1. SCOTUSblog was
denied press credentials to the Supreme Court. A total farce.
Here's Tom Goldstein on the ruling:
It seems a shame
to erect obstacles to access when organizations like ours share the
values and further the goals of journalism. We reach a lot of people.
No organization in the nation’s history has devoted nearly the resources
we have in covering this important institution. The Committee does not
seem to doubt that our actual coverage is comprehensive and
thoughtful.
Nor does it seem
to doubt that our editorial policies are effective in practice, so that
our coverage is objective and neutral. Under the Committee’s
interpretation, none of that matters. Because we actually work in the
field in which we write, we cannot be editorially independent about it.
That seems incorrect.
Not even the Committee seems to believe it, truly. As I discussed in a previous post,
under unpublished Guidelines, the Committee freely credentials
journalists from state-owned media. No one thinks that most of those
publications are independent of their governments. And the governments
actively lobby the Senate. But they receive a credential.
The overlap in
staff between the organizations – rather than the entities’ actual
editorial policies – also seems to be the wrong focus. As I discussed
in that previous post, the Committee grants credentials to several
organizations that are direct affiliates of profit-making businesses in
their fields, such as energy regulation. We absolutely don’t begrudge
those organizations being recognized. But it seems hard to say that
they have a greater appearance of independence than we do.
We have the very deepest respect for journalism. Guided by Lyle, we
have tried to implement every policy possible to ensure that our
coverage adheres to its finest traditions. We remain very grateful that
other members of the press and their representatives – including the
jurors of the Peabody Award, the Society of Professional Journalists
Award, and the National Press Club Award, as well as the Reporters
Committee for Freedom of the Press – accept that we are engaged in
journalism.
We obviously have a different conception from the Committee on what
it means to be a journalist and what it means to be independent. At
some point, given that the blog has operated for more than a decade, the
proof is in the pudding. You can look and decide for yourself whether
we are actually engaged in journalism.
The next step is
for us to appeal the Committee’s decision to the Senate Rules
Committee. We do not know how long that will take.
2. There's a pimp trial going on in federal court, and
the supposed pimp testified (via Miami Herald):
Damion St. Patrick Baston, the Jamaican man accused of pimping and
beating a string of women from South Florida to the Middle East to
Australia, denied the allegations Tuesday when he took the witness stand
in his own defense.
Baston said he went to school in New York
City, studied fashion, earned a black belt in karate, lifted weights
like his hero, Arnold Schwarzenegger, worked as a nightclub dancer and
eventually got into the music business as a talent agent.
But
Baston, 37, testified in Miami federal court Tuesday that he never
forced any of his many girlfriends into his escort service, “Bachelors
Club,” never abused them as prostitutes and never took their money.
“I was always nice and kind,” Baston told his defense attorney,
David Rowe, in soft, accented English, as the 12-person federal jury
listened. “It was love. It was romantic. It was fun.”
Asked if the
young women who fell under his spell suffered from Stockholm Syndrome —
the phenomenon that they felt attached to him despite his alleged abuse
— Baston said: “They all left.”
Baston is on trial on
sex-trafficking offenses in Miami federal court, charged with using
“psychological coercion and physical abuse” against at least seven women
he pimped around the globe. The Jamaican national, who was arrested at
his mother's New York home in December, faces cross-examination by
federal prosecutors Roy Altman and Olivia Choe on Wednesday.
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/06/24/4199381/jamaican-man-denies-being-global.html#storylink=cpy
3. No surprises here, but the
NY Times covers which Justices vote most often with each other. One important point that I've been discussing recently on the blog is that Justice Scalia is the most defendant friendly Justice while Justice Breyer is one of the least:
Justice Breyer is by many measures more conservative than the court’s
three other liberals. He was more likely to vote with Chief Justice
Roberts, Justice Kennedy, Justice Thomas or Justice Alito than any of
the other liberals. But there was one stark and telling exception:
Justice Breyer was less likely than any of the other liberals to vote
with Justice Scalia. Those two justices often tangle at oral arguments
and often have differing views of privacy rights, with Justice Scalia
joining the court’s liberals in Fourth Amendment cases and Justice
Breyer voting the other way.
4. How do you say certiorari?
The Justices apparently don't really know.
5. Edward Snowden's lawyer is profiled
here. Pretty interesting:
The next morning, Jesselyn Radack is in her K Street
office early. She works as national security and human rights director
for the Government Accountability Project, a kind of nonprofit
clearinghouse for whistleblowers. Her program focuses on whistleblowers
from the secret side of the government, which means she spends much of
her time dealing with surveillance and torture. She’s been here six
years, and the office is thoroughly lived-in. There’s a picture of her
husband and three kids behind the desk, as well as a birthday card with
two check marks: Kick Ass and Take Names. (Both are checked.) Orchids
grow in the corner next to a trophy paddle from the Maine People’s
Alliance, awarded for "her work in truth-telling." The secrecy of
Radack’s work with Snowden requires two laptops beside each other: one
standard Windows, and another running an encryption setup that she asks
me not to describe in detail. There’s no Wi-Fi anywhere in the office;
it’s too hard to secure. "I joke that I use drug dealer tactics," she
says. That means burner phones, paying in cash, meeting in person. "It’s
a terrible way to work as an attorney, but you have to."
6. A biggie from the Supreme Court this morning on cell phones.
Justice Roberts for the Court (9-0) finds that you need a warrant before searching. (The search incident to arrest exception does not apply). A good day for the 4th Amendment. From the opinion:
These cases require us to decide how the search incident now such a pervasive and insistent part of daily life that the proverbial visitor from Mars might conclude they werean important feature of human anatomy. A smart phoneof the sort taken from Riley was unheard of ten years ago;a significant majority of American adults now own such phones. See A. Smith, Pew Research Center, SmartphoneOwnership—2013 Update (June 5, 2013). Even less sophisticated phones like Wurie’s, which have already faded in popularity since Wurie was arrested in 2007, have been around for less than 15 years. Both phones are based on technology nearly inconceivable just a few decades ago, when Chimel and Robinson were decided.
Absent more precise guidance from the founding era, we generally determine whether to exempt a given type ofsearch from the warrant requirement “by assessing, on the one hand, the degree to which it intrudes upon an individual’s privacy and, on the other, the degree to which it isneeded for the promotion of legitimate governmental interests.” Wyoming v. Houghton, 526 U. S. 295, 300 (1999). Such a balancing of interests supported the search incident to arrest exception in Robinson, and a mechanical application of Robinson might well support the warrantless searches at issue here.
But while Robinson’s categorical rule strikes the appropriate balance in the context of physical objects, neither ofits rationales has much force with respect to digital content on cell phones. On the government interest side, Robinson concluded that the two risks identified in Chimel—harm to officers and destruction of evidence—are present in all custodial arrests. There are no comparable risks when the search is of digital data. In addition, Robinson regarded any privacy interests retained by an individual after arrest as significantly diminished by the fact of the arrest itself. Cell phones, however, place vast quantities of personal information literally in the hands of
individuals. A search of the information on a cell phone bears little resemblance to the type of brief physical search considered in Robinson.
We therefore decline to extend Robinson to searches of data on cell phones, and hold instead that officers must generally secure a warrant before conducting such a search.