Category Archives: Law: Ethics

Judge In His Own Case

It's a little short, but Federal Judge Pulls His Suit From Courts Run by State sure makes it sound like something seriously wrong happened here: a “federal judge in Louisiana has taken control of an accident case involving his car and issued an order transferring evidence about his medical condition to a sealed federal court file.”

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I Hate It When She’s Right

Most of the time I think Maureen Down’s column varies between vacuous and an insult to our collective intelligence. But I have to admit that about twice a year she hits one out of the park. Sunday’s paper has one one of those power slams: Quid Pro Quack, about Justice Scalia's apologia pro anas:

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Scalia Won’t Recuse. No Way. No How. Got That?

Scalia takes 21 pages to explain why he will not recuse himself in the Cheney case

Some of the arguments are pretty good; others hover round the laugh test. Can anyone really believe that,

Nothing this Court says on those subjects will have any bearing upon the reputation and integrity of Richard Cheney. Moreover, even if this Court affirms the decision below and allows discovery to proceed in the District Court, the issue that would ultimately present itself still would have no bearing upon the reputation and integrity of Richard Cheney.

Can anyone believe that? I sure don't.

I'd post more, but I have a deadline. (Thanks, Dan, for the tip.)

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Someone Needed to Look in the Mirror

The Mirror of Justice continues to be an interesting blog. Take for example, Mark Sargent, The Church's Lawyers, discussing the moral and ethical duties of the principals and the lawyers defending the Catholic church against what proved to be a plethora of justified charges of priestly abuse.

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Text of Motion for Scalia Recusal

Further to Sierra Club Moves for Scalia Recual, here is the full text of the Sierra Club's Motion to Recuse Justice Scalia (also available in pdf ). Note exhibit 2, Scalia's letter to the Los Angeles Times, and exhibit 3, which includes the very funny editorial cartoons.

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Sierra Club Moves for Scalia Recusal

There's no way Justice Scalia can duck the issue now that Sierra Club has formally moved for recusal in the Cheney case.

The Sierra Club today formally requested the recusal of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia from its case against Vice President Cheney and the secret Energy Task Force. Citing the intense public attention drawn to the January duck hunting trip taken by Cheney and Scalia, the Sierra Club reluctantly concluded that recusal is necessary to “redress an appearance of impropriety and to restore public confidence in the integrity of our nation's highest court.”

“Unfortunately, the Cheney-Scalia vacation mirrors the secrecy with which the Bush Administration often conducts business,” said David Bookbinder, Sierra Club's Washington Legal Director. “The public is continually shut out.”

The recusal motion filed today cites the dozens of editorials and editorial cartoons calling for Justice Scalia's withdrawal from the case as evidence that his impartiality is being reasonably questioned—the federal test for recusal. From the editorials and cartoons in papers across the country, to Jay Leno's monologue on the Tonight show, opinion leaders are questioning this trip and how it reflects on the Supreme Court.

“The public debate clearly echoes the common sense conclusion that the duck-hunting vacation taken by Cheney and Scalia creates the appearance of impropriety,” said Bookbinder.

The tactic of using the public commentary as evidence is sort of interesting, and demonstrates the wisdom—and also the possible vice—of the standard being one of 'reasonable appearance'.

On balance, I think it's a good standard, as one doesn't wish to put litigants into the postion of having to claim actual bias. No one would, and they'd never win. And this case is one where I think that the reasonable appearance of bias is quite clear. But I could imagine many cases in which the papers had a field day, but the accusation was not reasonable.

Bottom line: I don't sign on to the 'lots of smoke equals fire' view. A public outrcry, or even lots of jokes, is not sufficient to create a need for a recusal. And I don't understand the Sierra Club (based on the press release quoted above) to be arguing that the issue is that simple either. Rather, I take it that the evidence of public beliefs is presented at least in part to counter Scalia's public dismisal of the reasonableness of the concern in this case.

Just to repeat in case you missed it: the case involves the legality of secret meetings between Chaney and oil company execs. Some have alleged/speculated that in addition to discussing how to gut environmental rules, some pariticpants disucssed who would get access to Iraq's oil…and this in the early days of the current administration.

Justice Scalia's long and private trip—a multi-day secret meeting, albeit a social even not a business meeting—suggests not only a close relation with the litigant, but also a tin ear to the issues of openness.

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