Sunday, June 29, 2025

Tone it down

That was Chief Justice Roberts' message at a 4th Circuit Conference this week.  From the NY Times:

On the day after the Supreme Court issued a decision that sharply curtailed the power of federal judges to block Trump administration policies, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. spoke before a hotel ballroom filled with them.

He didn’t say a word about it.

The chief justice on Saturday gave a public interview with Judge Albert Diaz, the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, at a judicial conference in Charlotte attended by lower court judges who will be expected to parse and follow the Supreme Court’s directive limiting their ability to block executive branch policies nationwide.

During the discussion, the chief justice hinted at the stress of the end of the court’s term, which concluded on Friday, a time that he described as “a lot of sharp division and some sharp adjectives.”

***

The chief justice called threats against judges “totally unacceptable.” He said he viewed it as dangerous when “it becomes wrapped up in the political dispute that a judge who’s doing his or her job is part of the problem.”

“The danger, of course, is somebody might pick up on that, and we have had, of course, serious threats of violence and murder of judges just simply for doing their work,” Chief Justice Roberts said. “The political people on both sides of the aisle need to keep that in mind.”

Meantime, The Hill is covering F bombs from politicians

Friday, June 27, 2025

What's going on at FDC?

 From the NYT:

The authorities are investigating the death of a Canadian citizen who died Monday in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the agency said in a statement.

The man, Johnny Noviello, 49, was found unresponsive on Monday at around 1 p.m. at the Bureau of Prisons Federal Detention Center in Miami, according to the statement, which was released on Wednesday. Medical staff administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation, automated external defibrillator shock and called 911, ICE said. Mr. Noviello was pronounced dead by the Miami Fire Rescue Department at 1:36 p.m., the agency said.

ICE said that it had notified the Canadian consulate of Mr. Noviello’s death. The Canadian consulate did not immediately return phone and email requests for comment on Thursday.

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Ed Artau's first Senate hearing

 He was sitting next to Emil Bove, who drew most of the Senate's fire.

But Senator Blumenthal had some questions for Judge Artau.  From Law360:

One was Florida state appellate Judge Edward L. Artau for the Southern District of Florida. The others were for the Middle District of Florida, U.S. Magistrate Judge Kyle Dudek, Florida state appellate Judge Jordan Pratt and Florida state appellate Judge Anne-Leigh Gaylord Moe.

During Trump's first term, Pratt was counsel and then senior counsel at DOJ's Office of Legal Policy and deputy general counsel at the U.S. Small Business Administration, according to his LinkedIn profile.

In his prehearing questionnaire, he said while at DOJ, "I worked on various policy issues and worked to secure the confirmation of federal judges."

In February, Judge Artau was on the three-judge panel that ruled Trump could sue the Pulitzer Prize Board members in a defamation lawsuit following reporting that Trump colluded with Russia to win the 2016 presidential election.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., brought up this ruling during the hearing and argued that in the judge's concurrence, he "essentially parroted" Trump's talking points by "incorrectly calling the Russia story a 'now-debunked allegations'" and questioning the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in New York Times v. Sullivan , a landmark case protecting press coverage of public figures. Having said that, Blumenthal asked Judge Artau if litigants can expect him to be unbiased, especially when the federal government is a party.

"I've been a judge for 11 years. Nobody's ever questioned my integrity," he replied. "I know what you're getting at in terms of the issue, but I had no communications or expectations that I was even under consideration by the White House when I issued that opinion." He added he follows the Florida judicial canons very carefully.

Blumenthal then asked if had had spoken with the Florida senators about a federal judgeship prior to that ruling. Judge Artau said he spoke with Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., a few years ago about that, noting he is friends with Scott's general counsel.

This past November, when in Washington, D.C., the judge said he "paid him a courtesy visit like I do every year." In more of a back-and-forth, Blumenthal got him to say that he had been in talks with Scott's office for several years about a possible judicial nomination, and Blumenthal asked why he didn't recuse himself from the Pulitzer case.

Judge Artau pointed to the Florida judicial canons and said he didn't meet the requirements to recuse himself.

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Alligator Alcatraz

Desantis is talking about building a detention center in the middle of the Everglades.  Oh boy...

Can you imagine having to visit a client out there.  

From the Herald:

The latest plan by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to crack down on undocumented immigrants would involve emergency construction of a 1,000-bed detention center deep in the Everglades on swampy land owned by Miami-Dade County. On Monday, the county’s Democratic mayor attempted to slow the state’s efforts on the controversial idea. Without explicitly opposing the overall concept, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava ticked off a string of barriers to the idea being pushed by both DeSantis and his former top aide, Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, who has branded the proposed facility as “Alligator Alcatraz” for its remote location. “Due to the location of this parcel in a critical area, the conveyance of this parcel requires considerable review and due diligence,” Levine Cava wrote in a Monday letter to Kevin Guthrie, the state’s emergency management director under DeSantis. It “is also imperative that we fully understand the scope and scale of the proposed use of the site and what will be developed, as the impacts to the Everglades ecosystem could be devastating.”

Sunday, June 22, 2025

Politico covers SDFLA nominee Ed Artau

Here's the piece.  From the intro:

A Florida state judge was lobbying for a seat on the federal bench. After he sided with the president in a defamation case, Donald Trump gave him one.

Ed Artau, now a nominee to be a district court judge in Florida, met with staff in the office of Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott to angle for the nomination less than two weeks after Trump’s election last fall, according to a new Senate disclosure obtained by POLITICO. In the midst of his interviews, Artau was part of a panel of judges that ruled in Trump’s favor in the president’s case against members of the Pulitzer Prize Board.

About two weeks after the court published his opinion — which called for the overturning of a landmark Supreme Court case that made it harder for public officials to sue journalists — he interviewed with the White House Counsel’s Office. In May, Trump announced his nomination to the federal judiciary.

Critics raised concerns about Artau’s impartiality at the time of the announcement, in light of his ruling in the Pulitzer case. But the overlapping timeline of that decision with his meetings with Senate staff and the White House Counsel’s Office has not previously been reported.

Artau did not respond to a request for comment. In a statement, Harrison Fields, a White House spokesperson, said Trump had full confidence in his nominee and anticipated Artau’s confirmation.

The Sun-Sentinel recently raised these concerns in an editorial (that the Politico article cites above).


Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Sigh... (UPDATED)

UPDATE BELOW.

Who puts gum underneath a court table?  GROSS.
And do we really need an order to show cause about it?
Oy vey...

Show Cause for Gum Sticking 1750211788 by David Oscar Markus on Scribd

 

 UPDATE -- CHECK OUT THE COMMENTS FOR THE RESPONSE TO THE ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE (Filed by John Adams!)

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Judge Williams holds Florida AG in civil contempt

From the conclusion:

Over a century ago, author and sometime logician Lewis Carroll guided readers through the looking glass. Among the adventures there, we encounter a character who boasts of his mastery of words: “When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.” “The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.” The answer then, as now, is no. Litigants cannot change the plain meaning of words as it suits them, especially when conveying a court’s clear and unambiguous order. Fidelity to the rule of law can have no other meaning. 

Therefore, it is ORDERED AND ADJUDGED as follows: 

1. The Court finds Uthmeier in civil contempt of the Court’s April 18th Order (DE 49) requiring Defendants to provide actual notice of the TRO to any law enforcement officer with power to enforce S.B. 4-C. 

2. Uthmeier shall FILE BI-WEEKLY REPORTS detailing whether any arrests, detentions, or law enforcement actions pursuant to S.B. 4-C have occurred, and if so, how many, when, and by which law enforcement agency. The first report shall be filed on or before July 1, 2025. Further, If Defendants learn of any arrests pursuant to S.B. 4-C, Uthmeier shall file notice informing the Court of the details of the arrests immediately. Uthmeier may seek modification or termination of this reporting requirement after six months.

 Here's the order:

Judge Williams holds AG Uthmeier in civil contempt by David Oscar Markus

Monday, June 16, 2025

Trials

Another healthcare not guilty.  This one was before Judge Williams. Defense lawyers were Franklin Monsour and Adam Fels. Another example of why we need more trials.  Here's the Herald article about the verdict.

Meantime, in SDNY, the district judge is really hurting the defense in the Diddy trial. The latest ruling was dumping an African-American juror over strenuous defense objection. Via TMZ:
Friday, Diddy's attorney Xavier Donaldson stood up and said the court was taking a big step backward by getting rid of a juror of color ... asking the judge to bring him back into the court to give him the chance to explain.

During the jury selection phase, Juror No. 6 revealed he was a 41-year-old Black Hispanic man who works for the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision. One of the main reasons the defense said they didn't want him dismissed is because he's one of the few Black jurors.
And shortly after that juror was dismissed, another juror ended up in the hot seat, according to TMZ:
Diddy's trial is on the verge of another jury shakeup due to one of them getting a strange text message that's left the judge with concerns this juror is talking about the case outside of court.
Sources with direct knowledge tell TMZ the juror alerted the court on Friday about the text message, from a phone number he didn't recognize, asking him if HE was Juror No. 6 -- who'd already been in the news as someone Judge Arun Subramanian might dismiss.
We're told this other juror wanted the judge to know about the mystery text and, indeed, Judge Subramanian did have lots of questions for him about the message and the phone number from which it came.
Our sources say, although the juror said he didn't recognize the phone number ... the judge has concerns he might be discussing the trial with people who are NOT on the jury -- which, obviously, would be a major violation of the judge's instructions.