Sunday, April 30, 2023

News & Notes

1.  The Fort Lauderdale federal courthouse is still closed due to flooding weeks ago. 

2. Check out this wild sentencing, covered by Jay Weaver:

It started out as a routine sentencing of a Colombian cocaine smuggler and wound up as a messy and very Miami legal drama. You’ve got a local jeweler who deals in high-end watches claiming he’s been stiffed on a quarter-million loan to the smuggler’s friend, who bankrolled his legal defense. You’ve got an attorney hired by the jeweler to collect the debt making his claim in a criminal case, something that just never happens in by-the-book federal court. And you’re got a doozy of a motion by the jeweler’s attorney, arguing the drug trafficker should get punished hard because his pal who took out the loan hasn’t paid up, that the FBI fell down on the job of investigating the unpaid debt, and that the defense attorney for the smuggler ought to be sanctioned for any number of reasons.

3. Justice Alito apparently believes he knows who the leaker is.  And he's blaming the bar for not coming to his defense.  Oh boy.  Via the NY Times:

He added that he was disappointed that lawyers had not come to the defense of the court, which has faced mounting scrutiny for what critics say are serious ethical lapses.

“This type of concerted attack on the court and on individual justices” is, he said, “new during my lifetime.”

He added: “We are being hammered daily, and I think quite unfairly in a lot of instances. And nobody, practically nobody, is defending us. The idea has always been that judges are not supposed to respond to criticisms, but if the courts are being unfairly attacked, the organized bar will come to their defense.”

Instead, Justice Alito said, “if anything, they’ve participated to some degree in these attacks.”

4. Unlike the criticism of Justice Thomas, I'm not sure this attack on Chief Justice Roberts' wife, who has a very successful attorney placement firm, is justified.  From Business Insider:

"When I found out that the spouse of the chief justice was soliciting business from law firms, I knew immediately that it was wrong," the whistleblower, Kendal B. Price, who worked alongside Jane Roberts at the legal recruiting firm Major, Lindsey & Africa, told Insider in an interview. "During the time I was there, I was discouraged from ever raising the issue. And I realized that even the law firms who were Jane's clients had nowhere to go. They were being asked by the spouse of the chief justice for business worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, and there was no one to complain to. Most of these firms were likely appearing or seeking to appear before the Supreme Court. It's natural that they'd do anything they felt was necessary to be competitive."

Roberts' apparent $10.3 million in compensation puts her toward the top of the payscale for legal headhunters. Price's disclosures, which were filed under federal whistleblower-protection laws and are now in the hands of the House and Senate Judiciary committees, add to the mounting questions about how Supreme Court justices and their families financially benefit from their special status, an area that Senate Democrats are vowing to investigate after a series of disclosure lapses by the justices themselves.

 5. So, should there be an ethics code for the Justices?  This WaPo piece makes fun of the High Court for pushing back against the code.

Thursday, April 27, 2023

Disney Files Suit

 By John R. Byrne

This seemed like a matter of time. But now it's official. Disney is pushing back against Governor DeSantis's latest moves to exert state control over the Magic Kingdom. A few weeks back we covered how the old Reedy Creek board had executed a Declaration of Restrictive Covenants that greatly limited what the new board (the "Central Florida Tourism Oversight District") could do in terms of Disney. Yesterday, the new board declared the Declaration "void and unenforceable." Separately the Florida Legislature has recently pushed forward legislation that would prohibit enforcement of the Declaration (along with a Development Agreement) "unless the [new board] were to readopt them."

Disney presents a host of constitutional challenges to the state's action, arguing that it's "[a] targeted campaign of government retaliation--orchestrated at every step by Governor DeSantis as punishment for Disney's protected speech[.]" 

Disney isn't lacking for sound bites. How about this quote from the Florida representative who introduced the original Reedy Creek dissolution bill? “You kick the hornet’s nest, things come up. And I will say this: You got me on one thing, this bill does target one company. It targets The Walt Disney Company.”

Hard to believe.

The complaint (excerpted below) was filed in the Northern District of Florida. Will be fascinating to see this play out.

Disney Complaint by John Byrne on Scribd

🔥🔥🔥

 


Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Phins Back in Court

By John R. Byrne

While that Jimmy Butler performance last night has everyone talking about the Heat, one of our other professional sports franchises is back in federal court. 

The Dolphins filed suit last Friday against First Class Cruises, LLC and Jeffrey Nahom. According to the complaint, which landed before Judge Bloom, the defendants promoted a Fan Cruise where fans could interact with 35 former Dolphins players. The defendants allegedly failed to pay the cruise line for the requisite state rooms/amenities for the former players/fans, forcing the Dolphins to come to the rescue at the last minute and cut checks to the cruise line. 

The Sun Sentinel covers the lawsuit here. According to the paper, Nahom/Nahom-controlled entities had other cruise promotions that have generated controversy, including a Philadelphia Eagles cruise (cancelled) and Washington Commanders cruise (cancelled).

It isn't all bad. The Dolphins fan cruise did ultimately go forward and fans got to meet Dan Marino, the greatest quarterback in NFL history....

Sunday, April 23, 2023

SCOTUSblog off of Twitter

Not only are they not paying the $8 for the blue check, they have left Twitter altogether.  

Reuters covers how law firms are dealing with the new pay-for-the-blue-check program on Twitter:


While many law firms may be lukewarm to Twitter, some individual lawyers have amassed large followings, using the platform for self-expression, networking and business development.

Are they willing to pay for a checkmark?

Those who have the blue badges include former Manhattan U.S. attorney Preet Bharara, now a partner at Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr (1.7 million followers); Hogan Lovells appellate partner Neal Katyal (837,500 followers); Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan founder John Quinn (50,600 followers); and Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison appellate chair Kannon Shanmugam (13,000 followers).

Lest you think the list is limited to the elite alone, Michael Avenatti (aka Federal Correctional Institution, Terminal Island inmate number 86743-054) also has a blue check – and 612,200 followers.

None responded to my requests for comment, though I don’t know if Avenatti can actually get text messages in prison.

Class action watchdog Ted Frank of the of the Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute (20,000 followers) also has a blue check. When I asked him about it, he offered this response via email: “I recently purchased a phenomenal fish appetizer at a Chinese restaurant in Virginia for $12, making that at least 150% as important a story. Would be happy to give that a review.”

This is an example of why Ted Frank is good at Twitter.

Still, plenty of lawyers with big followings are checkmark-free. For example, former U.S. attorney general Eric Holder, now senior counsel at Covington & Burling, has 559,300 followers and no blue mark. He declined comment via a firm spokesman.

Thursday, April 20, 2023

“A 17-page paper on the importance of professionalism in the legal field and treating one’s opponents with civility.”

Two defense lawyers in the sprawling Young Thug criminal trial were ordered to write a 17 page paper on civility in the middle of trial or go to jail for 20 days.  

Which one would you pick?

The judge also said that the “Paper is to be published quality in APA format and at least 10 primary and secondary sources. April 28 at noon or you do 20 days.”

You can watch the in court order at the Twitter clip here.

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

So you want to be a Magistrate Judge?

 There’s a new opening as the Judge Otazo-Reyes on November 30.

Applications are due May 3.  

And here’s the committee who will recommend 5 names to the district bench:

Chair:

Ryan Ulloa, Esq.

Members: 

Sashi Bach, Esq.

Matthew Dates, Esq.

Wifredo Ferrer, Esq.

Hector Dopico, AFPD

Jasmin Grant (non-attorney)

Lindsey Lazopoulos Friedman, AUSA Francesca Nabors (non-attorney) Jonathan Osborne, Esq.

Monday, April 17, 2023

Motion To Continue Sentencing Until Rain Stops

By Michael Caruso 


Judges generally believe they are objective and impartial and can ignore irrelevant information when they make decisions. Research, however, has shown that many legally irrelevant factors may influence legal decision-making.


The “anchoring effect” may be the most well-known example. The anchoring effect is a type of cognitive bias where numbers that act as a reference point influence a person. These numbers may or may not be utterly irrelevant. In 2006, Prof. Dan Ariely asked students at MIT to bid on items in an arbitrary auction using social security numbers as their anchor. Students were asked how much they would pay for two types of wine, a cordless mouse, a cordless keyboard, a design book, and chocolates. The professor instructed students to write down the last two digits of their Social Security number at the top of the page and then write them again as a price next to each item. So, if the last two digits were four and five, the student would write $45. When they finished that task, students were asked to indicate for each item “yes” if they would pay that price or “no” if they would not. As the last step, students wrote down the maximum amount they would be willing to pay for each item. Ariely found that students’ Social Security numbers influenced the amount they were willing to pay. Students with the highest last two digits of their Social Security number (80-99) bid the highest, and those with the lowest last two digits (1-20) bid the lowest. When students were debriefed on the experiment and asked if they thought their Social Security numbers influenced the prices they would pay, they stated no.


In the federal criminal legal system, the Sentencing Guidelines have, post-Booker, remained the essential starting point in all federal sentences. Because the Guidelines produce a numerical value, they create a cognitive “anchoring effect” bias that some say exerts a disproportionately strong impact on a judge’s decision-making that may undermine the fairness of sentencing decisions. Researchers have other ways that anchoring biases purportedly impact judicial decision-making. 


But more decidedly irrelevant factors and circumstances may influence a judge’s imposition of sentence. With the disclaimer that I’m not vouching for any of the conclusions made by the authors of these studies (and note contrary studies), here are a few examples where judges purportedly impose longer sentences or render more severe decisions:


—Bad weather (higher sentences when raining) Cfhttps://hal.science/hal-03864854/document with https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/137050/8/sentencing%25

 

—Lack of sleep (higher sentences on the Mondays after the start of Daylights Savings Time) See https://hbr.org/2017/02/sleep-deprived-judges-dole-out-harsher-punishments

 

—Hunger (judges are more severe right before a meal break) 

Cfhttps://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/ pnas.1018033108 

with https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/lunchtime-leniency/ and  https://www.annieduke.com/no-judges-dont-give-harsher-sentences-hungry-annies-newsletter-october-5-2018/

 

—Sports (move to continue when the judge’s football team loses) https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2016/09/judges-issue-longer-sentences-when-their-college-football-team-loses/498980/

 

—Attractiveness (the more unattractive the defendant, the higher the sentence) See

https://www.thelawproject.com.au/insights/attractiveness-bias-in-the-legal-systemhttps://www.thelawproject.com.au/insights/attractiveness-bias-in-the-legal-system


Whatever the import of these and other studies may be, they certainly try to scientifically test Jerome Frank’s belief that a judge’s decisions are but a part of their total behavior and that the process of making decisions is, in reality, a composite of the psychological, environmental, and socioeconomic factors that go into the development of the personality of the individual judge. 


The bottom line is if you have a sentencing set for 11:30 the day after the Dolphins play Kansas City on Monday night and the forecast calls for rain, you may want to move to continue.