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This blog is the work of an educated civilian, not of an expert in the fields discussed.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Alito Day at SCOTUS

First Off ...

The first opinion handed down today was a preemption case. Kavanaugh spoke for seven (Thomas also concurred to turn back the clock on the Commerce Clause) while Jackson (and Gorsuch) dissented. The involved pesticide labels or such.

Alito Time 

The next three opinions were all by Alito. Okay. 

All were 6-3 the normal way. The conservatives disagreed somewhat in one case on the reasoning. Barrett added a "I'm so reasonable" concurrence in the Second Amendment case.

Kagan briefly dissented in the 2A case. Jackson provided much more discussion. 

Jake Charles ("Law prof, Pepperdine Law; Affiliated Scholar, Duke Center for Firearms Law. I write about constitutional law, especially the Second Amendment") on Bluesky notes various problems with Alito's history.

The case involved Hawaii having a law where property owners are presumptively not inclined to allow people to bring in guns. They could, mind you, give permission. 

Kagan flagged all the evidence that the Administration's policy on Haitians is racist. The majority was Mr. Magoo, this not being an affirmative action case where the "racism" of remedial policies will be flagged. 

Sotomayor dealt with a Mexican border dispute, announcing her dissent from the bench. Alito had a follow-up response on top of his opinion summary. It is not clear when this last (if ever) happened.

Dusty Ray Spencer Execution 

Meanwhile, a bit later, with no open dissents, the Supreme Court rejected (without comment) a final appeal before (after over 30 years) Florida executed Dusty Ray Spencer. He murdered his wife. 

The final claim raises an intellectual disability argument. I truly doubt, under normal rules, there is a compelling reason to take the case. He should not be executed on other grounds. 

Still, the order paved the way to taking a human life. A brief discussion, by someone, was warranted. 

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

SCOTUS Watch: First Opinion Day

The first opinion day of the week (yesterday) disposed of five cases, all somewhat also-rans. The opinions largely broke down 6-3. 

The oral argument didn't bode well for a prisoner trying to obtain damages against state prison officials for violating his religious liberty. The reason was not that the conservative justices only care about Christians. 

Holt v. Hobbs, for instance, protected the rights of a Muslim prisoner. The justices do somewhat selectively care about religious liberty. Nonetheless, the reason for the opinion here is likely somewhat different. Wrong all the same

Kagan and Jackson joined the result in a case about the Alien Tort Statute (the trend has been limited protections), but joined much of Sotomayor's dissent on why the majority went too far. 

The liberals fully disagreed with the conservatives in an immigration case. Thomas for the conservatives.

The one kumbaya moment was an overreach of a case involving the Takings Clause. Fair market value is fair enough when the government sells a property in a tax sale, as long as the whole thing is otherwise fair. 

Some libertarians might be upset, but I looked into the details (did so in response to an early response to this guy), and this was no great travesty or anything.  This is the case that it's okay to give to Alito. 

There will be more pain for the liberal side of things (and more hot-button cases) in the upcoming days. 

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

NY Primary

My district had two races: state comptroller and the House (Ritchie Torres).  The liberal challengers didn't do well. They did well in some other places, including Brad Lander, Mayor Mamdani's choice. 

It was a low turnout race in my polling place. I manned the only polling table (there are usually two). I appreciate those who showed up, a few with little children. Democracy is action.

Monday, June 22, 2026

SCOTUS Watch: Orders

The Order List was longer than usual. So, we had additional writings, particularly an apparent 6-3 per curiam, summarized by Mark Joseph Stern on Bluesky this way:

By a 6–3 vote, the Supreme Court reverses a decision in favor of Pedro Hernandez, a mentally impaired man who was pressured into an allegedly false confession of murder through these👇unconstitutional tactics. The supermajority says he did not face a deprivation of "clearly established" rights.

The liberals wouldn't have taken the case. It amounts to an "error correction" of an allegedly misapplication of the rules for federal habeas appeals. Some local coverage

Alito and Thomas would have taken or decided some crime-related cases (one involving the use of race) the other way. 

Jackson followed her practice regarding not rejecting certain appeals by incarcerated people allegedly abusing the pauper's petition rules. 

Sotomayor, for the liberals, would have taken a case involving a claim of intellectual disability in a capital case. Texas supported the appeal, but the Texas courts (this happened before) blocked it from happening below. Four justices earlier would have tightened the rules in such cases, so this isn't surprising. 

The Supreme Court granted another so-called "Bivens" case, involving a remedy for constitutionally based abuses. The claim won below, and Bivens has been much disfavored. So, it doesn't bode well. Congress can address the situation. 

We will have  (signed) opinions on Tuesday and Thursday. There is likely to be at least one more opinion day. Toss is a scheduled execution. 

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Pot and Guns

This morning, the Court issued its decision in United States v. Hemani. The Justices unanimously agreed that 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(3), as applied to Mr. Hemani, violated his Second Amendment rights. 

I talked about U.S. v. Hemani on my Substack; one entry linked in my last SCOTUS entry. It was a 9-0 opinion with multiple concurrences. It received support from both liberals and conservatives. Just what it decided is unclear. 

The link argues it is a limited decision. People should, on some level, carefully remember that it decided a limited question. It did not broadly, in all ways, allow users of marijuana (and other controlled substances) to own firearms. 

Gorsuch wrote the opinion of the Court. He summarizes the facts in a way that particularly favors the defendant. The government thought the guy was a terrorist. He was not. 

(There are implications that he and his family -- he is a dual Pakistani and U.S. citizen -- were profiled in some fashion.) 

He cooperated. He lived with his parents and had a stable job. He ultimately was charged merely with owning a gun while being an "unlawful user." It wasn't related to drug trafficking or "anything like that." 

He was just someone who used marijuana "every other day."  Oh. He had cocaine, too. But, hey, he said he didn't use it recently, or anything.  

The justices, including Jackson (with Sotomayor), who concurred to say it was stupid, granted that Bruen was good law. "All Americans" (what does that mean? are longstanding residents who are not citizens, "Americans"?) have an individual right to keep and bear arms for self-defense. 

The opinion didn't provide a whole quote from that opinion. For instance, Bruen opens with a basic statement that "ordinary, law-abiding citizens have a similar right to carry handguns publicly for their self-defense." 

Marijuana possession is a federal crime. Hemani was not a "law-abiding" citizen. He admitted it. Note also that this opinion doesn't say "citizen." It speaks of "All Americans." 

We should, however, look at what the Court specifically decided. That often requires some nuance. Reporting and a quick read often lead to wider assumptions.

The opinion reminds that regulations need to be “consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation." The federal government said that the specific provision involved matches up with "habitual drunkard" laws.

Gorsuch argues the "how" and "why" of such laws don't match the current provision. Again, framing things Hemani's way, he notes that otherwise the law in question allows for "prison for up to 15 years and disarmed for life." 

The opinion notes the government "seeks to prosecute" Hemani. It is unlikely they will seek a term anywhere near that length. The lifetime disarmament fears are also somewhat premature. 

Habitual drunkard laws generally disarmed people who were typically so drunk that they could not go about their normal business. That is not what is involved here. Unlawful use regularly doesn't involve people being drugged out of their minds daily. 

(The provision also could apply to something like Adderall. People regularly use that, including to "cram for exams." They aren't like "habitual drunkards.") 

The opinion reminds us that at the time of the Founding, people drank a lot of alcohol. Yes. 

For various reasons, including the fact that it was safer than most beverages. Our drinking habits are different now. We are also a much more populated society, with more dangerous guns, and more ways they are liable to cause harm. Also, in time, we determined that drugs could cause various harms, leading to regulation.

The specific focus on "habitual drunkard" laws, which are cited by the government to satisfy the Court's own rules, leads to a limited result. The provision here is a bad fit, yes, but the forcing is the Court's fault.

The Court flags that many drug users would not be violent. The law in question does not provide a hearing before disarming. Okay? 

Congress determined that certain drugs were dangerous enough as such. These developments happened later. Appeals to original history are of limited value here. 

Sometimes, the drugs involved are regulated for health reasons. This is not the same as being "categorically" dangerous. Recent events regarding rescheduling marijuana only emphasize this. 

The opinion ends by underlining that various types of firearm bans still might be acceptable. For instance, those that cover people actually intoxicated. Hemani regularly is intoxicated. 

Thomas references the Commerce Clause, which the majority notes wasn't involved here. The link to interstate commerce depends on the situation, including how the gun was obtained. 

Jackson cites the problem with Bruen. She favors "means-ends" scrutiny instead of so much focus on "contested historical questions." 

Scrutinizing the fit between a challenged law’s justification and its operation is an essential part of any sensible framework for Second Amendment adjudication.

Alito adds more on how marijuana is generally accepted today in his concurrence with Kagan. It's a reasonable-sounding opinion, though, having a "living constitutionalist" flavor. Not that I find that problematic. It cites how current practices are like original ones, but don't know how much that adds. 

The question presented directly addressed the Second Amendment. It probably would have been better if the opinion had simply, perhaps as a matter of constitutional avoidance, found the provision too vague and arbitrary. It said as much in a fashion.

The law literally would cover everyone who uses the covered substances. It might result in extreme results. See also, prosecutorial discretion, and its usage in this case, arising from an apparently mistaken investigation. "Morals" legislation, including drugs, regularly leads to such arbitrary results. 

[Underlining the value of careful scrutiny.]

The government, however, provided a narrower application. Just what that entails, however, is vague and open to arbitrary application. Since constitutional rights are at stake, it would be best to avoid that, including by raising procedural due process red flags. 

(A law that threatens free speech might be held to be overbroad even if the specific speech involved can be criminalized. The citation of Adderall fits in here.)

If we grant a constitutional right to own a firearm, it is reasonable to require a careful process to be in place before criminalization. The law here, like the reference to Adderall suggests, is not just about marijuana. I understand the result.

Nonetheless, the appeal to "habitual drunkard" laws was the road to confusion. Yes, the law isn't really like that. It was just cited to try to fit things into Bruen

The specific person here was a regular user of marijuana. It is an intoxicant. I think marijuana should be legal, and I appreciate the move to reschedule (which was done after Hemani's possession). But Hemani was an "unlawful" user of a drug, which (rarely unenforced, it might be) had serious penalties.

Again, this raises due process concerns, like other morals crimes. So, the result here is sound, on some level. The details, however, turn me off.

For instance, the overall logic of the opinion suggests you really don't have to be a "law-abiding citizen" to have RKBA. People can possess and even regularly use illegal substances. The government has to provide a careful process to show that the usage is dangerous enough not to own a firearm. 

And, what of other law-breakers? One lower court addressed people who commit welfare fraud. What level of law-breaking warrants disarmament? And, is a "lifetime ban" particularly a problem? 

The Supreme Court in the past referenced 14A, sec. 2, to allow felony disenfranchisement. Is gun possession different? The militia and voting are likely connected. See also jury service. The opinion not referencing the "law-abiding" language ... is that notable? 

Anyway, I doubt the Hawaii decision will be unanimous. We are likely to see it later this week. They should have decided the two opinions together. Show how the Court "reasonably" disagrees, with one gun case unanimous, the other likely 6-3. 

Finally, will marijuana usage now show up as polite in other cases? Some people claim marijuana has religious uses. The arguments tended to fail, but now litigants have a supportive opinion, especially if selectively quoted. 

Will federal RFRA claims work now? Time will tell.  

Friday, June 19, 2026

Young and Innocent

 


This Hitchcock film was on TCM. I liked the co-star, who looks older than she was. 1930s film. Well paced. 

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Their Finest


I read the book and watched the film (fairly loyal to the book) before. I did so again, finishing the book today. The author did a lot of (WWII-related) research. 

Both are recommended. The DVD has a director's commentary. The book cover is from the film.

The book has more subplots and is a quick read (over 400 pages). The film in the book and film have different titles.