1. The 3rd Circuit makes filing deadlines 5pm. I hate this rule. It won't help lawyers and will just move the deadline to a day earlier. Even my kids can upload their papers until 11:59 at night. Here's the rule and the reasons for it.
2. Former Judge Michael Luttig says the Supreme Court really needs an ethics code. Here's the actual statement. From the conclusion:
Whether the Supreme Court is subject to ethical standards of conduct or not is emphatically not a partisan political issue and must not become one. But just as emphatically, the issue of the Court’s ethical standards of conduct does not present a constitutional question, much less one of any constitutional moment. This is not to say that the issue and question of whether the Supreme Court should be bound to ethical standards in its non-judicial conduct and activities is not important. It is unquestionably important. It is even of surpassing importance. But it ought not be thought of as anything more – and certainly nothing less -- than the housekeeping that is necessary to maintain a Republic.
Lest the Congress and the Supreme Court ill serve the nation in the course of attempting to resolve the constitutionally fraught question before them, they should together address the question with the solemnity and wisdom that the question deserves and requires. If they do but this, they will almost assuredly conclude that the answer they seek is the answer they both should want.
3. Gov. DeSantis expands the death penalty... and it looks to be unconstitutional. Via the WaPo:
Gov. Ron DeSantis (R)
expanded Florida’s death penalty law on Monday, signing a measure
making it a capital crime to rape a child under the age of 12, a law
that could set up a future U.S. Supreme Court case.
Vowing
Florida “stands for the protection of children,” DeSantis signed the
law during a campaign-style event in Titusville, touting his record on
issues involving “law and order.”
The measure, which overwhelmingly passed the Florida legislature last month with bipartisan support, gives state prosecutors the option of seeking the death penalty if an adult is found guilty of the sexual battery of a child.
The
law will still go into effect even though it is unconstitutional. In
2008, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a 5 to 4 decision that struck down a
Louisiana law that allowed a child rapist to be sentenced to death,
barring states from executing child sex predators unless they also
murdered their victims.