Thursday, April 13, 2023

Trump Sues Cohen in SDFLA

By John R. Byrne 

Our district is now home to another lawsuit filed by former President Trump, this one against his former attorney, Michael Cohen. Trump is seeking $500 million in damages. 

You can read the Complaint here. As of the time of this post, no judge had been assigned yet.

***Update***

The case has been assigned to Judge Gayles

Ft. Lauderdale federal courthouse closed…

 …due to flooding and rain. 

Can’t wait for that new courthouse!

I’m told judges and staff are all working from home and hearings are proceeding via Zoom. 

Stay dry!

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

"What have you done for mankind today?"

By John R. Byrne

It's a question that Ben Ferencz used to ask his children around the dinner table every night. Ferencz, who was the last living Nuremberg prosecutor, died last Friday in his sleep. He was 103. He had moved permanently to South Florida in 2019.

The South Florida Sun Sentinel, along with countless other media outlets, are covering Ferencz's life. He was only 27 years old when he prosecuted 22 members of the Nazi killing squads. The beginning of his opening statement, which the paper excerpts, is powerful. 

“It is with sorrow and with hope that we here disclose the deliberate slaughter of more than a million innocent and defenseless men, women, and children. This was the tragic fulfillment of a program of intolerance and arrogance. Vengeance is not our goal, nor do we seek merely a just retribution. We ask this Court to affirm by international penal action man’s right to live in peace and dignity regardless of his race or creed. The case we present is a plea of humanity to law.”

Ferencz is considered one of the founding fathers of the International Criminal Court. Remarkably, in 2011, he delivered the closing statement for the prosecution at the Court's first trial. What a legacy.

Monday, April 10, 2023

One Day It Will Please Us To Remember Even This


By Michael Caruso

Some believe that our unfortunate reality is that, sometimes, no amount of thoughtfulness, hard work, or understanding will transform an intractable problem into a resolvable one. Yet, today marks the 25th anniversary of a counter-example—the “signing” of the Good Friday Agreement that brought peace to Northern Ireland and ended decades of violence known as “The Troubles.”

The origins of the Troubles date back to centuries of warfare in which the predominantly Catholic people of Ireland attempted to break free of British (overwhelmingly Protestant) rule. In 1921, the Irish successfully fought for independence, and Ireland was partitioned into two countries: the Irish Free State, which was almost entirely Catholic, and the smaller Northern Ireland, which was primarily Protestant with a Catholic minority.

While Ireland was fully independent, Northern Ireland remained under British rule, and the Catholic communities in cities like Belfast and Derry complained of discrimination and unfair treatment by the Protestant-controlled government and police forces. In time, two opposing forces coalesced in Northern Ireland mainly along sectarian lines: the Catholic “nationalists” versus the Protestant “loyalists.”

During the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, Northern Ireland suffered dozens of car bombings and sectarian attacks perpetrated by paramilitary groups on both sides, like the Provisional IRA and the Ulster Volunteer Force. Hundreds of civilians were among the dead.

There is a connection to our district. The IRA had two primary sources for weapons—Libya and the United States. And there were at least two notable prosecutions here that involved alleged gun running for the IRA. In 1990, the FBI used a Stinger missile to lure four suspected IRA members in a sting operation. One of those arrested—Joseph McColgan— commented: ″I’m just a poor Irishman here on holiday, and I was entrapped by certain people here.″  They were later convicted at a trial presided over by Judge Gonzalez. 

The Troubles ended, at least officially, with the signing of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998, creating a framework for political power-sharing and ending decades of violence. 

A year later, however, "the Florida Four" were accused of smuggling guns to the IRA. At a trial before Judge Ferguson, one of the men testified that “militant Irish-Americans” pushed him to buy weapons because they feared the peace deal would leave defenseless Catholics to face armed Protestant paramilitaries and police. The three men who went to trial were convicted of gun smuggling but acquitted of providing material support and conspiracy to murder. 
 
Postscript: Most of you know that David has a wonderful podcast called “For the Defense,” where he talks with defense lawyers about their cases. In writing this post, I realized that our district’s history—although somewhat alive on the internet—might be lost to time. I wonder if a voluntary bar association would be interested in doing a podcast with the judges and lawyers involved in these and other notable cases and creating an oral history of our district. 

Paul Hastings' associates have to buy their own work from home setup?

Here's the slide everyone is talking about, which was apparently presented to associates at Paul Hastings.  As you can imagine, it's gotten quite a bit of criticism. 



Thursday, April 06, 2023

Dershowitz Sees Reversal of Litigation Fortune

 By John R. Byrne:

Judge Singhal just granted summary judgment to CNN in a high-profile defamation case. The Plaintiff, Alan Dershowitz, alleged that a host of CNN anchors and commentators misconstrued statements he made to the US Senate during President Trump’s impeachment trial. 

The order candidly touches on the evolution of the news media and the state of First Amendment jurisprudence more broadly.

Some good legal trivia in the order too, including this about the Supreme Court's landmark defamation decision--New York Times Co. v. Sullivan:

“In Sullivan, an advertisement containing false information was published in the
New York Times. In total the circulation of the paper in the entire state of Alabama—
where the concerned parties’ alleged injury occurred—was 394 copies."

394! 

Bottom line: CNN’s reporters may have “spun” Dershowitz's comments but there wasn’t evidence that they spoke with actual malice, the governing standard.

Worth a read. Order excerpted below.

Dershowitz Order by John Byrne on Scribd

Tuesday, April 04, 2023

Nikki Fried and Lauren Book arrested for peaceful protests

 

Well, everyone is talking about Trump and whether that's a political prosecution. Take a look at this arrest last night of Nikki Fried and Lauren Book. What happened to the first amendment? Yikes.

Sunday, April 02, 2023

Judges Branch and Ho ban Stanford Law Students from clerkships

Not just the protestors, but all students who attend Stanford.  They are cancelling the whole school because a small group of students tried to cancel a federal judge who was speaking at a Federalist Society event. They are already boycotting Yale. 

Hey, more opportunities for the UM law students!

Here's some coverage:

"We will not hire any student who chooses to attend Stanford Law School in the future," Ho, who sits on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, said Saturday evening in a speech to the Texas Review of Law and Politics, a transcript of which was reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon. The clerkship moratorium, like the one on Yale, will exempt current law students.

Ho's announcement is the latest and most dramatic effort to hold Stanford accountable for its treatment of Fifth Circuit appellate judge Kyle Duncan, who was shouted down by hundreds of students—and berated by Stanford diversity dean Tirien Steinbach—when he spoke at the law school last month. The students called Duncan "scum," asked why he couldn't "find the clit," and screamed, "We hope your daughters get raped."

Though Steinbach is on leave, Stanford has ruled out disciplining the hecklers, who by Stanford's own admission violated the school's free speech policy.

"Rules aren't rules without consequences," Ho said. "And students who practice intolerance don't belong in the legal profession."