Order List
Today's Order List was long enough that it suggested additional writings. It also had some notable developments, including a case that might further weaken Oregon v. Smith (general applicable laws are generally acceptable for religious liberty purposes).
One case on the "shadow docket":
By a 6–3 vote, and with no opinion, the Supreme Court throws out a lower court decision denying qualified immunity who killed an unarmed, mentally ill man by using "bodyweight force" to restrain him. All three liberals dissented.
A per curiam error corrects a lower court Fourth Amendment decision. Sotomayor, without comment, wouldn't provide relief. Jackson dissents with an opinion.
Sotomayor, in a statement, discusses a dispute involving a child abduction measure. She agrees it is something they should eventually address.
This specific lawsuit, however, is procedurally inappropriate to take. Nonetheless, she argues it was at least partially a self-inflicted wound by the Court.
Sotomayor, without comment, also noted she would have granted a case alleging evidence was not properly supplied in a criminal case.
Shadow Docket Story
Steve Vladeck addresses a NYT article, with internal documents, discussing a major change in the shadow/emergency/interim docket in 2016. I agree with his overall analysis. The articles provide sunlight on issues of special concern. The actions are troubling.
Fix the Court suggests a proper response would be congressional legislation requiring transparency. If they abuse the process, jurisdiction stripping and budget cuts would be some possible consequences.
(This was suggested in an email I received via a subscription.)
Or we can go the route of certain conservatives who think the leak is the biggest problem. The overall comments there, as I noted in a comment, ignore that internal deliberations are regularly leaked. Full documents are a step beyond that, but that might be appropriate (e.g., Pentagon Papers).
Thomas vs. Progressives
Prof. Segall focuses on his corruption -- Harlan Crow -- but also links to a wider discussion, how his usual "just so" historical account is garbled. This is who conservatives deem their model judge.
Happy Birthday, Justice John Paul Stevens. And Adolf Hitler, apparently, going by Justice Thomas.
Meanwhile ...
Some good news in a lower state court in Pennsylvania, which, on state constitutional grounds, struck down a Hyde Amendment. A concurring opinion also cited religious liberty.
Some state courts went this route in the past. The principle should be applied nationwide.

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