Happy Cinco de Mayo
(aka DUI lawyer day)! The Amigos are excited to be guest blogging this
week (and looking forward to an early margarita happy hour on DOM’s expense
card). As we commemorate the Mexican army’s unlikely victory over the
French at the Battle of Puebla in 1862 (more here), you
might be surprised to learn who (Mexican drug cartels?) is behind the rising
cost of a quality lime. From CNN.
Cartel members have demanded a certain
percentage of orchard owners' lime shipments . . . . The violence in the
region and threats from criminal organizations has made it all but impossible
for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to certify the limes that are
emerging from Mexico are being grown in a sanitary way.
The fallout has jacked up prices for U.S. and Mexican
consumers and businesses accustomed to celebrating Cinco de Mayo with limes in
their beers, margaritas and mojitos. A case of limes now goes for close
to $100, up substantially from reports of $15 to $20 last year.
Stay thirsty my friends . . .
In other news, some Scalia clerk needs a stiff drink right about now. Last week, Nino penned one of his trademark blistering dissents
denouncing regulatory overreach, only to have overreached himself by misstating the facts of a
prior unanimous Supreme Court decision -- that he himself authored. Oops. The blogosphere has been having fun with this one. The latest here.