Supreme Court considers law banning sex offenders from Facebook

Bail Bond Sanford – Supreme Court considers law banning sex offenders from Facebook

Source     : Independent News
By             : Samuel Osborne
Category :  Bail Bond Sanford , Sanford Bail Bond

Supreme Court considers law banning sex offenders from Facebook

Supreme Court considers law banning sex offenders from Facebook

The US Supreme Court is considering a law banning convicted sex offenders from social media sites such as Facebook. The lawsuit was sparked by a North Carolina sex offender who posted on Facebook after his traffic ticket was dismissed. “No fine. No Court costs. No nothing. Praise be to god. Wow. Thanks, Jesus,” Lester Packingham Jr wrote. Mr Packingham was forbidden by a 2008 North Carolina law from using social networking sites that children could join, because he is a registered sex offender.

He was convicted of indecent liberties with a minor when he was 21 and served 10 months in prison. A Durham police officer investigated the post and determined Mr Packingham used an alias rather than his real name. He was prosecuted, convicted of a felony and received a suspended prison sentence.

However, his lawyers say no evidence pointed to him using Facebook or his computer to communicate with minors, or that he posted anything inappropriate or obscene.  The Supreme Court will now decide whether the law, meant to prevent communications between sex offenders and minors, is so broad it violates the Constitution’s free speech protections. The case goes to the Supreme Court after it was upheld by North Carolina’s highest court in a divided ruling. The law addressed websites which might allow sex offenders to gather information about minors, the state court said.

But dissenting justices argued the ban extends further and could outlaw reading the New York Times and Food Network website. “Everyday Americans understand that social media — which includes Twitter, Facebook, Instagram — are absolutely central to their daily life and how the First Amendment is exercised in America today,” said Stanford law professor David Goldberg, who will represent Mr Packingham at the Supreme Court on Monday. Though the intent of North Carolina lawmakers may have been to block sexual predators from finding and grooming prey online, Mr Goldberg said the law goes further and makes it a crime for someone on a sex-offender registry to say anything about any subject on social media. “That goes way, way too far,” Mr Goldberg said. “It’s a crime to do anything, including what Mr Packingham did, which was to say ‘God is good’ because he was victorious in traffic court. There’s never been any suggestion that he was up to anything but exercising his freedom of speech.” “We have to protect young people wherever they are, whether that’s at school, or at summer camp or increasingly online,” said North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein, whose office is defending the law. “This North Carolina law keeps registered sex offenders off of social networking websites that kids use without denying the offenders access to the internet. It just keeps them off of certain web sites.”

Read More : independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/facebook-sex-offenders-paedophile-supreme-court-north-carolina-social-media-law-lester-packingham-jr-a7600201.html

‘Just Keep Swimming’: Tips From 4 Atlanta Legal Technology Leaders

Sanford Bail Bond – ‘Just Keep Swimming’: Tips From 4 Atlanta Legal Technology Leaders

Source     : Daily Report Online News
By             : Gabrielle Orum Hernández
Category  :  Bail Bond Sanford , Sanford Bail Bond

‘Just Keep Swimming’: Tips From 4 Atlanta Legal Technology Leaders

‘Just Keep Swimming’: Tips From 4 Atlanta Legal Technology Leaders

“Bridging the Technology Gap in Law,” an event hosted at Atlanta Tech Village and co-sponsored by Thomson Reuters and legal technology entrepreneur group Evolve Law, brought together speakers from Atlanta’s legal technology community to highlight some advice they’ve picked up through their work. Below are four tips from some of Atlanta’s legal technology leaders and entrepreneurs: Natalie Kelly, director, State Bar of Georgia’s Law Practice Management Section – “Just keep swimming.”

In her 20 years working at the Georgia State Bar’s Law Practice Management section, Natalie Kelly found that more and more attorneys are looking for assistance managing practice technology. In fact, she said 63 percent of the requests she gets for consultations come from lawyers looking to adopt or migrate technology in their practice. Kelly noted that no one, even the oldest practicing attorneys, lives today without the influence of technology. The more important question, she said, is how to get more attorneys to bring technology into their practices: “Everyone uses technology, it’s the gaps we need to focus on.” There is a lot about technology adoption that makes small firms and solo practitioners. The threat of being automated out of a job, the price of e-discovery technology, potential threats to data security are three of what Kelly named “scare tactics” dissuading small firms from taking the plunge. Regardless of these concerns, Kelly encouraged small firm lawyers to “just keep swimming” through the maze of technology until they find a solution that fits. Bar associations, she added, can push members towards technology adoption with discounted software and useful resources. Jennifer Downs, founder, Aggregate Law – “It’s about connection.”

While setting up her business, Jennifer Downs had to teach herself how to leverage social media for business development. She encouraged attorneys looking to do the same to think about what social media engagement would best fit the type of practice they run, their client base, the target age group they’re looking to connect with, and their current social media engagement. Most adults engage on Facebook, she said, but many professionals also engage on LinkedIn. Using these two networks can help attorneys connect with their peers. Twitter, by comparison, has a younger average user base, but does attract a lot of other attorneys. Downs said that sharing information and resources through social media can help lawyers connect and establish trust with potential clients, many of whom are skittish about hiring attorneys without a specific referral. “You want to give your clients what they’re looking for and meet them where they are,” she said.

Where practitioners often make mistakes, Downs noted, is when they set up profiles on major social media platforms and quickly abandon them. “Be active, but don’t just set up your profile and then be a ghost,” she urged, adding that profiles without regular updates can make users wonder whether a business has been shuttered altogether. Matt St. John, sales specialist manager, Thomson Reuters – “Identify the ripple in your workflow.”

According to St. John, Thomson Reuters research finds that law firm practitioner grievances come in three flavors: complaints about clients, complaints about technology, and complaints about business development. Trying to operate a practice in the face of increasing client demands of “more for less,” cumbersome technology, and business management requires that attorneys invest more, not less, in technology strategies that will help cut through inefficiencies, he said. St. John encouraged looking for places in the practice workflow where an infusion of technology could redirect wasted time towards legal work. He suggested that automation and practice management are two areas attorneys could consider investing in. One of the mistakes St. John sees attorneys make the most is to upload every piece of physical paper associated with a matter into a practice management system. “A lot of law firms have the same mentality about technology as they do about paper,” he said. Instead, he encouraged audience members to purge their files the same way they’d purge or archive physical files. “Cull your data just like you would documents,” St. John said.

Read More : dailyreportonline.com/id=1202777817464/Just-Keep-Swimming-Tips-From-4-Atlanta-Legal-Technology-Leaders?mcode=1202616187678&curindex=4&slreturn=20170124011220

More protection for children in legal disputes under Family Justice Courts’ workplan

Bondsman in Seminole County – More protection for children in legal disputes under Family Justice Courts’ workplan

Source     : Channel News Asia News
By             : Loke Kok Fai
Category : Bail Bondsman in Sanford , Bondsman in Seminole County

More protection for children in legal disputes under Family Justice Courts’ workplan

More protection for children in legal disputes under Family Justice Courts’ workplan

The Family Justice Courts (FJC) unveiled its 2017 workplan on Monday (Feb 20) – one which it said places the interests of children at the fore by resolving disputes quickly, effectively and with less animosity between parties. It was announced by Judicial Commissioner Valerie Thean at a closed-door seminar. She said former Chief Justice Chan Sek Keong’s view was that Singapore’s judicial system enforced and protected the legal rights and interests of litigants, and that family law was no exception.

However, Ms Thean noted that such enforcement has psychological consequences on those affected by a case, such as children at the centre of a divorce. “When a plaintiff comes to court to, in his mind, ‘seek justice’, he is essentially saying he wants to be proved right, and the defendant utterly and incontrovertibly wrong,” she said. “The irony is that within the complexity of a relationship, the answer, if not delivered well, could serve very little purpose and in fact do more harm than good. Thus, family justice is also said to require therapeutic outcomes,” she added.

CHILD-CENTRIC INITIATIVES
For acrimonious divorces, the FJC may rope in the services of parenting coordinators. Under a pilot scheme since last year, 24 of these specially-trained lawyers assist parents in the implementation of court orders such as child access arrangements. One of these lawyers, Mr Raymond Yeo, said this involves the lawyer playing the role of mediator – to help resolve minor disputes such as the timing and venue to hand over the child to the other parent. He added that this minimises the likelihood of parties having to return to court, causing additional stress for the child.

The scheme will be expanded this year to include coordinators from the social science fields, such as social workers and psychologists. “When we deal with parenting coordination work, we don’t just deal with the legal aspect. We deal a lot with party’s emotions, and that’s where the softer skills come in,” said Mr Yeo. “So if we can have a lawyer, perhaps even paired up with a counsellor or social worker, or a psychologist that’s actually trained in parenting coordination, I think it will give a really holistic approach in resolving conflicts between two parents.” Amendments to rules governing lawyers’ professional conduct were also proposed. These include making it mandatory for family lawyers to advise their clients that the court will prioritise the best interests of children over the wishes of parents or children, or both. They also prevent a lawyer acting as a parenting coordinator or representing the child in a case to subsequently act for any party in matters relating to the family proceedings.

Much of these rules were originally unwritten ethical guidelines that were “just understood and taught”, said family lawyer Malathi Das – a member of the ethics workgroup which drafted the proposed amendments. “I would see the changes being brought in for family law practice as being a fine-tuning or a calibration of existing rules so that they are more specific, that are more child-centric,” said Ms Das. “They take into account recent developments with respect to other forms of dispute resolution, such as mediation, with the introduction of new initiatives like the child representative and parenting coordinators.” Ms Das added that the rules could also protect lawyers from pressure by their clients to carry out unethical, but otherwise legal action. She said: “One of the greatest challenges in family practice is the expectations of clients, and those expectations translating into possible difficulties on the part of lawyers to meet those expectations. “And because of that, you find that having ethical rules and a robust code of conduct will also help the lawyer in a way referee the dispute by telling clients: ‘Look I’m not allowed to do this because this is unethical and I will get into trouble for it.’ I think it is good that we can be honest with clients and point to a specific code or a specific rule.”

REFINEMENTS TO CURRENT PRACTICES
The FJC also revealed results of a pilot study of its Child Inclusive Dispute Resolution Programme. In 2016, the programme managed to achieve an 80 per cent resolution rate – where at least one or all cases involving children’s issues were settled. But to further refine its child-centric approach in areas such as mediation and counselling, the FJC will also partner the National Institute of Education this year on longitudinal research examining the impact of its approach on parents as well as children. Pending the approval of Nanyang Technological University’s (NTU) Institutional Review Board, the study will explore the outcomes of 300 families that have undergone counselling and mediation at the Family Dispute Resolution Division of the courts on divorce and ancillary matters. Other planned improvements to the family justice process include the launch of a new Family Protection Centre in the second half of the year, to offer those exposed to family violence a “more private and calming environment” where their applications for Personal Protection Orders will be handled. This will be complemented with a new IT system called iFAMS, which would allow parties to file such applications at the Family Court Registry or Family Violence Specialist Centres.

Read More : channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/more-protection-for-children-in-legal-disputes-under-family/3532654.html

California Supreme Court justice discusses education and immigration at CSUN

Seminole County Bail Bonds – California Supreme Court justice discusses education and immigration at CSUN

Source     : Sundail News
By             : Nathan Hickling
Category :  Bail Bonds Sanford , Seminole County Bail Bonds

California Supreme Court justice discusses education and immigration at CSUN

California Supreme Court justice discusses education and immigration at CSUN

California Supreme Court Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar visited CSUN Thursday to speak to students on a variety of issues, including the importance of diversity in the courtroom and offering lingual services to non-English speakers in court. Cuéllar was introduced and asked questions by Dr. Gabriel Gutiérrez, Chicano studies department chair, and Melisa Galván, Chicano studies assistant professor, who spoke on the importance of immigration law to CSUN students. “Many of our students come to us for advice about how to deal with actual cases,” Gutiérrez said.

Cuéllar, who served on the former president of the United States, Barack Obama’s transition team, provided his guidance. “My watchboard has always been what can I do from my position,” Cuéllar said. “I was enormously dedicated and passionate about trying to get it right and trying to help the president stay true to what he had promised during the campaign.” Cuéllar also spoke of the challenges he faced as a Mexican-born student in California and how his experiences living along the border gave him a unique perspective in law, something he listed as one of his strengths as a justice. “In a place like Calexico you see a lot of the struggles that are part of our state’s history,” Cuéllar said. “I felt that the whole point of my being there was that I could bring something different to the discussion.”

Cuéllar was born in Matamoros, Mexico, but later moved to Calexico in the Imperial Valley. Fluent in Spanish and English, he spoke of the importance of providing services in court to Californians who are not proficient in English as part of the California court’s Language Access Plan Implementation Task Force. We [the task force] were engaged in a historic expansion of how we engaged in these issues,” he said of the roughly seven million Californians who the plan targets. According to Cuéllar, this is a challenge for the courts because it requires individuals to attend court, and it would be wrong for one to walk out uncertain about what to do, and not be able to deal with the proceedings because one cannot pay for an interpreter.

Cuéllar said some of the most important legal services being worked on are offering interpreters in civil court cases and making sure that the court buildings themselves are accessible, including everything from signs to forms.“It takes money, it takes effort, it takes an engaged population… it takes mentors, it takes lawyers who care about the issue,” he said of the plan.

Read More : sundial.csun.edu/2017/02/california-supreme-court-justice-discusses-education-and-immigration-at-csun/

Kentucky Supreme Court strikes down Lexington's anti-begging law

Bail Bond Seminole County – Kentucky Supreme Court strikes down Lexington’s anti-begging law

Source     : Courier Journal News
By             : William Theisen
Category :  Bail Bond Seminole County , Bail Bondsman in Sanford

Kentucky Supreme Court strikes down Lexington's anti-begging law

Kentucky Supreme Court strikes down Lexington’s anti-begging law

The Kentucky Supreme Court struck down Lexington’s anti-panhandling law on Thursday saying the practice is constitutionally protected free speech. It’s a decision that likely kills similar ordinances across the state, including the one in Louisville Metro that imposes a $250 fine, 90 days in jail, or both for those who aggressively beg for money in public.“Despite the societal stigma associated with panhandling, this form of expression is widely considered to be constitutionally protected speech,” Chief Justice John D. Minton Jr. said in the decision.

The case was brought by attorneys for Dennis Champion, 58, who has been cited or arrested more than 550 times for begging, illegal solicitations and disorderly conduct since 2004 in Lexington and Louisville, according to court records. Defending the Lexington ordinance, which carried a maximum penalty of 30 days in jail, a $100 fine, or both, the Fayette County attorney’s office said the city had a compelling interest in “pedestrians not being struck by motorists” and in the “efficient flow of traffic.” But the 14-page ruling said Lexington officials failed to show that panhandlers were responsible for traffic delays or accidents. The landmark ruling also said it is unconstitutional for city officials to treat individuals who carry signs begging for money differently from others, such as those with religious messages such as “Jesus Loves You.”

“The only thing distinguishing these two people is the content of their messages,” Minton said. A decade ago, Louisville’s Metro Council enacted an anti-begging law saying that there was an increase in aggressive solicitation in downtown and throughout the city that had become “extremely disturbing and disruptive to residents and businesses.” The ordinance says certain types of panhandling has “contributed not only to the loss of access and enjoyment of public places, but also to an enhanced fear, intimidation and disorder.” “It was primarily a response to people who (were) getting up in folks’ faces, not leaving them alone and demanding money,” said Democratic caucus spokesman Tony Hyatt.

Louisville has defined aggressive solicitation as repetitively approaching or following pedestrians despite refusals, the use of abusive or profane language to cause fear and intimidation, unwanted physical contact, or the intentional blocking of vehicular and pedestrian traffic. It specifically forbids such behavior within 20 feet of an automated teller machine, an outdoor dining area or a bus stop. The high court’s ruling does provide a legal road map on how cities could regulate beggars that appears to favor Louisville’s ordinance. Minton wrote that Lexington “could prohibit all individuals from approaching stopped motorists,” which he said targets the behavior a city seeks to prohibit rather than why a person steps into traffic. Just before Champion’s case went before the Supreme Court last October, Jefferson District Judge Eric Haner ruled against Louisville’s “aggressive panhandling” ordinance saying that any crime that carries the penalty of incarceration must be crafted by the state legislature.

“We did not appeal that case knowing that the Lexington case was before the Supreme Court and that we would receive guidance from them,” said Josh Abner, a spokesman for Jefferson County Attorney Mike O’Connell. Abner said they are reviewing the Supreme Court’s decision to determine how it will affect Louisville’s ordinance before advising Mayor Greg Fischer or the council on next legal steps.

Read More : courier-journal.com/story/news/local/2017/02/16/kentucky-supreme-court-strikes-down-lexingtons-anti-begging-law/97992698/

Republican Lawmakers Propose New Law To Reduce Legal Immigration

Bail Bondsman in Sanford – Republican Lawmakers Propose New Law To Reduce Legal Immigration

Source      : NPR News
By             : John Burnett
Category : Bail Bondsman in Sanford , Bondsman in Seminole County

Republican Lawmakers Propose New Law To Reduce Legal Immigration

Republican Lawmakers Propose New Law To Reduce Legal Immigration

When he was running for president, Donald Trump pledged to reduce immigration — both the illegal and legal varieties. His allies in Congress hope to make good on that promise, and two Republican lawmakers have introduced new legislation targeting legal immigration. The landmark Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 eased the path across the nation’s borders for people from Asia and Africa — parts of the world that previously had limited opportunity to immigrate to the United States. Today, a new generation of immigration restrictionists thinks it’s time to reduce the overall flow. The junior senators from Arkansas and Georgia, Tom Cotton and David Perdue, are proposing a new law.

“The goal here is to get our immigration levels back to historical norms, to take something of a pause to allow the economy to catch up with the immigrants that we have allowed into our country over the last two generations,” Cotton says, “and to focus on the well-being of American citizens, those citizens who are here today, many of whom are struggling economically.” Their bill would do three things: First, limit the number of foreign nationals who are able to get green cards to reunite with their families already in the U.S. — currently the largest category of legal immigrants; second, cut the number of refugees in half; third, eliminate the diversity visa lottery — a program that gives visas to countries with low rates of immigration to the United States. Cotton says the number of green cards awarded each year — about a million — is excessive. “In one year, this would reduce it to around 600,000,” Cotton says. “Over the span of the 10-year window it would fall to about 500,000.”

A plan to cut immigration in half faces entrenched opposition among immigration-friendly Republicans, pro-immigrant Democrats, and business lobbies that favors high immigration rates. But the proposed law has friends in a high place: Cotton says he’s been coordinating with the Trump administration and its coterie of longtime anti-immigration figures, including chief strategist Steve Bannon, Attorney General nominee Jeff Sessions, and Julie Kirchner. Kirchner, the former executive director of the far-right immigration restrictionist group Federation for American Immigration Reform, is now a special political adviser in U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Linda Chavez, a conservative political commentator who served in the Reagan White House, says these restrictionist voices are being amplified this year.

“I’ve been around this issue for 35 years,” she says. “We’ve never seen the kind of reception for these groups that we’re seeing in the Trump administration.” The idea that the time has come to invite fewer people from around the globe to become Americans is based on the belief that there are simply too many unskilled immigrants, and that they are competing with low-skilled Americans for jobs. Economists have done studies for and against this theory, and each side fervently defends its case. “It would be serious, serious changes to the dynamism of the American economy and the American spirit,” says Tamar Jacoby, head of Immigration Works USA, a pro-business group that wants more legal immigrant workers.

The arguments are not all economic — there is a cultural component, the notion that it’s time to let the American melting pot cool down for a spell. In the House of Representatives, Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, expects to propose a companion bill to reduce immigration. He is concerned about immigrant enclaves growing in metropolitan areas. “When you have so many immigrants being admitted, they tend to cluster together, they tend to maybe be a bit more slow in learning the English language, to becoming acculturated, to becoming patriotic Americans,” Smith says. The bill is the first in a series of GOP measures intended to redesign the American immigration system. Everyone agrees immigration desperately needs fixing, but it remains to be seen if Congress is ready to narrow the gate.

Read More : npr.org/2017/02/07/513957928/republican-lawmakers-propose-new-law-to-reduce-legal-immigration

SCOTUS for law students: Predicting Supreme Court justices

Bail Bonds Sanford – SCOTUS for law students: Predicting Supreme Court justices

Source     : Scotus Blog News
By             : Stephen Wermiel
Category :  Bail Bonds Sanford , Seminole County Bail Bonds

SCOTUS for law students: Predicting Supreme Court justices

SCOTUS for law students: Predicting Supreme Court justices

The nomination of Judge Neil Gorsuch has moved into a phase that is unique to the Supreme Court confirmation process: trying to predict how a justice will vote on particular issues and cases in the future. This predictive process may occur in two phases. The first is well underway – vast amounts of commentary and analysis about how Gorsuch may handle everything from employment-law cases to white-collar-crime issues. The second phase will take place in just over a month, when the 20 members of the Senate Judiciary Committee try to figure out what kind of questions to ask the nominee that will actually shed any light on his views. The stakes are enormous. Liberals hope to ascertain just how conservative Gorsuch really is, and some want to find a way to block his confirmation if their worst fears prove to be true. Conservatives want to be certain that he is genuinely conservative, cut from the mold of Justice Antonin Scalia, whose death a year ago created the vacancy that President Donald Trump has nominated Gorsuch to fill. For liberals the struggle is in some ways a full dress rehearsal for the fight over the next vacancy that occurs on the Supreme Court after this one is filled. The conventional wisdom is that Gorsuch will simply restore the court to the balance that existed when Scalia was still on the bench: four solid conservatives, four liberals and Justice Anthony Kennedy in the middle, often deciding the outcome in close cases. If the next vacancy is created by the departure of any of the three oldest justices – Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 83; Kennedy, 80; or Stephen Breyer, 78 – then the appointment of a conservative would dramatically tip the balance on the court. For conservatives the current struggle is also in part to lay the foundation for the fight over the next vacancy. However, it is also part of a prolonged effort to be sure that the nominees of Republican presidents are genuine conservatives. Conservatives value highly the need for reliable predictions because they believe they have been burned by a series of nominees by Republican presidents who turned out to be disappointingly moderate justices, including Harry Blackmun and Lewis Powell (appointed by Richard Nixon); John Paul Stevens (Gerald Ford); Sandra Day O’Connor and Kennedy (Ronald Reagan); and David Souter (George H.W. Bush). “No more Souters,” is a frequent battle cry for conservatives today.

With that understanding of what is at stake, let us turn to the fascination, perhaps even obsession, with predicting the behavior of Supreme Court nominees. In just over two weeks since the nomination of Gorsuch was announced, hundreds of thousands of words have already been written trying to predict what impact he will have on particular legal fields or how he may approach specific issues. This commentary covers a wide range of perspectives, sometimes seemingly contradictory. First, there are the statistical analyses. For example, The Washington Post ran a column earlier this week by two political science professors who studied Gorsuch’s decisions on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit in cases that were later reviewed by the Supreme Court. Their conclusion was that “Gorsuch may be more conservative than Justice Clarence Thomas.” But a day earlier, the blog Empirical SCOTUS analyzed the language in opinions written by Gorsuch and ran its conclusions under the headline: “Scaling Judge Gorsuch’s Opinions: Hints of a Possible Centrist.” When Gorsuch was nominated, The New York Times displayed a chart, based on an analysis by several other professors, tha showed him as more conservative than both Scalia and Justice Samuel Alito but less conservative than Thomas. Then there is the widest imaginable array of predictive analyses of specific legal issue areas. These range from a Scientific American blog analysis finding it “difficult to draw any firm conclusions” on Gorsuch and environmental law to a suggestion at Crain’s Cleveland Business that Gorsuch shows “a consistent reluctance to second-guess employer decisions.” An Associated Press analysis says he has been sympathetic to free speech claims but also supportive of religious groups in suits against the government. Another blog attempted with little success to discern how Gorsuch would view white-collar-crime cases. Many of these analyses are inconclusive because there are too few cases to evaluate and because as a federal appeals court judge, Gorsuch was constrained by existing precedents. It is difficult to glean much from this commentary. And when the scene shifts to the Senate Judiciary Committee, senators will confront the challenge of how to get any accurate, predictive measure of this Supreme Court nominee. If the past is any guide, it will not be easy. When Joe Biden was still a senator from Delaware, he referred to the Supreme Court confirmation process as “Kabuki theater.” This is because it resembles an odd dance in which senators try to elicit useful information from nominees who, in turn, try hard not to tell the Senate anything useful.

The dilemma is that most nominees to the Supreme Court feel that they cannot answer any questions that may commit them to specific positions or to views on particular cases. If they do, then they may have to recuse themselves from participation on those issues or cases when they come before the Supreme Court. Our judicial system, the prism of a nomination clarifies, turns on the idea that justices must approach each case with an open mind, committed to considering the specific facts and legal arguments for that dispute without preconceived notions. Sparring over the merits of this approach has already begun among senators. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) calls this the “Ginsburg standard” after a statement made by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg during her confirmation process. “No hints, no forecasts, no previews – that is what has become known as the Ginsburg standard,” McConnell said recently in a Senate speech. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has a different view. After he met privately with Gorsuch, Schumer wrote, “Judge Gorsuch must be far more specific in his answers to straightforward questions about his judicial philosophy and opinions on previous cases. He owes it to the American people to provide an inkling of what kind of justice he would be.”

Are there questions senators may ask and nominees may answer that will have any genuine predictive value? The answer is unclear. Some legal scholars have suggested that senators question nominees specifically about how they view past cases decided by the Supreme Court. This, they argue, would provide insight into the nominees’ thinking but would run less risk of creating conflicts for them as justices. Perhaps, but during his confirmation hearing in 1986, Scalia declined to discuss any cases, famously refusing even to answer questions about Marbury v. Madison, the 1803 landmark decision that laid the groundwork for judicial review. Some nominees have been more willing to discuss some past cases to a limited extent; almost all nominees discuss Brown v. Board of Education, for example. Other lines of questioning are possible. Senators often ask about legal doctrines and tools: How much deference should courts show to the elected branches of government? What role should legislative history play in judicial interpretation? Does a nominee believe in the existence of implied rights in the Constitution, like privacy? What role does international law play in U.S. courts? Although these questions do not involve commitments on specific cases, nominees will still sometimes refuse to answer them because to do so may force them to outline particular approaches to deciding cases. Recent nominees have generally been willing to answer these questions but often in circumspect ways that do not reveal much about the way they would approach particular issues. The frustrating result for the senators is that nominees often resort to less-than-insightful platitudes, like the oft-quoted declaration by Chief Justice John Roberts that judges are just like baseball umpires, calling balls and strikes, but not pitching or batting. Judging by the commentary, Gorsuch will confront this dilemma most clearly over his expressed doubts about the important Chevron doctrine, a Supreme Court rule that says courts should defer to reasonable federal-agency interpretations of laws they administer. Adopted in 1984 in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., the rule has been much debated and heavily criticized by Gorsuch. Senators will pummel him with questions about what he has said and written about it. But if he is to hear cases as a justice on how to apply the Chevron doctrine or whether to overrule it, will he say he has to refrain from discussing it in any more detail than he already has, or will he feel obligated to explain his position? This is how the hearings for Gorsuch will likely play out in the Senate Judiciary Committee. Between now and March 20, when the hearings begin, it is a safe bet that the senators and their staff will work hard to map out questions that will try to make the hearings more productive, whether their goal is accurate prediction of the nominee’s likely rulings or just a better understanding of what makes him tick.

Read More : scotusblog.com/2017/02/scotus-law-students-predicting-supreme-court-justices/

Attacks on judges undermine law - Supreme Court president

Bail Bonds in Sanford – Attacks on judges undermine law – Supreme Court president

Source     : BBC News
By             : Press Release
Category : Bail Bonds in SanfordSeminole County Bail Bonds

Attacks on judges undermine law - Supreme Court president

Attacks on judges undermine law – Supreme Court president

The president of the UK’s Supreme Court has criticised politicians for not doing enough to defend judges following a row over the Brexit legal challenge. Lord Neuberger said politicians did not speak out quickly or clearly enough and some media attacks had been unfair. He said unjustified attacks on the judiciary undermined the rule of law.

After the government lost the Article 50 case at the High Court, a Daily Mail headline called the three judges in the case “enemies of the people”. Lord Neuberger, who retires in September, was speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme a month after the Supreme Court ruled that only Parliament, not ministers, had the power to trigger the UK’s exit from the EU because that was where laws were made. The Daily Mail’s front page story was published when the government lost the first stage of the legal battle at the High Court last November. That story sparked a furious row with critics, including MPs from all parties, accusing Liz Truss, the lord chancellor and justice secretary, of not standing up for an independent judiciary. The Supreme Court, the final court of appeal in the UK for civil cases – and for criminal cases from England, Wales and Northern Ireland – hears cases of the greatest public or constitutional importance affecting the whole population.

Its justices also sit as the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council and as such will occasionally hear appeals against the death penalty from Commonwealth countries. In an average year, the Supreme Court hears about 90 appeals and makes about 80 judgements on important issues of law.

‘Ultimate guardians’
In his interview, Lord Neuberger did not single out any newspaper or politician, but said: “We [judges in general] were certainly not well treated. One has to be careful about being critical of the press particularly as a lawyer or judge because our view of life is very different from that of the media. “I think some of what was said was undermining the rule of law.” Asked whether politicians had responded quickly enough to defend the judiciary and rule of law, Lord Neuberger said: “They were certainly vocal enough quickly enough after our hearing [in the Supreme Court].   “After the [High] Court hearing. I think they could have been quicker and clearer. But we all learn by experience, whether politicians or judges. It’s easy to be critical after the event. They were faced with an unexpected situation from which like all sensible people they learned.” Lord Neuberger said that undermining the judiciary also undermined the rule of law as judges were “the ultimate guardians” of it. “The rule of law together with democracy is one of the two pillars on which our society is based,” he added. “And therefore if, without good reason, the media or anyone else undermines the judiciary that risks undermining our society. “The press and the media generally have a positive duty to keep an eye on things. But I think with that power comes the degree of responsibility.”

Read More : bbc.com/news/uk-38986228

Texas Anti-abortion Efforts Renew After Supreme Court Defeat

Bail Bonds Sanford – Texas Anti-abortion Efforts Renew After Supreme Court Defeat

Source     : US News
By             : PAUL J. WEBER, Associated Press
Category :  Bail Bonds Sanford , Seminole County Bail Bonds

Texas Anti-abortion Efforts Renew After Supreme Court Defeat

Texas Anti-abortion Efforts Renew After Supreme Court Defeat

Undeterred by a U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down sweeping abortion restrictions that were sold as protecting women’s health, Texas Republicans are pushing new measures pitched as protecting fetuses, with a hopeful eye toward Washington. New anti-abortion measures are moving through the Legislature — where Democrats are virtually powerless to stop them — and opponents see a shift in GOP strategy after last year’s 5-3 Supreme Court ruling that rejected the state’s claims of trying to safeguard women and dismantled a 2013 law that prompted many of the state’s abortion clinics to close.

A state Senate committee on Wednesday will begin hearing three anti-abortion measures, none of which claim to be aimed at protecting women’s health. And with the Supreme Court apparently set to become more socially conservative under President Donald Trump, Republicans say there is a new opportunity. “You would be almost remiss and neglectful, in my opinion, not to push that envelope going forward knowing what’s coming up,” Republican state Sen. Charles Perry said.

The newest Texas proposals would toughen regulations on what happens to a fetus both before and after an abortion. Perry’s proposal would mostly ban a commonly used second-trimester abortion procedure, known as dilation and evacuation, and is similar to laws that courts have blocked in Alabama, Oklahoma, Kansas and Louisiana. Another bill would require fetal remains to be buried or cremated. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has already ordered that change, but it is on hold pending a federal trial.

A third proposal would ban, among other things, the donation of fetal tissue under a measure Republicans have sought since the release of heavily edited, secretly recorded videos shot inside Planned Parenthood clinics by an anti-abortion group in 2015. Perry said his bill has nothing to do with protecting women’s health — a departure from how Republicans defended the former law known as HB2, which imposed building upgrades on abortion clinics and required doctors who perform abortions to have admitting privileges. More than 20 abortion clinics in Texas closed after the law passed.

Justice Stephen Breyer wrote in the majority opinion striking down that law that it failed to offer “medical benefits” sufficient to justify the burdens placed on women. “The Supreme Court called them out on that,” said Blake Rocap, legislative counsel for the abortion-rights group NARAL Pro-Choice Texas. “Because the avenue of lying about what is good women’s health and safety is now foreclosed to them, they’re now having to turn to other methods to make operating a practice difficult if not almost impossible.” Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson signed into a law a bill similar to Perry’s proposal last month The ban is among a push by abortion opponents nationally and at statehouses around the country with Republicans in control of the White House and Congress. Trump’s first nominee to the Supreme Court, Neil Gorsuch, has a conservative legal philosophy seen as similar to the late Justice Antonin Scalia’s.

Read More : usnews.com/news/news/articles/2017-02-14/texas-anti-abortion-efforts-renew-after-supreme-court-defeat

Law Schools That Graduated Supreme Court Justices

Sanford Bail Bond – Law Schools That Graduated Supreme Court Justices

Source     : US News
By             : Ilana Kowarski
Category : Bail Bond Sanford , Sanford Bail Bond

Law Schools That Graduated Supreme Court Justices

Law Schools That Graduated Supreme Court Justices

There are certain things that today’s sitting Supreme Court justices have in common: All eight have law degrees from Ivy League universities, for instance. But over the last 100 years, the resumes of Supreme Court justices show a lot more variety in their academic backgrounds. U.S. News looked into where Supreme Court justices who were appointed between 1916 and 2016 earned their law degrees, and some interesting patterns emerged.

For one, until the 21st century, the majority of Supreme Court justices had a bachelor’s of law degree, commonly known as an LL.B., rather than a Juris Doctor degree, commonly known as a J.D. In the mid-1960s and early 1970s, U.S. law schools began to replace LL.B. programs with J.D. programs. Even though today a J.D. is the standard entry-level credential for lawyers, it is not a requirement to serve on the Supreme Court. For instance, Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has an LL.B. from Columbia University, and former Chief Justice William Rehnquist had an LL.B. from Stanford University. Both ascended to the pinnacle of the legal profession without a J.D.

Another notable pattern is the high proportion of justices who earned their law degrees from elite law schools in the Northeast. Among the 46 justices who were appointed between 1916 and 2016, 25 received law degrees from Ivy League schools. However, over the past century, many justices have been appointed without an Ivy League law school pedigree, and six justices were appointed without law degrees. Among the six without law degrees, three attended law school without receiving a degree and three did not attend law school at all.

It used to be common for aspiring U.S. attorneys to apprentice for an experienced lawyer and learn about the law through work experience rather than in a school setting, and several Supreme Court justices chose this nonacademic route. The Supreme Court justices in the past century who did earn formal law degrees earned those degrees from a variety of schools, including state universities in the South and West. Two of the justices appointed in this past century earned two law degrees – Sherman Minton, who had both an LL.B. from Indiana University—Bloomington and an LL.M. from Yale University, and Lewis Powell, who had both an LL.B. from Washington and Lee University and an LL.M. from Harvard University. Below is a map of the schools where Supreme Court justices who were appointed in the past century earned law degrees, along with the school’s 2017 Best Law Schools ranking, if applicable.

Read More : usnews.com/education/best-graduate-schools/top-law-schools/articles/2017-02-10/map-where-this-centurys-supreme-court-justices-got-law-degrees