Toobin on Citizens United

Jeffery Toobin has an article in the New Yorker about the behind-the-scenes action in Citizens United. It’s long, so I haven’t had the chance to read it in its entirety, but here’s a “review” from Jonathan Adler at VC. The first graf:

The latest New Yorker has an extensive excerpt of Jeffrey Toobin’s forthcoming book, The Oath: The Obama White House vs. the Supreme Court, focusing on the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision. The story, “Money Unlimited: How Chief Justice John Roberts orchestrated the Citizens United decision,” is everything you’d expect from a Toobin piece. It’s engaging and informative, with exclusive behind-the-scenes reporting of how the decision came to be. This stuff is catnip for court watchers. Yet the article also contains plenty of subtle (and not-so-subtle) spin in service of Toobin’s broader narrative of an out-of-control conservative court. As a consequence, Toobin paints a somewhat misleading picture of the case and the Court.

Fallout from PLIVA v. Mensing

Something I’ve been keeping an eye on is the effects of the SCOTUS ruling in PLIVA v. Mensing, limiting liability of generic drug makers for side effects of the drug that are not included on the warning label from the brand-name drugs.

A couple of links.

First:

In the wake of Mensing, state courts in Pennsylvania, California, and New Jersey have been considering what to do with thousands of suits by metoclopramide users who claim they weren’t warned about the long-term risks of developing a neurological disorder. (The cases were mostly filed in state courts after the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation denied a bid to consolidate the metoclopramide litigation at a federal level.) What’s notable is that judges in those states have taken markedly different approaches to their metoclopramide dockets: In Philadelphia and San Francisco, judges have allowed thousands of personal-injury suits against the generics to move forward despite Mensing. But on Friday Superior Court Judge Carol Higbee in Atlantic City, New Jersey, ruled that generics are largely off the hook in her court.

Alison Frankel at Thomson Reuters. In addition to the Higbee decision, there was another case in NJ (in re Fosamax)

A likely case for eventual SCOTUS review, to reconcile the decisions in PLIVA v. Mensing and Wyeth v. Levine, which provided for damages to plaintiffs who suffered side effects from brand-name drugs.

On Wednesday, the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit upheld a $21 million verdict awarded to a woman who suffered grievous injuries as a result of taking a generic pain medication prescribed by her doctor. In its appeal to the First Circuit, the generic drug manufacturer, Mutual Pharmaceutical Company, argued that the design defect claims were preempted by the Hatch-Waxman Amendments to the Federal, Drug, and Cosmestic Act (“FDCA”) under the Supreme Court’s 2011 decision PLIVA v. Mensing.

Bartlett v. Mutual

A NYT article about people suffering from side effects of the generics. Included in the article is a mention of a Public Citizen petition of the FDA to allow generics to use the Changes Being Effected process to change their warning labels. The FDA has apparently postponed their decision on this petition.

And Sen. Leahy has introduced a bill to address the PLIVA/Levine discrepancy. The bill is here with its House counterpart, introduced by Rep. Van Hollen here.

Legal news

An interesting case was argued at SCOTUS yesterday:

[I]n Christopher v. SmithKline Beecham Corp[, t]he Justices will decide, once and for all, whether pharmaceutical sales representatives (PSRs) are “outside salesmen” and thus exempted from overtime-pay requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) The decision will also settle a circuit split between the Second and Ninth Circuits: the former held that PSRs are not outside salesmen and thus are not exempted from the FLSA’s requirement that they be paid overtime wages, while the Ninth Circuit (in this case) unanimously reached the contrary conclusion. This will be an interesting case with wide-ranging ramifications for the pharmaceutical industry and the ninety thousand people nationwide employed as PSRs.

Christopher v. SmithKline Beecham Corp

Also, the en banc Ninth Circuit decided the AZ voter ID case:

We uphold Proposition 200’s requirement that voters show identification at the polling place, but conclude that the NVRA supersedes Proposition 200’s registration provision as that provision is applied to applicants using the National Mail Voter Registration Form (the “Federal Form”) to register to vote in federal elections. [NVRA = National Voter Registration Act — ed.]

Gonzalez v. AZ

Florence and the 4th Amendment

I promised Mark I’d post some thoughts on Florence v. Board of Freeholders, the recent 4th Amendment case from SCOTUS. Since this post isn’t a scholarly document, I’m not going to provide extensive references or links.  My sources are the opinions from the various cases, which can be found at various sites on the web.

First, a brief summary of the case from Lyle Denniston at SCOTUSblog:

Insisting that it has no expertise in how to run a jail or prison, the Supreme Court divided 5-4 Monday in ruling that every person arrested and held temporarily can be subjected to a routine strip search, so long as it involves only a visual inspection without touching or abusive gestures.  The prisoner, however, may be told to manipulate some part of the body.  Some difference of emphasis among the five Justices in the majority made it appear that the decision might be more limited than at first glance.

The ruling, it appeared, did not authorize jail officials to conduct a strip search unless the prisoner was to be placed among other prisoners at the facility.  Two Justices wrote separately in an effort to stress that aspect of the ruling, and their votes were essential to the 5-4 result.

The decision was a clear defeat for challengers to strip searches as a general policy.  The Court explicitly refused to limit the authority to use strip searches only to situations in which a specific individual gave officers a reason to consider that prisoner to be dangerous or likely to be carrying a concealed weapon or drugs.   The same kind of visual inspection of an arrestee’s naked body, the Court declared, can be applied to anyone placed in the general population of a jail or prison, even if only temporarily.

If you’re still interested, then there is more below.

Continue reading

Unprecedented?!?!

President Obama is nothing if not bold. Yesterday, in an abuse of language for which there is unfortunately a great deal of precedent, the president opined on SCOTUS’s recent hearing regarding the fate of ACA.

Ultimately I am confident that the Supreme Court will not take what would be an unprecedented, extraordinary step of overturning a law that was passed by a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress

Unprecedented and extraordinary? Really? No law passed by Congress has ever been overturned by the court before?

Politics is politics, of course, and we all know the games of semantic deception that are regularly played by politicians. But, especially for a former professor of constitutional law, this is a particularly embarrassing departure from reality. Doesn’t it debase our politics even more than is already the case to have a Chief Executive who is so shameless in his disregard for the meanings of the words he uses and the reality he pretends to describe?

Any of the health care / legal experts care to weigh in on the day’s activities?

Ashot here…I’m adding a first person account from yesterday’s arguments. And here’s the link to the audio.

Impressions from inside the courtroom

Mark A. Hall

Wake Forest University

The room was packed and buzzing with excitement. Some people clearly had slept outside last night. Even some of the attorneys general from the challenger states had to stand in line to get in. In the way into the building, I spotted none other than Ken Cuccinelli, attorney general of Virginia and lead party in the Fourth Circuit case. Sitting in my same row in the courtroom was a virtual quorum of the Senate Finance Committee, including Senators Leahy, Baucus, Grassley, and Kerry.

Solicitor General Verrilli encountered some forceful challenges early on in his presentation In particular, Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Scalia and Alito raised concerns about the slippery slope problem, citing examples such as burial insurance, gym membership, and mandatory cell phones to help with police emergencies.

Perhaps one of the most memorable exchanges, and certainly one that will resonate in the media, involved a question from Justice Scalia asking Solicitor General Verrilli to define the market.

JUSTICE SCALIA: Could you define the market — everybody has to buy food sooner or later, so you define the market as food, therefore, everybody is in the market; therefore, you can make people buy broccoli.

GENERAL VERRILLI: No, that’s quite different. That’s quite different. The food market, while it shares that trait that everybody’s in it, it is not a market in which your participation is often unpredictable and often involuntary.

Students of the Court, and of effective rhetoric, know that how issues are framed is critical to how analysis and decisions proceed. Thus, much of the questioning throughout the morning addressed the issue of which of several markets the Court should regard as being regulated: the insurance market, all health services, or the portion of health services the uninsured people are likely to use. As another example of framing, Justice Alito countered the government’s position that the uninsured force others to pay for their care by noting that most people subject to the mandate are required to pay more into the insurance pool than they are expected to use. Justice Roberts also pointedly observed that the comprehensive insurance mandated by the law includes several services that many people never use, such as pediatric care and substance abuse treatment. So, it appears that cross subsidies are in the eye of the beholder.

None of the Justices appointed by Democratic presidents expressed any substantial concerns about the government’s commerce clause position—suggesting that their votes are secure, as has been speculated. Instead, they appeared to rise to the government’s defense. Toward the end of the first hour, Justice Sotomayor crisply defined the government’s three main lines of defense somewhat more clearly than even the Solicitor General had. About 15 minutes into the argument, Justice Breyer spoke up to offer the government some support. He observed that Congress created commerce where none previously existed when it started the Bank of the US, for instance, which Justice Marshall’s opinion in McCulloch v. Maryland famously upheld under the Necessary and Proper clause.

That was the first of two novel arguments Justice Breyer made that I don’t recall reading in the principal briefs. He also pressed several times an argument that should appeal to public health lawyers: what if there were a rampant contagious disease that threatened 10 million lives; couldn’t the government mandate vaccinations? If so, what does it matter that people who are forced to be vaccinated weren’t engaged in any commercial activity?

About 30 minutes in, the Lochner v. New York case was unexpectedly introduced into the arguments, in the form of questioning from Justice Scalia about whether the term “proper” in the Necessary and Proper clause has independent force. Chief Justice Roberts joined in, noting that the Court had earlier expressed concerns about unwieldy substantive due process jurisprudence only with regard to constitutional limits on states’ police plenary powers, and not with respect to limiting the federal government’s enumerated powers.

Tax arguments, on the other hand, received fairly short shrift in all of the arguments. There seems to be very little support, on either side of the Court’s ideological divide, for sustaining the individual mandate as an exercise of Congress’ taxing power. The challengers also reminded the Court that, if this were a tax, they still contend that it is unconstitutional as an unapportioned “direct tax.”

Both Paul Clement for the states and Michael Carvin for the private parties spoke smoothly and quickly. Justices Sotomayor and Breyer were especially active in challenging their positions, with Justices Kagan and Ginsburg also chiming in regularly. Especially notable, I think, were Justice Breyer’s several references to his concern that barring the federal government from mandating individual health insurance in this case might prevent it from responding effectively to a virulent epidemic.

One of my favorite moments, which drew hearty laughs, was this exchange with Justice Kagan: “Well, doesn’t that seem a little bit, Mr. Clement, [like] cutting the bologna thin? I mean health insurance exists only for the purpose of financing health care. The two are inextricably interlinked. We don’t get insurance so that we can stare at our insurance certificate. We get it so that we can go and access health care.”

I listened most attentively to questions for the challengers from the Court’s conservative wing. All eyes and ears were on Justice Kennedy, as a potential swing vote, and he spoke up early on (about 3 minutes in), raising a key point: is it “true that the noninsured young adult is, in fact, an actuarial reality insofar . . . health insurance companies figure risks? That person who is sitting at home in his or her living room doing nothing is an actuarial reality that can and must be measured for health service purposes; is that their argument?” Justice Kennedy repeated this sophisticated point later: “they are in the market in the sense that they are creating a risk that the market must account for.” And, near the end of the morning’s argument, he interjected (in response to the slippery slope concern that regulating here would allow the government to regulate anything): “I think it is true that if most questions in life are matters of degree, in the insurance and health care world, both markets — stipulate two markets — the young person who is uninsured is uniquely proximately very close to affecting the rates of insurance and the costs of providing medical care in a way that is not true in other industries. That’s my concern in the case.”

Later, Chief Justice Roberts challenged the analogy to requiring people to buy cars, noting that not everyone is in the car market, but they are all in the health care market. He made the same points several times in different ways. For instance, to Mr. Carvin: “I don’t think you’re addressing their main point, which is that they are not creating commerce in health care. It’s already there, and we are all going to need some kind of health care; most of us will at some point.” And, in response to Carvin’s analogy to mandatory mortgage insurance: “I don’t think that’s fair, because not everybody is going to enter the mortgage market. The government’s position is that almost everybody is going to enter the health care market.”

Youth Sentencing

Should the juvenile offender, charged as an adult, be susceptible to life without parole sentencing?  Two cases were before the Court.  Read Lyle Denniston’s review and you will see that the various Justices likely raised every argument you would have raised, among you, among them.

Argument recap: Compromise on youth sentences?

A paragraph to chew upon if you do not read the link:

In the cases of Miller v. Alabama (10-9646) and Jackson v. Hobbs (10-9647), most of the Justices appeared to share the sentiment expressed early by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy that the Court did not want to be forced to choose between two opposite choices: no life-without-parole sentences for any minor, or no limit on the sentence for anyone no matter how young.  And there also seemed to be considerable support for Kennedy’s apparent willingness to focus mainly on the question of whether such a sentence should be mandatory and, if so, whether that should be keyed to a specific age.   Kennedy’s views may be crucial, since he has been the author of the Court’s key rulings on youths’ sentencing.

I am willing to accept that the concept of what constitutes “cruel and unusual” punishment changes over time based on neuroscience.  For an originalist, “cruel and unusual” does not change over time and this case presents no difficulties.  For me it presents difficulties.  However, I am a bit calloused in these particular cases.  In short, once we choose to prosecute a youth as an adult, we place him in the penitentiary system for the term of his sentence.  We do not place him in a home where he is wanted, or in a juvenile justice facility with serious pretensions for education, training, and reconstruction of a life.  In short, once we choose to treat them as adults, I think the die is cast.  I think they are less likely to reform than adult first time offenders, given the reality of the penitentiary as a high school, a college, and a career.  So for me, while the world could be a better and more forgiving place, in our everyday reality, it is not.

I would be more inclined to say that treating any juvenile as an adult offender before the age of 16 is cruel and unusual than I would be to say the life sentence without parole is cruel and unusual.  These are my own musings, not those of any of the Justices, according to Denniston.

 

 

Survivor or not?

From NPR this morning, an interesting question being posed to SCOTUS about survivor benefits from Social Security for children conceived after the beneficiary’s death:

Two eras clash on Monday at the U.S. Supreme Court, when a law written in 1939 is applied to in vitro fertilization. At issue is whether children conceived through in vitro fertilization after the death of a parent are eligible for Social Security survivors benefits.

[snip]

The government concedes the twins are Robert’s biological children. But the Social Security Administration says that it determines eligibility based on the inheritance laws of each state, and in Florida, where the couple lived, children conceived after the death of a parent cannot inherit property, unless specifically provided for in a will.

Karen Capato counters that under the 1939 Social Security Act, survivors benefits go to any child of a covered individual, and the word child is “plainly defined” as the biological offspring of a married couple. She contends that the section of the law dealing with state inheritance statutes only kicks in when the “biological parentage is disputed.”

Is A Baby Conceived After Dad’s Death A ‘Survivor’?

What do you all think?

Mark adds:

The previous post and comments are found at:  https://all-things-in-moderation.com/2011/11/16/do-the-twins-get-ss-survivors-benefits-i-report-you-decide/

Let me add that NPR did a lousy job of presenting the matter.  This is a statutory and not a constitutional case.  The statute requires that the beneficiary must have been dependent upon the deceased individual at the time of his or her death. Citing a case that held that a fetus in esse at the time of its parent’s death had an expectancy of dependency on that lost parent, the Circuit reversed the trial court on the issue of whether these were children, but remanded for a fact finding as to whether they were dependent on their biological father at the time of his death.  I expect a per curiam decision that this is not a contestable fact issue in this case, and a reinstatement of the denial of benefits. There is no way to stretch from a fetal anticipation of support from a parent who dies during gestation to a fetal expectancy of a parent who does not exist at the time of conception.  The Court need not reach the definition of “children”, so minimalism says they should not address that in this case.  I will go out on a limb and say that there is no way these twins can qualify for benefits.

Eye on the Courts

The Sixth Circuit recently heard oral arguments on an interesting “free exercise” case. However, the case also addresses free speech issues and the role of counselor among other thought provoking issues. As a liberal lawyer who was raised in an evangelical home and is now a practicing Catholic (there’s a joke in there somewhere) and since I know one of the lawyers involved in the case, I find the case very interesting. The basic facts are that a student, Julea Ward, enrolled in the counseling program at Eastern Michigan University and subsequently refused to talk with patients about their homosexual feelings. Ms. Ward was dismissed from the program and subsequently sued the University. The District Court granted Summary Judgment to the University, and Ward filed an appeal with the 6th Circuit who heard oral arguments in early October. A decision is expected some time in November.

Not to wade too deeply into the factual weeds, but the University’s program is accredited by the American Counseling Association and must follow the ACA’s Code of Ethics. It is this Code of Ethics that Ms. Ward was accused of violating and which led to her dismissal. There are programs that aren’t accredited by the ACA where Ms. Ward could have attended and possibly avoided this conflict. However, since she hired an attorney 3 years before she was kicked out of the program, it seems that she was probably actively seeking out this fight. To be fair to Ms. Ward, there is literature that supports the notion that it is appropriate to refer clients to another counselor where your personal beliefs may cause a conflict. So it does seem that the ACA and the University’s position on the Code of Ethics is not without it’s holes.

I have a hard time seeing this as a violation of the free exercise clause, or any other Constitutional right for that matter. As the District Court pointed out, this was a narrowly constructed rule that applied only to counseling students and only when they are speaking with a client. It also seems aimed at preventing clients from feeling judged by their counselor.

An interesting side note to this is that the Michigan Attorney General, Bill Schuette, filed a brief in support of Ms. Ward so he took a position contrary to the interests of a State University. On the other hand, the ACLU sided against the little guy and in favor of the big University. If the 6th Circuit upholds the District Court’s ruling, expect Ms. Ward to appeal to the SCOTUS. If the 6th Circuit reverses the District Court, there are several scenarios; appeal en banc, appeal to the SCOTUS, settlement, take a chance at trial.

If you have the time, here are the ACA’s amicus brief, Ms. Ward’s brief, the AG’s brief.

EMU has a site that links to several different briefs and opinions.

The Right’s Next Target? The scourge of American democracy, the judiciary.

Maybe someone linked to this over the weekend, but the NY Times had an interesting article on the newest target of the Right. Tired of attacking Obama, it looks like the Republical Presidential field has move to attacking the judiciary. The criticisms seem pretty standard, with the courts, the 9th Circuit (think California) in particular, being called activist, elite, rogue and radical. What seems to be different are the “solutions” being offered up by the candidates.

Perry has suggested term limits and allowing Congress to overrule the SCOTUS with a 2/3 majority. Gingrich recently told voters that judicial supremecy is “an affront to the American system of self-government.” Bachman said she will fight back against the courts and Santorum has said he would sign a bill to eliminate the 9th Circuit. Gingrich seems to want to be slightly more subtle in dealing with the 9th Circuit by eliminating their clerks and having them meet in the dark. The idea of limiting the types of cases they can hear has also been floated out there with same sex marriage sure to end up on the excluded list. According to the article, the suggestions of term limits and reforming the 9th Circuit have been floated around in the past, but this all seems new to me.

The article does lay out the Constitutional provisions which give Congress some say over the courts and I don’t have enough time right now to get into that, but suffice to say Congress does have some tools they can use to…errr..send messages to the courts. One thing they can’t do is cut judges’ salaries which is why you end up with Gingrich’s suggestions which pretty clearly undermines the intent behind prohibiting Congress from cutting the salary of judges.

Briefly, my thought is that I hate this and it’s extremely short sighted. I’ll be back later, but I have a box of documents to sort through. Boooo.