s review of the pleadings, the rule to increase child support contemplated that support was being paid pursuant to extrajudicial agreement and the former Mrs. Bruno was seeking an increase. Lane remarked that nothing in the 2009 Consent Judgment stated that no child support was paid for 13 years. In Lane’s reading, the 2009 Consent Judgment’s language regarding arrearages contemplated only the date the rule was filed until the date of judgment, and that the parties had reached an agreement to pay retroactively from the date the rule was filed.

The district court reviewed the campaign commercial, along with portions of the divorce record, as well as the testimony of all witnesses. In particular, the district court heard Medley admit in her testimony that she knew that tuition and health insurance are child support payments, that she could identify no judgment ordering 13 years of past due child support payments, and that she had no evidence or reason to doubt the former Mrs. Bruno’s statements that Judge Bruno made tuition and health insurance payments on the child’s behalf.

Based on our review of the entire record, we conclude that the district court correctly found and the evidence before the district court supported a finding of actual malice. We find nothing in the record that leads us to conclude that the district court failed to consider malice or manifestly erred in determining that Medley knew her commercial was false or at the very least acted with reckless disregard for whether her statements in the commercial were false….

Judge Lobrano would have gone so far as to award Bruno damages for a frivolous appeal, because “Medley’s appellate arguments are frivolous in that Medley abandoned her defenses originally advanced and adopted unfounded defenses and baseless relief requests on appeal”:

I can discern no other purpose in bringing this appeal than to further harass Judge Bruno with litigation to continue the promotion of a false campaign ad and the perpetration of the falsities in the media. Allowing judicial candidates carte blanche to defame opposing candidates is against public policy and an abuse to the First Amendment freedom of speech. Medley should be held responsible for such abuses that involve the improper use of the appellate process. Her actions are uniquely harmful when one considers the effects of social media, which allows publishers to disseminate false stories to mass audiences instantaneously, throughout this appeal process. Such Article 2164 damages will deter similar reckless conduct in the future, promote the integrity of judicial elections and the appellate process, and discourage the politicization of the judiciary resulting in increased judicial election expenses and eventually compromising judicial integrity and impartiality leading to a decreased public accountability of the courts.

The other two judges disagreed as to the appeal damages:

“[O]ur jurisprudence … reflects that ‘appeals are always favored and, unless the appeal is unquestionably frivolous, damages will not be granted’ due in part to the possible chilling effect on the appellate process.” … Accordingly, “[e]ven when an appeal lacks serious legal merit, frivolous appeal damages will not be awarded unless the appeal was taken solely for the purpose of delay or the appellant’s counsel is not serious in the position he advances.” … [T]he record does not support a finding that Medley’s counsel is not serious in the position Medley advances. Although we have determined that Medley’s positions in this appeal are ultimately incorrect, in applying the foregoing principles, I cannot say that Medley’s appeal is frivolous….

 

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Lawsuit Claims President Trump “Is Misleading People, Deceiving Them to Sin, and Dooming Them to Hell”

From Kelly v. Trump, decided Monday by Patricia W. Griffin, Master in Chancery, Delaware Court of Chancery:

Kelly’s main theory of her case is that Trump creates the illusion of being a devout Christian, while engaging in acts that Kelly contends are against the main tenets of Christianity. She claims that his actions substantially burden and injure her “free exercise of religion” causing her “eternal harm” and “chilling [her] free exercise of religion by [his] increased threat of government sponsored religious persecution and, or the actual government sponsored persecution for [her] attempts to freely exercise [her] religion.”

Kelly alleges that, through Trump’s deception, he is misleading people, deceiving them to sin, and dooming them to hell. The primary harm Kelly claims is that, because Trump is leading people to hell, Kelly will not be able to love them for eternity. She also alleges that she is persecuted, and her religious belief chilled, because of Trump’s support for one religious belief, and suppression of others, which substantially burdens her freedom to exercise her faith.

Three guesses about how the court resolves the case ….

Note also this:

Her claim that she will suffer eternal harm by her inability to have relationships with people if Trump’s actions cause people (including acquaintances/friends she mentions in her complaint) to go to hell is not a sufficiently concrete injury. It is impossible for this Court to determine what happens to people after they die and under what circumstances a person goes to hell. That determination is appropriately left to a higher power.

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Trump Elephant as Free Speech

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From Judge Roy B. Dalton Jr.’s opinion in Maxwell v. School Dist. of Volusia County, handed down Oct. 23 but just posted on Westlaw; seems quite correct to me:

Plaintiff Tyler Maxwell … is … an eighteen-year-old senior at Spruce Creek High School … in Port Orange, Florida. To park in the lot adjacent to the School, Tyler paid $55 for a School parking decal. On September 14, 2020, he drove his pickup truck to School, but this time with a new passenger in the truck bed—a red, white, and blue elephant statue with “TRUMP” emblazoned on its side.

The school forbade this, arguing that:

School Board Policy 805 “reasonably regulates political activities in time, place, and manner of use while on School Board property” so the prohibition of Tyler’s elephant does not violate Tyler’s constitutional rights. Policy 805 prohibits “political posters, signs, banners, or any other writing which promotes a political issue, cause, position, or candidate” that is “permanently posted in or on school board property.” The School concluded, Tyler’s “political activity … occurred on school grounds, during school hours, and appears to give the imprimatur of public endorsement of partisan political positions or a particular candidate” in violation of Policy 805….

No, said the court:

The School’s response contends the elephant is school sponsored expression, stating it gives the “imprimatur of public endorsement” and cites two school sponsored expression cases. But it would not be reasonable for the public to believe an elephant endorsing a presidential candidate, clearly placed in an individual student’s car, parked in the school parking lot where mostly students park, represents the School’s view. {That is no more likely than attributing to the School a student’s bumper sticker message on the environment or affinity for Gator football.} {Neither is the elephant display associated with any curricular activity.

{The School published on its website the grounds for revoking a student’s parking decal. The grounds do not include politicking. Failure to abide by school policy is a ground for revocation, but the policy Defendants cite prohibits “permanently posted” political signage. Tyler’s elephant is not permanently posted on school grounds.}

The mobile elephant is pure student expression, and the School must tolerate it unless the expression “would materially and substantially interfere with the requirements of appropriate discipline in the operation of the school.” To “justify prohibition of a particular expression” the School “must be able to show that its action was caused by something more than a mere desire to avoid the discomfort and unpleasantness that always accompany an unpopular viewpoint.” Accepting the truth of the verified allegations at this juncture, Tyler will likely succeed in showing the School did not have a reasonable belief his elephant would lead to a substantial disruption of school activities.

Tyler alleges the elephant did not disrupt students—it remained outside the School, in Tyler’s truck. And the School allows other forms of political speech at that location, including bumper stickers. While the Court is mindful of the School’s difficult task of ensuring a safe and orderly place of learning for students, “undifferentiated fear or apprehension of disturbance is not enough to overcome the right to freedom of expression.” Tyler has shown a likelihood of success on his First Amendment claim….

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Classes #22: Equal Protection I and Eminent Domain

Class 22: Equal Protection I: School Desegregation

  • Brown v. Board of Education (I) (1003-1012).
  • Bolling v. Sharpe (1012-1015)
  • Brown v. Board of Education (II) (1015-1017)
  • Massive Resistance to Brown and the Role of Courts (1017-1020)
  • Cooper v. Aaron (1020-1026)

Class 21: Eminent Domain

  • Introduction, 997
  • Kelo v. City of New London, 1001-1008

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