Thursday, September 05, 2024

Fort Lauderdale Policing on Trial

By John R. Byrne

The City of Fort Lauderdale is going to stand trial in a high-profile police brutality case. The blog covered this case, which has generated nationwide media coverage, back at the motion to dismiss stage. Now, after Judge Ruiz denied motions for summary judgment filed by Fort Lauderdale, the City will be defending its policies, procedures, and officer conduct in front of a jury. It wasn't a total victory for the Plaintiff, LaToya Ratlieff, as the individual officers were able to prevail on qualified immunity grounds. The Sun Sentinel covers the order, which is excerpted below, here. Wonder if the City will try to settle before trial.

22-61029 - Ratlieff v. FTL Et Al. - Order on Cross Motions for Summary Judgment by John Byrne on Scribd

Tuesday, September 03, 2024

KBJ has a new book out

It's called "Lovely One" and Justice Jackson is releasing it today.

The Miami native is making the rounds, including this interview on CBS.

She will be speaking at a sold out event at the Arsht this weekend.

From the CBS interview:

The justice who was nominated by President Biden has said she cannot "label" her judicial approach as liberal or conservative. Since being named to the court in 2022 as the 116th associate justice in U.S. history, she has joined the majority in 78% of cases. She told O'Donnell she's working to become a better consensus builder — a skill for which her mentor, retired Justice Stephen Breyer, was known.

"No one can match Justice Breyer in that skill…" Jackson said. "But I think that's aspirational. I would like to be better at forging consensus."

Jackson quickly found her voice on the Bench, issuing several solo dissents in her first term. The court's newest member doesn't shy away from sparring with some of the more senior justices.

She notably tangled with Justice Clarence Thomas over affirmative action last year, when the court struck down race-conscious admissions policies at U.S. colleges in a pair of cases involving the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Harvard College. (Jackson recused herself from the case involving Harvard, her alma mater.)

In a concurring opinion, Thomas wrote that Jackson believes "we are all inexorably trapped in a fundamentally racist society, with the original sin of slavery and the historical subjugation of Black Americans still determining our lives today."

Jackson told O'Donnell she does not agree with Thomas' characterization of her views. Jackson said her dissent pointed "out that we still exist in a society in which the gaps that were initially created as a result of slavery, as a result of Jim Crow, exist and that affirmative action, for example, was really a response. It was remedial to try to do something about the gaps that exist in wealth, in education, in health."

Monday, September 02, 2024

Rest in Peace, Bob Rust


By John R. Byrne


Robert “Bob” Rust passed away over the weekend. He served as US Attorney in our district from 1969 to the mid 1970s (he and Willy Ferrer our are longest serving US Attorneys). Rust had a significant impact on the office, hiring lawyers like Pat Sullivan, who went on to prosecute Noriega in the early '90s.

 

Before becoming US Attorney, Bob was an AUSA. In that role he helped foil the assassination of then President-elect John F. Kennedy on December 15, 1960 in Palm Beach. The story is wild and worth a read. For his efforts, he received the Award of Merit from the Chief of the U.S. Secret Service. 

 

Rest in peace, Bob. You will be missed. 

Friday, August 30, 2024

Substantive Due Process Fight

By John R. Byrne

A little heavy in terms of content for a summer Friday but still notable. In Eknes-Tucker v. Alabama, the Eleventh Circuit declined to rehear en banc the challenge to an Alabama law that bars providing puberty blockers or cross-sex hormones to minors as treatment for gender dysphoria. The order is 170-plus pages. It consists of an opinion from Chief Judge Pryor critiquing the doctrine of substantive due process (noting it "does violence to the text of the Constitution"), an opinion from Judge Lagoa, who issued the panel opinion, recapping specifics of the case as well as recent factual developments, and three dissents (Judge Jordan, Judge Rosenbaum, and Judge Wilson). 

Reading it will take you back to your Con law days.

College football begins in earnest tomorrow. Canes open at the Gators. There’s going to be a lot of trash talking on Monday from one of those fan bases.

Denial of Rehearing by John Byrne on Scribd

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

David Kendall for President Bill Clinton



FOR THE DEFENSE, SEASON 6, EPISODE 7:
David Kendall for President Bill Clinton

We have another incredible guest this week -- David Kendall of Williams & Connolly.  David is a friend and one of the best lawyers I know.  We take a deep dive into his defense of President Clinton during the impeachment proceedings back in the late 90s. One of the things we discuss with David on this episode is his cross of independent counsel, Ken Starr. You can read it here.

As always, you can catch this and other episodes on the web or on every podcast platform, including Apple and Spotify


Our thoughts remain with the loved ones of Chris Morvillo, who joined me on the last episode of the podcast.  I said a few words about his tragic loss here. My heart goes out to his daughters and family, his friends, and his colleagues. It's hard to get my head around what happened.  If you'd like to hear more about what an amazing person he was, the video of his interview is here.  

One of the great things about this podcast is getting to know truly incredible people.  Chris was one of those.  I hope he, his wife, and the others lost rest in peace.    


If you have a friend that would like to receive these updates, please have them sign up here.

Thank you! --David

 

Hosted by David Oscar Markus and produced by rakontur
 


Monday, August 26, 2024

Life Tenure

John R. Byrne

Federal judges have life tenure. But how long should they serve? In 2023, the average retirement age in the United States was 62 years old. But, according to this recent article from NBC News, the average age of a federal judge is 69. And though federal judges can take senior status starting at age 65, many who are eligible choose not to do so. 

Is there a way to further incentive judges to take senior status when eligible? And is that even necessary? As the article discusses, the average age of those serving in other branches of government has also increased. And in cases where there are concerns about the competency of a federal judge, colleagues have stepped forward to gently (and sometimes not so gently) pressure them to step down. 

What do you think?

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Burger King v. Burger King

By John R. Byrne

Know Burger King's connection to Miami? Though the company was originally founded in Jacksonville, it operated there as "Insta-Burger King." In 1954, two Miami-based franchisees bought the company, rebranded it "Burger King," and opened the first location at 3090 Northwest 36th Street in Miami. The rest is history, with Burger King becoming one of the titans of the fast food industry. 

But the company had a recent setback in India when it came up against a formidable opponent: Burger King. An enterprising couple opened an eatery in India in the late '80s and, in 1991, rebranded it "Burger King." When O.G. Burger King caught wind of it, they sued the couple for trademark infringement. An Indian Court just ruled for the couple, noting that they were using the Burger King name before Burger King entered the Indian market. Also, the India Burger King used different imaging, including the picture of a crown between the words "Burger" and "King" (why didn't O.G. Burger King think of that?!).

Maybe McDowell's should consider opening an India location? 

Monday, August 19, 2024

Chris Morvillo feared dead

I am devastated about today's news that superstar lawyer Chris Morvillo, who was set to celebrate the high profile acquittal of Mike Lynch on Lynch's yacht, is feared dead after a tornado hit the anchored ship.  Morvillo's wife and Lynch also are presumed dead. Adding to the tragedy, Lynch's co-defendant, who also was acquitted, died this weekend in an unrelated accident.

I am having a tough time processing what happened.  I had Chris on my podcast just last week.  We had never met before being introduced for the episode, but we became fast friends, emailing about the case and his upcoming adventure. We shared so many good stories about trial work.  We honestly could have made a 3 hour episode and we were both surprised that the hour flew by so quickly. I could tell right away what an amazing guy Chris was. Smart. A fighter. Passionate.  A family guy who spoke glowingly about his children.  

The story of this representation, which lasted over 10+ years, is amazing.  Chris dedicated over a decade of his career to obtaining justice for Mike Lynch.  He got it and then for this to happen.... it's tough to find the right words.

In the last few days, we emailed about the episode and the positive feedback we had been receiving.  He was so excited about the trip. He couldn't wait for his daughters to meet up with him and his wife.  I am so thankful the girls had not yet arrived when this tragedy struck.   

For a guy coming off the win of his career and about to celebrate with his client and family, I cannot imagine a worse tragedy.  I am sick about it.  I am thinking about his two daughters and the rest of his family, his colleagues, and everyone else who knew Chris -- a shining light in our white collar criminal defense world. He will be greatly missed. 

Update -- here's the raw video of the interview with Chris.  I thought it would help show what an incredible guy he was.

Sunday, August 18, 2024

Chicken Wings

 Rumpole covers the case of the stolen chicken wings here.  But that wasn't the only chicken wing case in the news.  Apparently the Ohio Supreme Court said boneless wings can have bones.  Stephen Colbert wasn't having it at the 4:21 mark:


Thursday, August 15, 2024

Chat with the Chair

By John R. Byrne

Judge Karen K. Caldwell, a district judge from Kentucky, is the Chair of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation. That's the panel that decides whether to consolidate civil cases from different districts and, if they are consolidated, to which judge to ship those cases. Our district judges are currently presiding over some large MDLs. But, for many, the JPML's decision making process is mysterious. In the current issue of The Federal Lawyer, our own Judge Ruiz interviewed Caldwell about it. Worth a read, especially if you practice in the MDL space.

The JPML has been around since 1968. Seven district judges currently sit on the panel. Interestingly enough, we've never had a judge from the SDFLA serve as a panel judge and only one Florida district judge, Judge Hodges from the Middle District, has ever served. We need to get to work on that!

Summer2024 Caldwell by John Byrne on Scribd

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

What's the possessive of Harris?

Harris' or Harris's?

Walz' or Walz's?

Markus' or Markus's?


In other news, the 11th Circuit issued this opinion yesterday, with each judge also writing a concurring opinion.  Three concurring opinions... by Rosenbaum, Newsom, and Luck.  Happy reading.

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Chris Morvillo for Autonomy CEO Mike Lynch


FOR THE DEFENSE, SEASON 6, EPISODE 6:
Chris Morvillo for Autonomy CEO Mike Lynch

You're gonna enjoy this one. Chris Morvillo tried a 3 month case across the country for a client he represented for 10+ years after a co-defendant had already lost and after the judge said that the client had to remain on house arrest with armed guards.  And this was not for any ordinary client -- the press dubbed Autonomy CEO Mike Lynch as the British Bill Gates.  Lynch turned to Chris Morvillo of Clifford Chance and Brian Heberlig & Reid Weingarten of Steptoe & Johnson.  Chris joins the podcast this week to discuss the amazing and against-all-odds across the board acquittal. 

There are lots of podcast connections to this episode -- Brian was previously on the show as was the presiding judge, Charles Breyer.  And a few weeks ago we had Sean Hecker on to discuss a related case.  One of the things we discuss with Chris on this episode is an incredible jury instruction the defense got from Judge Breyer after the prosecution engaged in some shenanigans with the defense's summary witness.  You can read the instruction here.


As always, you can catch this and other episodes on the web or on every podcast platform, including Apple and Spotify

If you have a friend that would like to receive these updates, please have them sign up here.

Thank you! --David

 

Hosted by David Oscar Markus and produced by rakontur

Friday, August 09, 2024

A Good Day for a Pro Se Litigant

By John R. Byrne

There's an old saying that a lawyer who represents himself has a fool for a client. Though pro se defendant Frederick Bush wasn't a lawyer when he represented himself at his federal trial, he also wasn't a fool. In fact, he acquitted himself quite nicely, preserving a mens rea argument that the Eleventh Circuit just relied on to vacate his conviction.

To recap, Bush was confined at a residential re-entry center in Tallahassee. One day, he decided to leave, later claiming that an employee there had threatened him. In a single count (importantly), the government charged him with two separate statutes that criminalize escaping or leaving custody, one of which (critically) required proof that the defendant acted "willfully" (i.e., with knowledge that his conduct was unlawful). 

At trial, Bush had several back-and-forths with the Court about the need for the government to prove willfulness, even reading from an old Fifth Circuit case. Still, the Court specifically instructed the jury that it needn't find that Bush knew that his actions were unlawful. This was plain error, the Court said. 

A short opinion. Also notable that Judge Newsom used the word "stretch" to describe Bush's time in custody. A word right out of a Dashiell Hammett novel.

Bush Decision by John Byrne on Scribd

Tuesday, August 06, 2024

Snitchin' ain't easy

 Jennis Ellis has turned State against the former president and her former client.  According to the AP:

Former President Donald Trump’s campaign attorney Jenna Ellis, who worked closely with his personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, will cooperate with Arizona prosecutors in exchange for charges being dropped against her in a fake electors case, the state attorney general’s office announced Monday.

Ellis has previously pleaded not guilty to fraud, forgery and conspiracy charges in the Arizona case. Seventeen other people charged in the case have pleaded not guilty to the felony charges — including Giuliani, Trump presidential chief of staff Mark Meadows and 11 Republicans who submitted a document to Congress falsely declaring Trump had won Arizona.

“Her insights are invaluable and will greatly aid the State in proving its case in court,” Attorney General Kris Mayes said in a statement. “As I stated when the initial charges were announced, I will not allow American democracy to be undermined — it is far too important. Today’s announcement is a win for the rule of law.”

In other news, Rumpole posted the NYT interview with Justice Gorsuch.

Some interesting stuff re criminal justice:

French: Well, one way I’ve heard that described is that complexity is a subsidy for the wealthy. That complexity is a subsidy for the powerful. In other words, large corporations, well-connected individuals, wealthy individuals can navigate all of the red tape. But the ordinary American really struggles, and sometimes the ordinary American can even struggle to interpret criminal law.

This was an interesting element of the book to me and something that people who are not familiar with your jurisprudence might not know — it’s that you’ve long been a champion of the rights of criminal defendants. It struck me that some of the stories here in the book, of the way in which the complexity of criminal law has impacted people, are among the most potent in making the point. Is there a particular story about the abuse of criminal law that stands out to you as you’re reflecting back on the work?

Gorsuch: I would say Aaron Swartz’s story in the book might be one example. Here’s a young man, a young internet entrepreneur, who has a passion for public access to materials that he thinks should be in the public domain. And he downloads a bunch of old articles from JSTOR.

His lawyer says it included articles from the 1942 edition of The Journal of Botany. Now, he probably shouldn’t have done that, OK?

But JSTOR and he negotiated a solution, and they were happy. And state officials first brought criminal charges but then dropped them. Federal prosecutors nonetheless charged him with several felonies. And when he refused to plea bargain — they offered him four to six months in prison, and he didn’t think that was right — he wanted to go to trial.

What did they do?

They added a whole bunch of additional charges, which exposed him to decades in federal prison. And faced with that, he lost his money, all of his money, paying for lawyers’ fees, as everybody does when they encounter our legal system. And ultimately, he killed himself shortly before trial. And that’s part of what our system has become, that when we now have, I believe, if I remember correctly from the book, more people now serving life sentences in our prison system than we had serving any prison sentence in 1970. And today — one more little item I point out — one out of 47 Americans is subject to some form of correctional supervision (as of 2020).

French: You speak in the book about coercive plea bargaining, this process where a prosecutor will charge somebody and then agree to a much reduced sentence on the condition that they don’t take it to trial, that they go ahead and plead guilty, or sometimes when they refuse to plead guilty, they’ll add additional charges. This is something that a lot of critics of the criminal justice system have highlighted for some time. Do you see a remedy?

Gorsuch: Well, I’m a judge, and I’m going to apply the laws we the people pass. That’s my job. In the book, I just wanted to highlight to “we the people” some of the changes that I’ve seen in our law during my lifetime, and plea bargaining during my lifetime has skyrocketed. It basically didn’t exist 50 or 100 years ago, and now 97 percent or so of federal criminal charges are resolved through plea bargaining.

And I just have some questions. What do we lose in that process? We lose juries. Juries are wise, right? And they’re a check both on the executive branch and prosecutors and they’re a check on judges, too, right? And the framers really believed in juries. I mean, there it is in Article III. There it is in the Sixth Amendment. There it is in the Seventh Amendment. They really believed in juries, and we’ve lost that.

And another thing about juries, when you lose juries: Studies show that people who sit on juries — nobody likes being called for jury service. But studies show that after jury service, people have a greater respect for the legal system, for the government, and they participate more in their local governments.

 

Sunday, August 04, 2024

Plea offers

When negotiating a plea agreement with the government, how often do you hear -- this isn't an actual offer... I need to get approval from my supervisor.  

I wonder if that happened in the 9/11 cases where the three defendants were offered life only to find out later that the Defense Secretary decided to withdraw the offers.  Via the NY Times:

Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III on Friday overruled the overseer of the war court at Guantánamo Bay and revoked a plea agreement reached earlier this week with the accused mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and two alleged accomplices.

The Pentagon announced the decision with a memorandum relieving the senior Defense Department official responsible for military commissions of her oversight of the capital case against Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and his alleged accomplices for the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York City, at the Pentagon and in a Pennsylvania field.

The overseer, retired Brig. Gen. Susan K. Escallier, signed a pretrial agreement on Wednesday with Mr. Mohammed, Walid bin Attash and Mustafa al-Hawsawi that exchanged guilty pleas for sentences of at most life in prison.

In taking away the authority, Mr. Austin assumed direct oversight of the case and canceled the agreement, effectively reinstating it as a death-penalty case. He left Ms. Escallier in the role of oversight of Guantánamo’s other cases.

Because of the stakes involved, the “responsibility for such a decision should rest with me,” Mr. Austin said in an order released Friday night by the Pentagon.

“Effective immediately, in the exercise of my authority, I hereby withdraw from the three pretrial agreements that you signed on July 31, 2024.”

 I also wonder whether the defendants had told the government that it accepted.  If so, I'm sure you'll see a motion to enforce the deal. 

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Geofencing and Privacy

By John R. Byrne

One way law enforcement tries to identify suspects is through a "geofence warrant."  In short, law enforcement asks providers like Google to tell it what devices (typically, cell phones) were in a specific area at a specific time. The idea is to get a universe of potential bad guys. 

Yesterday, the Eleventh Circuit decided that defendants generally don't have standing to challenge such searches as violating the Fourth Amendment. In the case, the defendant, Davis, moved to suppress Google data showing that a phone that was associated with him (it was his girlfriend's phone) was at the scene of a robbery and carjacking. 

The Court ruled that Davis lacked standing to challenge the search. Though much of the Court's analysis turned on the phone not being Davis's phone, it also downplayed the invasiveness of geofence searches, noting they were too restrictive in their scope to be considered the kind of "near-constant electronic surveillance" that certain Supreme Court Justices (Sotomayor and Alito specifically) had identified as potentially problematic. 

Judge Jordan concurred in the opinion, giving a fairly detailed account of how Google handles geofence warrants, noting the uncertainties in how other companies (e.g., Apple) responds to them, and taking issue with some of the conclusions by the majority. 

Once you read Davis, you'll be able to impress your friends/neighbors/relatives with all your geofence knowledge.

Davis Opinion by John Byrne on Scribd

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

New Podcast episode: Phil Hubbart for Pitts and Lee



FOR THE DEFENSE, SEASON 6, EPISODE 5:
Phil Hubbart for Pitts and Lee

Florida International University College of Law hosted Phil Hubbart and me for a discussion about Hubbart’s book, From Death Row to Freedom: The Struggle for Racial Justice in the Pitts-Lee Case.
 
Phil Hubbart is a living legend in the 3-0-5.  He revamped the public defender’s office and was an appellate judge.  He recently wrote a book about one of the most riveting cases in Florida history, State v. Freddie Pitts and Wilbert Lee, two Black men who were wrongfully charged and convicted of murder in Port St. Joe, Florida in 1963.  I think you'll enjoy Hubbart discuss how he got involved in the case and worked for over 10 years to get them exonerated. 


As always, you can catch this and other episodes on the web or on every podcast platform, including Apple and Spotify

If you have a friend that would like to receive these updates, please have them sign up here.

Thank you! --David

 

Hosted by David Oscar Markus and produced by rakontur
 

Monday, July 29, 2024

Should Supreme Court Justices have term limits?

 Joe Biden says yes in this proposed Supreme Court reform, which also includes an ethics code and ending immunity for former presidents.  From the AP:

Biden is calling for doing away with lifetime appointments to the court. He says Congress should pass legislation to establish a system in which the sitting president would appoint a justice every two years to spend 18 years in service on the court. He argues term limits would help ensure that court membership changes with some regularity and adds a measure of predictability to the nomination process.

He also wants Congress to pass legislation establishing a code of ethics for justices that would require justices to disclose gifts, refrain from public political activity and recuse themselves from cases in which they or their spouses have financial or other conflicts of interest.

Biden also is calling on Congress to pass a constitutional amendment reversing the Supreme Court’s recent landmark immunity ruling that determined former presidents have broad immunity from prosecution.

The decision extended the delay in the Washington criminal case against Trump on charges he plotted to overturn his 2020 presidential election loss and all but ended prospects the former president could be tried before the November election.

The last time Congress ratified an amendment to the Constitution was 32 years ago. The 27th Amendment, ratified in 1992, states that Congress can pass a bill changing the pay for members of the House and Senate, but such a change can’t take effect until after the next November elections are held for the House.

Thursday, July 25, 2024

Trump wins Motion to Dismiss Against ABC/Stephanopoulos

Chief Judge Altonaga handed President Trump a victory yesterday in his lawsuit against ABC and George Stephanopoulos. 

During a March 10, 2024 interview of US Representative Nancy Mace, Stephanopoulos asked Mace about her endorsement of Trump despite the fact that he was "found liable for rape." Trump sued, alleging that the defendants defamed him in light of a jury's verdict expressly finding that he was not liable for rape under New York Penal Law.  ABC and Stephanopoulos moved to dismiss on the grounds of "substantial truth" and the "fair report privilege."

Judge Altonaga rejected both, pointing to the reporter's reference to specific jury verdicts ("Stephanopoulos was not reporting on statements by Carroll or other commentators; rather, he was discussing the outcome of a legal proceeding in which the jury expressly rejected a charge of rape as defined by New York Penal Law"). 

The case marches on.

Opinion excerpted below.

[34] Order Denying Motion to Dismiss on Scribd

Tuesday, July 23, 2024

You think running your law firm is hard?

Well, check out this interview by Michael Mora and Lisa Willis of John Morgan or Morgan & Morgan.  He has over 1000 lawyers, just sold 60% of his software company for $430 million, and plans on giving the keys to his kids:

Morgan, 68, sat with ALM’s Daily Business Review to discuss succession plans for the law firm he built from into one of the largest personal injury plaintiff firms in the country.

This plan appears to increasingly involve his adult children as the face and drivers of the law firm in preparation for whenever Morgan calls it quits.

“My boys are 41, 39 and 35. They’re all very capable. They’ve all had gigantic verdicts,” Morgan said, as he then proceeded to list some of their accolades, including a multibillion-dollar verdict. “They have worked at the law firm their whole lives and they are taking over the firm.”

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Should the feds have stormed Sergio Pino's home or allowed him to surrender?

The attempted arrest ended in tragedy -- Pino's suicide.  So should they have let him surrender as his lawyer offered? The Miami Herald has the competing narratives between U.S. Attorney Mark Lapointe and Pino's defense lawyer Sam Rabin.

The Government: If investigators knew that a gang member or organized crime leader, for example, was going to kill an “innocent bystander,” said Markenzy Lapointe, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, “we would show up and arrest them. And we don’t apologize for that.” Less than a month ago, according to charging documents, a crew of hitmen tried to fatally shoot Tatiana Pino outside her Pinecrest home — an event that accelerated the murder-for-hire investigation. Sergio Pino hired that crew, with the instruction to kill Tatiana before the couple’s next divorce hearing, Lapointe said. The next day, on June 24, the FBI raided Sergio Pino’s home for the first time. “We knew he was trying to kill his wife,” Lapointe said. “What if you give him notice and he decides, ‘You know what, I’m going to speed up the process now. Since the two crews couldn’t kill [Tatiana], I’m going to kill her myself. I’m going to figure out a way and kill her myself.’ That could have happened.”

The Defense: But Rabin disputes that retelling, saying the FBI “never gave me any opportunity to speak with Mr. Pino.” “I advised an FBI agent on the scene that I was Mr. Pino’s lawyer and requested the opportunity to speak with Mr. Pino. I was told to remain behind the police line and never contacted again either in person or by phone by anyone from the FBI or Coral Gables Police Dept after I made my presence known,” Rabin said in a statement. “I was standing with members of Mr. Pino’s family on the perimeter of the scene. No one contacted any of his family members on the scene.”

*** “The arrest was designed to isolate, intimidate and frighten him into submission,” Rabin said in a statement. “They accomplished their goal.”

***

From behind the police tape, Rabin says he and Pino’s relatives were unable to get ahold of the 67-year-old. None of their calls were going through, something he found suspect. “The only logical conclusion is that the FBI was using a device to prevent Mr. Pino from making or receiving phone calls while the crisis was ongoing,” Rabin alleged. The FBI declined to respond to Rabin’s allegations. Rabin also said that Pino “was prepared to confront the government’s case in court. He never indicated otherwise, and he certainly never mentioned an intention to harm himself or anyone else.”

Friday, July 19, 2024

Guest Post by Kaitlin Prece – Smith v. Arizona (2024)

Smith v. Arizona: There’s No Substitute For The Truth

First, a big thanks to David Oscar Markus and Jon R. Byrne for the opportunity to submit this guest post. This post will cover the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Smith v. Arizona, which addressed whether the testimony of a “substitute” expert witness implicates the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause when he relays an absent analyst’s statements to support his own opinion based on tests the non-testifying analyst conducted.[1] As further discussed, the issue required the Court to confront when an out-of-court statement is truly offered for its truth. And while the Court unanimously decided that aspect, it punted on the remainder thus leaving the once common practice in the Eleventh Circuit in serious doubt yet not without life.

For context, the concept of the substitute expert is generally explained as a practical means for prosecutors to present expert testimony. Consider this example: A forensic analyst who tested substances recovered from a defendant no longer works at the crime lab come trial and is believed to have moved to another state, so the prosecution opts to summon a qualified lab employee who reviewed and interpreted the results of the test(s) to form his own “independent” opinion. Although it’s not an ideal scenario, certain federal circuits—including the Eleventh Circuit—have authorized it. The rationale being that cross-examining only the substitute expert is sufficient because when the expert gives his independent opinion, the only witness against the defendant is that person. But the Court’s unanimous decision in Smith turns that logic on its head.

All this dates back to Crawford v. Washington, when the Court held the Confrontation Clause bars the admission of “testimonial hearsay” statements, unless the witness is unavailable and the defendant previously had the opportunity to cross examine the witness. It follows, then, that if a substitute expert does not offer the testimony of another analyst for the truth of the matter asserted, then there is no right to confrontation because the statements are not hearsay. As previewed, the central question in Smith tested when something is indeed offered for the truth of the matter asserted in the context of implicating the Confrontation Clause.

The Court set the stage for Smith when it decided a very similar issue involving whether the Confrontation Clause applied to forensic evidence in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts. In Melendez-Diaz, the Court held a prosecutor cannot introduce an absent laboratory analyst’s  report into evidence to prove the results of the forensic testing. But what if the substitute expert solely relies on the absent analyst’s report as the basis for his independent conclusion upon reviewing the report? It’s not hearsay if it isn’t offered for the truth and, after all, Federal Rule of Evidence 703 permits an expert to convey an absent party’s statement to the jury so long as the sole purpose of doing so is to establish the basis of his subsequently formed opinion.  Melendez-Diaz left the door open for this theory when the report is used simply as the basis for the testifying expert’s opinion.

The opportunity to answer this question first presented itself in Williams v. Illinois, but the case resulted in a fractured plurality. Five Justices rejected the “basis of opinion” logic, but there was no majority decision. And with five Justices finding the statements not testimonial, it was removed from the restraints of the Confrontation Clause. With this split decision, the Williams opinion fueled widespread confusion in lower courts over the constitutionality of substitute expert testimony. For example, the Eleventh Circuit followed the plurality’s rationale while the Second Circuit refused to extend the opinion beyond the facts presented in Williams.

This brings us to Smith, which clarifies this impending question. Last month, the Court held that when an expert witness conveys a non-testifying analyst’s statements in support of the expert’s opinion, the statements are necessarily offered for the truth of the matter asserted and thus are hearsay, implicating the Confrontation Clause when such statements are also testimonial.

Leaving no room for dispute, the Court explained when something is offered for the truth:

[T]ruth is everything when it comes to the kind of basis testimony presented here. If an expert for the prosecution conveys an out-of-court statement in support of his opinion, and the statement supports that opinion only if true, then the statement has been offered for the truth of what it asserts. How could it be otherwise? The whole point of the prosecutor’s eliciting such a statement is ‘to establish—because of the statement’s truth—a basis for the jury to credit the testifying expert’s opinion.

 

Although one issue has been resolved— when an out-of-court statement conveyed by a substitute expert in support of his opinion is offered for its truth—another issue remains—whether another analyst’s notes or reports relied on to form the opinion are testimonial. The Supreme Court remanded that issue for the lower court to determine because the Arizona courts seemed to have taken for granted that the notes and reports from the state’s forensic lab were testimonial under the circumstances.

The Court did provide some guidance on how it should be approached. The Court suggested for the lower court to determine what exact statements were being relied on by the testifying substitute expert witness, the analysts notes or report, before determining what the primary purpose of those statements were. Moreover, the Court was sure to note that not all lab records will be testimonial: “[L]ab records may come into being primarily to comply with laboratory accreditation requirements or to facilitate internal review and quality control. Or some analysts’ notes may be written simply as reminders to self. In those cases, the record would not count as testimonial.”

This dictum may aid both courts and attorneys as expert testimony is used, but the Court’s decision to refrain from addressing whether the statements are testimonial, along with two concurrences with varying articulations of what constitutes a testimonial statement, still leaves unanswered questions and potentially creates new ones. For example: when, if at all, can the prosecution effectively use a substitute expert now? Will prosecutors pull back or lean into the practice of substitute experts? Will the Court’s opinion create a logistical headache in arranging for all necessary experts to testify? Will state crime labs now be forced to retain and re-test substances that a former employee conducted? Broadly speaking, at least the Court clarified one important aspect of the issue—no matter how you cast it, there is no substitute for the truth.



[1] This issue, along with the one addressed in an earlier post by my Teammate, Mark Royero, was the subject of the 2024 Gibbons Criminal Procedure Moot Court Competition, where Mark and I represented the University of Miami School of Law. I would also like to thank our coaches, Adam Stolz and Luis Reyes for their guidance and support throughout the competition.

Tuesday, July 16, 2024

New Podcast Episode -- Sean Hecker for Robert Bogucki

 

FOR THE DEFENSE, SEASON 6, EPISODE 4:
SEAN HECKER FOR ROBERT BOGUCKI

We are back to our roots. A terrific criminal defense lawyer and my good friend, Sean Hecker, is here to discuss the wild trial of United States v. Robert Bugucki.

Sean is a real criminal defense lawyer.  After graduating Stanford Law School and two clerkships, he started at the Federal Defenders Office in New York.  He founded the powerhouse law firm Hecker Fink.  And he joins me to discuss the Robert Bogucki matter.  Bogucki, an FX trader for Barclays, was accused of orchestrating a $6 billion fraudulent scheme. You may remember the case as I previously discussed it with Judge Charles Breyer, who presided over it. 


As always, you can catch this and other episodes on the web or on every podcast platform, including Apple and Spotify,  

If you have a friend that would like to receive these updates, please have them sign up here.

Thank you! --David



Hosted by David Oscar Markus and produced by rakontur

CONTACT: info@rakontur.com, dmarkus@markuslaw.com

Monday, July 15, 2024

Judge Aileen Cannon dismisses the Trump documents indictment

 Here's the 93-page order, which starts this way: "Former President Trump’s Motion to Dismiss Indictment Based on the Unlawful Appointment and Funding of Special Counsel Jack Smith is GRANTED in accordance with this Order [ECF No. 326]. The Superseding Indictment is DISMISSED because Special Counsel Smith’s appointment violates the Appointments Clause of the United States Constitution. U.S. Const., Art. II, § 2, cl. 2. Special Counsel Smith’s use of a permanent indefinite appropriation also violates the Appropriations Clause, U.S. Const., Art. I, § 9, cl. 7, but the Court need not address the proper remedy for that funding violation given the dismissal on Appointments Clause grounds. The effect of this Order is confined to this proceeding."

From the Introduction:

The Motion before the Court challenges the legality of Special Counsel Smith (hereinafter, “Special Counsel Smith” or “Special Counsel”) in two consequential respects, both of which are matters of first impression in this Circuit, and both of which must be resolved before this prosecution proceeds further [ECF No. 326]. The first is a challenge to his appointment under the Appointments Clause, which provides the exclusive means for appointing “Officers of the United States.” Article II, § 2, cl. 2. The Appointments Clause sets as a default rule that all “Officers of the United States”—whether “inferior” or “principal”—must be appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. Id. It then goes on to direct that “Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in Heads of Departments.” Id. For purposes of this Order, the Court accepts the Special Counsel’s contested view that he qualifies as an “inferior Officer,” not a “principal” one, although the Court expresses reservations about that proposition and addresses those arguments below. The Motion’s second challenge is rooted in the Appropriations Clause, which prohibits any money from being “drawn from the Treasury” unless such funding has been appropriated by an act of Congress. Art. I, § 9, cl. 7 (“No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law. . . .”). Both the Appointments and Appropriations challenges as framed in the Motion raise the following threshold question: is there a statute in the United States Code that authorizes the appointment of Special Counsel Smith to conduct this prosecution? After careful study of this seminal issue, the answer is no. None of the statutes cited as legal authority for the appointment— 28 U.S.C. §§ 509, 510, 515, 533—gives the Attorney General broad inferior-officer appointing power or bestows upon him the right to appoint a federal officer with the kind of prosecutorial power wielded by Special Counsel Smith. Nor do the Special Counsel’s strained statutory arguments, appeals to inconsistent history, or reliance on out-of-circuit authority persuade otherwise. 

The bottom line is this: The Appointments Clause is a critical constitutional restriction stemming from the separation of powers, and it gives to Congress a considered role in determining the propriety of vesting appointment power for inferior officers. The Special Counsel’s position effectively usurps that important legislative authority, transferring it to a Head of Department, and in the process threatening the structural liberty inherent in the separation of powers. If the political branches wish to grant the Attorney General power to appoint Special Counsel Smith to investigate and prosecute this action with the full powers of a United States Attorney, there is a valid means by which to do so. He can be appointed and confirmed through the default method prescribed in the Appointments Clause, as Congress has directed for United States Attorneys throughout American history, see 28 U.S.C. § 541, or Congress can authorize his appointment through enactment of positive statutory law consistent with the Appointments Clause. This Order proceeds as follows. After laying forth pertinent factual and procedural background leading to the present Motion, the Court summarizes the legal principles underlying the Appointments Clause and the separation-of-powers doctrine on which it rests. The Court then surveys the statutory structure of the Department of Justice, focusing on the provisions which grant the Attorney General appointment authority. Following that contextual summary, the Court engages with the text, context, and structure of each of the statutes cited in the Appointment Order. Finding no officer-appointing authority in the cited statutes—and seeing no reason in the mixed historical record to deviate from the absence of such authority—the Court addresses the Supreme Court’s dictum with respect to those statutes in United States v. Nixon, 418 U.S. 683, 694 (1974). As the Nixon decision and record bear out, the Attorney General’s statutory appointment authority, or the matter of the Appointments Clause more generally, was not raised, argued, disputed, or analyzed; at most, the Supreme Court assumed without deciding that the Attorney General possessed statutory appointment authority over the special prosecutor involved in that action. Following the discussion of Nixon and related out-of-circuit precedent, the Court turns to the question whether Special Counsel Smith is a principal officer requiring Presidential nomination and Senatorial consent. On that issue, although there are compelling arguments in favor of a principal-officer designation given the regulatory framework under which he operates, the Court rejects the position based on the available Supreme Court guidance. The Court then examines the question of remedy, concluding that dismissal of this action is the only appropriate solution for the Appointments Clause violation. Finally, the Court considers the Appropriations Clause challenge to the funding of Special Counsel Smith, concluding for many of the same reasons that Congress has not authorized the appropriation of money to be drawn for the expenses of his office. The Order concludes there, finding it unnecessary under the current posture to reach the remedy question for the Appropriations Clause violation.

From the Conclusion:

 Upon careful study of the foundational challenges raised in the Motion, the Court is convinced that Special Counsel’s Smith’s prosecution of this action breaches two structural cornerstones of our constitutional scheme—the role of Congress in the appointment of constitutional officers, and the role of Congress in authorizing expenditures by law. The Framers gave Congress a pivotal role in the appointment of principal and inferior officers. That role cannot be usurped by the Executive Branch or diffused elsewhere—whether in this case or in another case, whether in times of heightened national need or not. In the case of inferior officers, that means that Congress is empowered to decide if it wishes to vest appointment power in a Head of Department, and indeed, Congress has proven itself quite capable of doing so in many other statutory contexts. But it plainly did not do so here, despite the Special Counsel’s strained statutory readings. Nor does his appeal to inconsistent “historical practice” supplant the absence of textual authorization for his appointment. The same structural emphases resonate in the context of the Appropriation Clause, which “embodies a fundamental separation of powers principle—subjugating the executive branch to the legislatures power of the purse.” All American, 33 F.4th at 221 (Jones, J., concurring). In the end, it seems the Executive’s growing comfort in appointing “regulatory” special counsels in the more recent era has followed an ad hoc pattern with little judicial scrutiny. Perhaps this can be traced back to reliance on stray dictum in Nixon that perpetuated in subsequent cases. Perhaps it can be justified practically by the urgency of national crises. Or perhaps it can be explained by the relative infrequency of these types of investigations, by congressional inattention, or by the important roles that special-counsel-like figures have played in our country’s history. Regardless of the explanation, the present Motion requires careful analysis of the statutory landscape to ensure compliance with the Constitution, and the Court has endeavored to do so with care. The Court thus returns to where it started. The Appointments Clause is “among the significant structural safeguards of the constitutional scheme.” Edmond, 520 U.S. at 659. So too is the Appropriations Clause, which carefully separates Congressional control of the “purse” from Executive control of the “sword.” The Federalist No. 78 (Alexander Hamilton). The consequences of relaxing either of those critical provisions are serious, both in this case and beyond. As Justice Frankfurter explained in his opinion in Youngstown, “[t]he accretion of dangerous power does not come in a day. It does come, however slowly, from the generative force of unchecked disregard of the restrictions that fence in even the most disinterested assertion of authority.” Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579, 594 (1952) (Frankfurter, J., concurring). “[I]llegitimate and unconstitutional practices get their first footing . . . by silent approaches and slight deviations from legal modes of procedure.” Boyd v. United States, 116 U.S. 616, 635 (1886).

Sunday, July 14, 2024

After a crazy weekend, your moment of zen