Author Archives: SHG

Tuesday Talk*: To Enforce Anyway?

There is law. There is duty. And then there is the question of discretion, who gets to decide whether it’s to be executed or not. This is an issue that’s reared its head on numerous levels over the past few years, most notably when progressive prosecutors ran for and won office upon the campaign promise that they would categorically refuse to prosecute laws with which they disagreed.

There’s no doubt that a prosecutor has the individualized discretion to decide not to pursue a particular case. Maybe the evidence isn’t there. Maybe the facts and circumstances are such that she feels it would be an improper or counterproductive exercise of authority. Regardless, it’s within their authority to decide to toss a case. But individualized discretion is very different than categorical exceptions. Continue reading

The Reimagination of Martin Luther King, Jr.

There are few people whose words are seized upon to make arguments they never made, never intended, never believed, more than MLK. The reason why is obvious, as they were so respected and revered that the influence of an appeal from authority was undeniable. The problem is that they aren’t here to refute the motives and meanings put into their mouths.

And, indeed, if they were here, perhaps they would have approved of the ideas others impute to them, but it’s disingenuous to use their memory, their words spoken more than 50 years ago, in a different world, with different understandings and different problems, than are now perceived. Continue reading

Why Wouldn’t They Come?

Although the Supremes have yet to hand down rulings in the Harvard and University of North Carolina affirmative action cases, it’s assumed that the Court will limit, if not eliminate, the use of race in college admissions. Whether it was called holistic or a collateral consideration only for the educational purpose of creating diverse classrooms on campus, it turned out that it served to produce racial quotas despite all the pretty bows tied around the admission decision. Acceptance for some. Denial for others. Race being the distinction between the two.

In anticipation, colleges are preparing to deal with the aftermath, eliminating standardized testing requirements which, they contend, favor wealthier white students who can afford test prep courses, as well as legacy admissions, sports recruitment, scholarships based on race, early admission, all of which for one reason or another are argued to favor white students over “Black and Latinx” (as if Asians didn’t exist). But I digress. Continue reading

Poor Form By Former NY Judges

Governor Kathy Hochul nominated the Presiding Justice of the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Second Department, Hector LaSalle, to be Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals, filling the vacancy of former Westchester County District Attorney Janet DiFiore, who had replaced Jeanine Pirro when she was bumped to judge to get her out of the job. One of the things people often fail to realize is that political parties use judgeships as payoffs or dumping grounds to get rid of people.

Why Justice LaSalle is unclear. Was this payment of a debt? It’s hard to imagine that Hochul knew or cared anything about him personally, as she couldn’t find Brooklyn without a map, and LaSalle’s history was as a prosecutor, a past position over-represented already. The last thing New York needed was another former prosecutor on the Court of Appeals, keeping them the majority voting bloc as appointed by Dem governors who feared being viewed as soft on crime. Continue reading

Rebutting The Bail Reform Act’s Presumption of Detention

It’s like the marketing slogan often emblazoned on cop cars, “To Serve and Protect.” People take this very seriously, not realizing it carries about as much weight as “New and Improved.” When it comes to criminal law, the phrase so often used is “worst of the worst,” not because it has any meaning but because it sells laundry detergent.

The Bail Reform Act clearly favors pretrial release in most cases. At the Detention Hearing, a person must be released unless “the judicial officer finds that no condition or combination of conditions will reasonably assure the appearance of the person as required and the safety of any other person and the community.” 18 U.S.C. § 3142(e). But the Act contains a rebuttable presumption of detention for some crimes—most federal drug offenses and § 924(c) gun charges.

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When Public Defenders Suffer “Moral Injury”

Criminal defense is not for the faint of heart. We do an ugly job, representing people who are often very guilty of doing very bad things to other people, and still defending them and, if it’s possible within the bounds of the law, beating the case. Sure, there are innocent  defendants and overcharged defendants, and there are defendants who’ve been burned by life and ended up committing crimes for lack of any viable alternatives within their sphere of understanding, but there are also defendants who are bad dudes. And then there’s the dirty little secret that most defendants are guilty.

Yet we defend them, and we don’t think too hard about whether we’re the good guys or not. Everyone has a constitutional right to a defense, and it’s our job to fulfill our end of the constitutional duty. Continue reading

What Of The Hamline University “Snitch”?

There has been little reason to write about the travails of Hamline University adjunct professor Erika López Prater, fired for the “harm” she caused by showing a Muslim-created “renowned 14th century painting depicting the Prophet Muhammad” in a class about Islamic art. After all, there has been near universal support for the professor, both as a matter of academic freedom and because she did everything humanly possible to accommodate the most fragile sensibility of students.

In the syllabus, she warned that images of holy figures, including the Prophet Muhammad and the Buddha, would be shown in the course. She asked students to contact her with any concerns, and she said no one did. Continue reading

Tuesday Talk*: Open Thread

I was up most of the night and didn’t fall asleep until the morning, so I slept in and have no post for today. In its place, I’m going to try an open thread, where you can talk about whatever things/issues are on your mind.

Please don’t make me regret this. Thank you.

*Tuesday Talk rules apply.

“Purposefully Unequal” By Concealing Merit

First, it was one high school in Virginia. Students at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, already subject to controversy for its plan to end competitive admission  in favor of “holistic” admissions, given that the majority of its students were Asian, which meant they weren’t black. But at the time, there was another issue brewing that had yet to become known, that the principal concealed from students and parents the awarding of merit scholarship recognition.

While Fairfax County Public Schools Superintendent Michelle Reid claims the principal at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology withheld National Merit awards from students in a “one-time human error,” parents at two local high schools got a Friday and Saturday night surprise.

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The Browning of Suburbia

After World War II, GIs came home from the war, went to college under the GI bill as a nation thanked those who survived for their service, and married. These budding new families needed a place to live, and so suburbia was born. Green lawns and trees, Air. Quiet. Privacy. The squalor of city life, too many people in too small a space, was replaced with detached homes and backyard barbecues. Continue reading