1. An interesting oral argument early this morning in the 11th Circuit (8am start!). I love pirate cases. U.S. v. Bellaizac-Hurtado, Case No. 11-14049: A
consolidated appeal in which four defendants are challenging the
constitutionality of applying U.S. jurisdiction, under the Maritime Drug Law
Enforcement Act, over a vessel transporting cocaine, seized in Panamanian
territorial waters, pursuant to Congress's authority "[t]o define and
punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offences against
the Law of Nations." U.S. Const.
art I, § 8, cl. 10. The question is whether drug trafficking in foreign
territorial waters is a violation of the "Law of Nations" and thus
within Congress's authority to criminalize. Appellate gurus were on the case-- Tracy Dreispul argued the case for the FPD and Jonathan Colan
for the USAO.
2. Judge Richard Posner wrote an cutting piece about Justice Scalia's book on interpretation. This comes after Scalia made fun of Posner. Cat fight! Here's a snippet from Posner's article but the whole thing is really worth a read:
Those are more
persuasive points than the dictionary’s definition, and as is often the case,
the court got the definition wrong. (Scalia and Garner miss this, too.) A
sandwich does not have to have two slices of bread; it can have more than two
(a club sandwich) and it can have just one (an open-faced sandwich). The slices
of bread do not have to be thin, and the layer between them does not have to be
thin either. The slices do not have to be slices of bread: a hamburger is
regarded as a sandwich, and also a hot dog—and some people regard tacos and
burritos as sandwiches, and a quesadilla is even more sandwich-like.
Dictionaries are mazes in which judges are soon lost. A dictionary-centered textualism
is hopeless.
4. HAVE A NICE LONG HOLIDAY WEEKEND.