Monday, June 09, 2025

Should defendants be required to remain stoic throughout their trial?

I've been doing some commentary on the Diddy trial.  One thing that struck me last week was the judge scolding Diddy for reacting to testimony and threatening to exclude him from the courtroom.  Shouldn't a defendant be permitted to react to the testimony and look at the jurors.  After all, prosecutors prep witnesses on how to behave on the stand.  And one of their witnesses last week was sobbing.  

 

Meantime, Diddy's lawyers have moved for a mistrial because they say that they have proof one of the prosecution's witnesses lied. TMZ covers it here.

Wednesday, June 04, 2025

Guest Post By Itiel Wainer – Barnes v. Felix (2025)

Guest Post By Itiel Wainer – Barnes v. Felix (2025)

My sincere gratitude to David Oscar Markus and John R. Byrne for allowing me to submit this guest post. In it, I briefly examine the Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Barnes v. Felix, one of two SCOTUS cases that were the focus of the 2025 Gibbons National Criminal Procedure Moot Court Competition. My teammate, Sydney Stark, and I were honored to represent the University of Miami School of Law at that event. You can read Sydney’s discussion of the competition’s other issue here. I also want to extend a heartfelt thank you to our exceptional coaches, Adam Stolz, Esq. and Luis Reyes, Esq. whose support continues to be immeasurable.

Barnes v. Felix is SCOTUS’ latest opinion on excessive force cases and reinforces that there are no short cuts for considering the “totality of the circumstances” when evaluating whether one’s use of deadly force was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. The case arises from a routine traffic stop that turned fatal. The police officer, Roberto Felix, pulled over Ashtian Barnes in a rental car for unpaid toll violations. When, moments later, Barnes tried to speed away, Felix drew his weapon, stepped onto the moving vehicle’s doorsill, and within seconds fired two shots, killing Barnes. The body camera footage of the incident is available here for those who wish to personally witness the encounter.

Barnes’ mother filed suit under § 1983 against Officer Felix for using excessive force against her son in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. The district court ultimately granted the officer summary judgment. It did so under a theory that the court’s reasonableness inquiry of the officer’s conduct must be limited to the precise moment an objectively reasonable officer would have perceived a threat. In effect, the court limited its “reasonableness” inquiry to the two seconds before Officer Felix fired his gun and did not consider other factors, like the officer’s decision to jump on the moving car or the basis for pulling over Barnes being mere toll violations.

The Fifth Circuit affirmed on appeal, explaining that the circuit has adopted a “moment of threat doctrine,” which narrows the Fourth Amendment reasonableness inquiry in deadly force cases. Interestingly, the judge who authored the majority opinion also filed a separate concurrence criticizing the doctrine, arguing that the moment of threat doctrine conflicts with the totality of the circumstances standard that has long governed Fourth Amendment reasonableness.

The Supreme Court granted certiorari to address the validity of the moment of threat doctrine and the supposed circuit split on the doctrine. Yet, in both his briefing and oral arguments, the respondent, Officer Felix, declined to defend the moment of threat doctrine. Instead, Felix argued that the moment of threat doctrine, as defined by the Fifth Circuit, does not actually exist. Felix pointed to a circuit split over whether courts may consider an “officer-created danger” as part of the totality of the circumstances as the real issue in the case. He framed the Fifth Circuit’s moment of threat doctrine, to the extent it exists, as a shield against an officer-create danger theory: that Officer Felix’s decision to jump onto Barnes’s car rendered Felix’s subsequent use of force unreasonable.

In a succinct, nine-page unanimous opinion penned by Justice Kagan, the Court rejected the moment of threat doctrine. The Court clarified that while “the situation at the precise time of the shooting will often be what matters most,” there is no hard and fast time limit on the totality of the circumstances inquiry. Thus, the Court explained, the moment of threat doctrine applied by some courts directly contradicts the mandate that trial courts examine the totality of the circumstances. Because the Fifth Circuit’s time-restricted analysis foreclosed scrutiny of Officer Felix’s decision to leap onto Barnes’ car, the Court declined to consider his officer-created-danger argument and left that question open for another day—i.e., whether an officer’s use of force could be deemed excessive if the officer’s conduct “unjustifiably” creates or escalates a situation that leads to a deadly confrontation, even if the force used was objectively reasonable at the time it was deployed.

Ultimately, the Supreme Court’s decision in Barnes v. Felix is a narrow holding clarifying that the totality of the circumstances inquiry has no temporal restriction. Ordinary principles of relevancy and causation likewise guide the analysis, further necessitating a result that continues to afford leeway to trial courts in conducting such a fact-specific, contextual inquiry. The narrow holding is also one way to avoid the morass of whether the moment of threat doctrine even exists. Nevertheless, by sidestepping the officer-created danger question, the Court left the most significant question unanswered for the time being.

Tuesday, June 03, 2025

922(g)(1) Still Constitutional

By John R. Byrne

Not a shocker, but the Eleventh Circuit confirmed yesterday that not all Second Amendment gun rights arguments are going to be winners, even in the post-Bruen era. In the case, US v. Dubois, the defendant was convicted on a 922(g)(1) felon-in-possession charge. He argued that 922(g)(1) was unconstitutional, citing Bruen, among other recent Supreme Court decisions. But Chief Judge Pryor, writing for the court, pointed out that the Supreme Court's recent Second Amendment opinions haven't abrogated the Eleventh Circuit's prior precedent upholding the constitutionality of 922(g)(1)

More interesting, though, were the concurring opinions, written by CJ Pryor and Judge Abudu. 

Pryor opined that 922(g)(1) would survive even were the Eleventh Circuit to consider its constitutionality anew, exploring how the principles of disarming certain groups at the Founding—combined with severe punishments for felonies—support the law’s constitutionality today. For example, in the centuries leading up to the Founding, English law disarmed brigands, highwaymen, and, wait for it, Catholics.

Meanwhile, Judge Abudu articulated concern with focusing on history and tradition when examining a law's constitutionality, noting that such history and tradition included laws passed when women and people of color "were denied a seat at the legislative table[.]"

Full opinion here.  


Monday, June 02, 2025

Republicans, who ya got? MAGA or Federalist Society?

 This is a fascinating blow up -- Trump takes on the Federalist Society and Leonard Leo, calling him a sleazebag. 

From Politico:

It was a striking characterization of Leo, who played a key role in working with Trump to shape the conservative Supreme Court.

“He openly brags how he controls Judges, and even Justices of the United States Supreme Court — I hope that is not so, and don’t believe it is!,” Trump wrote.

Trump’s attack came after the U.S. Court of International Trade on Wednesday struck down his tariffs, a massive blow to the primary pillar of the administration’s economic agenda. The ruling was temporarily stayed by an appellate court on Thursday. One of the judges on the three-person panel that blocked the tariffs is Timothy Reif, who was appointed by Trump in his first term.

The blame, Trump said, lay with the Federalist Society.

“I am so disappointed in The Federalist Society because of the bad advice they

 gave me on numerous Judicial Nominations,” he wrote. “This is something that cannot be forgotten!”

Leo, in a brief statement in response, did not criticize the president.

"I'm very grateful for President Trump transforming the Federal Courts, and it was a privilege being involved," Leo said. "There's more work to be done, for sure, but the Federal Judiciary is better than it's ever been in modern history, and that will be President Trump's most important legacy."

Trump's relationship with the activist is known to have grown strained over Trump's disappointment that the three conservative justices he appointed to the court on Leo's advice did not intervene to keep Trump in office after he lost the 2020 presidential election.

 So my Republican friends, who are you siding with?

Friday, May 30, 2025

Shark Divers Pardoned

 By John R. Byrne

Happy Friday. A few months back, the blog covered the case about two shark divers who were prosecuted and convicted because they tried to save sharks from what they believed was an illegal poaching operation. The Eleventh Circuit reluctantly affirmed the convictions, with Judge Lagoa writing a powerful opinion lambasting the government for prosecuting the men in the first place. 

This past Wednesday, President Trump pardoned the men. Congrats to Marc Seitles, Ashley Litwin, and Andy Adler who led the pardon charge. Article here

Unrelated, details below on the Celebration of Life for Paul Donnelly. 

Monday, June 2, 2025 @ 10:00 am. The service is at Dignity Memorial's Forest Lawn Funeral Home 2401 Davie Road, Davie,  FL 33317

Celebration of Life by John Byrne on Scribd

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Breaking--Judge Ed Artau nominated for open SDFLA district court seat (UPDATED)

By John R. Byrne

Hot off the presses. President Trump has nominated Judge Ed Artau, who sits on Florida's Fourth District Court of Appeal, for Judge Scola's open district court seat. Here's the Truth Social Post announcing the nomination. 

UPDATE (by DOM) -- Hi everyone.  Quick update -- In addition to Artau for Scola's seat, Trump has nominated 4 others for Florida seats -- Jordan E. Pratt, John Guard, Anne-Leigh Gaylord Moe, and Kyle Dudek.

In addition, interim U.S. Attorney Hayden O'Byrne's time was up, but our court appointed him as U.S. attorney until Jason Redding Quinones takes over.

And finally, the legal community is abuzz over the nomination of Emil Bove to the Third Circuit. 

Editorial by Judge Luck and Judge Altman

By John R. Byrne

Many of you have likely heard about the shocking and tragic murder of a young Israeli couple outside the Capital Jewish Museum after they had attended a gathering of the American Jewish Committee. This should hit close to home, as the AJC just recently hosted several of our judges at an AJC event on Watson Island. The Dispatch has published an editorial written by four federal judges, including Judge Luck and Judge Altman, addressing the incident. Worth a read. Linking to it here