From  Z Editor  I can hardly believe this rag has been  going for Fourteen issues. One or two new subscribers express an  interest with each fresh vituperative slam. It  feels like progress,  even though bimonthly or quarterly instead of monthly has become the  norm.  Nonetheless, I hope you are enjoying the highlights of all  the news and spin that's fit to font. It is distressing to fall  behind with each new development, and so I've been resigned to  skimming the highs and lows of what I think is “the big” news.   I'm sorry I've been unable to keep up with all the circuit cases in  advance as I tried once to do.  And as always, a very warm welcome  to all newbies.  Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays and Happy New  Year to all. May 2008 be long and prosperous. Or short, if you are  up for release.
  The  Supreme Court is in the mid-term recess, and finally issued its  first opinions of the term in December.  Also, there have been some  curious developments in the criminal sentencing, sex offender  commitment and residency challenges areas.  GPS monitoring has been  in the spotlight as well.  And, as always, more DNA exonerations and  freeing of innocents jailed.    
     I was able to read “The Innocent Man” by John  Grisham over a short Christmas break.  I'm glad I did, even though I  once thought it hit too close to home and avoided it.  The main  theme about the end of the presumption of innocence is sad but true:   rotten apples in law enforcement have done untold harm in this  arena. Overall, the book has my highest recommendation.        
     The  Supreme Court affirmed the moratorium on lethal injection executions  until Baze can be decided, and Boumedienne put habeas  in the spotlight Wednesday (12/5).  There was an interesting debate  at the Federalist  Society website on this. Tim Lynch (CATO Institute) asserted that  the DTA/MCA (Detainee Treatment/Military Commissions Acts) is an  unlawful suspension of the constitutional writ of habeas corpus.  Marty Lederman joined in questioning the efficacy of the  government's arguments. The voices from the “right” come from  ex-government prosecutors and Bushies who cannot assume quickly  enough that anyone arrested anywhere -- by feds, CIA, SpOp, Army,  Marine or whomever -- must be, you guessed it, bad guys.  What's so  Kafkaesque is that when you ask for the evidence they just tell you  its “classified” or “we can't tell you.”   
     Oh well. Just trust 'em. I, for one, will not trust  one Republican politician with one more dollar ever again, not after  what's happened in the past eight years of Republican rule.  Carefully note the qualification as discrimination is not on party  affiliation alone:  Republican is okay by me, but don't be both, a  politician too, because that's not kosher. They say Republicans  don't handle power well, and isn't it curious that's what they're  saying about Candidate Rudy Giuliani? Well okay, maybe I've been  looking for just the right excuse not to pay my taxes this year.   
     In the words of one big-time attorney for the  defendants, military commission hearings are “a joke”.  If the  commission finds that there isn't enough evidence to hold the guy  they simply schedule another hearing until the guy loses.  That is  not some wacko talking but a lawyer, in some instances a former JAG  officer. The inside scoop sends a very clear message about command  pressure. It speaks ugly volumes about the guys responsible for  running the place, and I don't just mean Gitmo.  It speaks volumes  about us generally, about America, and what we've become. A nation  of laws, or a nation of flawed laws? A nation in need of fixing.
     Speaking of scoop, apparently one tuff grandma (from  Texas) has a son, a former White House Spokesman who claims he was  mislead into making false statements to the public and thereby  actually becoming the mouthpiece for the communication of lies to  the public by, of all people, the President, Vice President and  their closest aids.  This seems another one of those, “if anybody  should know ...” cases.  But wait, try this one on for size, “if  you can't trust the government whom can you trust?”    
     Speaking of trust, guess whom a congressional  committee voted to hold in contempt of Congress:  Gonzo Attorney  General Gonzales, and gonzo top WH official  and nominee to Supreme  Court, Harriet -- I'm-so-good-at-writing  thank-you-notes-to-my-boss-the-President -- Meiers.
     Where the Gitmo guys could go upon being released is a  really good question.  One (facetious) response is that they'd come  aboard and apply for political asylum. After six years of Gitmo  they're really in need of some R and R, and maybe that should be  someplace near an Iranian nuclear facility. I'll bet we could  arrange that. How about this: a convoy of cruise missiles with Gitmo  guys strapped on?  It's not like we've treated them honorably the  way we'd treat real POWs. What's that story about killing two birds  with one rocket? Convenience. Buy now, pay later.
     How pissed off would you be if, just if, you really  were innocently swept up in Afghanistan, or in the current case,  Algerians found in Bosnia after the Supreme Court there found  insufficient evidence and ordered your release? We've picked up  Canadians and German residents as well and rendered them. Say, I've  got a really great idea.  Take all the “illegal” immigrants we  can find and do them like that. Very target rich environment exists  right here at home. And we won't really have to worry except perhaps  housekeepers and nannies and ag and meatpacking workers will have to  be replaced, along with the good cheap construction labor. That's  the bad news. The good news, and there is always good news along  with the bad, is that due to the recent ailment of the biggest  “subprime” mortgage lenders, we won't need much homebuilding  labor for a time.  We won't need manufacturing labor either because  that's all being done in China and parts East.   
     Apparently we threatened Bosnia with termination of  diplomatic relations if they refused to cooperate in the “arrest”  of these guys after the Bosnian Supreme Court ordered their release.  WOW. I wonder what the real evidence is against them.   
     Now, I'm starting to get worried about getting calls  from overseas because it might just provide the excuse for feds to  start scanning all my mail, email and cellphone calls.  Recently  some a--hole from Nigeria, get this, he's pretending to be a  Japanese pharmaceutical executive (the company supposedly sells meds  for upset stomach, aches and pains!) appoints me “agent” then  calls me and says they want my bank account information so they can  wire me money. That's a good one!  Do I look like a complete and  total imbecile? Don't answer that question. Sorry, but after I  started talking to the guy in Japanese I had to tell him I was  calling the FBI on him it made me so mad. Lucky for me I know the  language.  So anyway, at that point he really started to sound a lot  more like a Nigerian guy than an oriental. Orientals have that  distinctive accent. You can't miss it. But those Nigerians, they're  sharp. They've got oil too. I wondered then if these guys actually  knew I'd been in Japan and was actually part Japanese.  Naturally,  I'm getting pretty good at detecting Nigerian accents. It's  definitely an essential skill for making it on the outside. And  Remember Bruce singing “Born in the USA” a few years back. You  can't always take that stuff personally if you are Nigerian or  Japanese, or an immigrant or something. Say, wasn't Pele from  Nigeria? Bruce, Bruce came to a frat house in college one winter and  blasted us out. Awesome. Black Sabbath came one year too. They  played in the auditorium. Now, music is on electronic jukeboxes in  all your neighborhood dives. Push the buttons on screen and music  menus magically appear.
     In fact, I actually expect to be rendered any day now.   See y'all.  The black helicopters are starting to swarm the  neighborhood again.
     There was a rally at the Ohio State House against  repressive legislation that in effect if not by intent is designed  to create a new class of homeless, jobless Americans. We are talking  about the so-called “residency restrictions.” As if it wasn't  idiotic enough to require “registration” and publish your  personal information, predictably inviting vigilantes and  witch-hunting, murder, mayhem and mutilation.    
     What has become of America?    
     Citing “fiscal responsibility” the President keeps  vetoing children's health care bills (SCHIP) while asking for  increases in the trillions for military authorizations in Iraq. In  defense of what? Wholesale violations of privacy, usurious credit  card and mortgage companies, killer toy importers, foreign oil  barons. It is undisputed that during the six years of the Bush II  imperium, imperium not in the sense of superpower which is fine by  me (I like living in superpower-dom), but in the resemblance of  martial law and arbitrary military rule, not to mention repressive  economic policies that have been opening a Grand Canyon, okay,  Texas-size income gap.  Sadder and wiser should be the people.  But  what have we learned?    
     How to vote against our own self interests, that's  what. Can Obama be the ticket to save America from a  Bush/Clinton/Bush/Clinton reign of Yaley friends and family: Skull  and Bones? It's all good if you went to one of those elite  universities. The top Fortune 500 companies boasts only one minority  CEO, and he recently got ousted (Parsons).  That sounds like a “good  ol' boy club” to me. White, black, yellow, red ... doesn't matter  to me, but I do recognize the signs of dictatorial rule.    Curiously, Chavez of Venezuela (the state owner of Citgo, the  national oil company there) sought to pass a law to appoint himself  president-for-life.  The vote failed -- good for the people. Again,  some people don't handle power  well.  Of course, Venezuela's  Citizen's Oil, as it's called, offers to provide heating fuel to  Americans who've fallen on hard times and can't afford to buy it.   At least that's what their TV ad says.
  Reflections     Just a few final  reflections for the year. My last letter went out late in October  and seven or eight short weeks have passed.  It is called overcome  by events.  First, Thanksgiving. Now Christmas. And New Years of  course.      
     As I have been thinking about  the Holidays, events of the past year, what's happened and has not  happened, where I've been and have not been, I think we all do this  reflectivity “subconsciously,” whether or not we take the  opportunity to express it outwardly in some fashion.  For some, it  might simply be a “Happy Holidays” or “Merry Christmas”.    Here goes my list for 2007:
     We have not gotten into another  war.    
     We have come close to an  economic recession: In fact we may be heading into one.      
     The rich have gotten a lot  richer.    
     The Presidential candidates  have been spending money like drunken sailors.    
     The Democrats seem to be having  a good year in terms of raising money, for candidates and in polls.     
     The nation is still divided  almost fifty/fifty between Red and Blue.    
     The Political Independent  movement seems to be a growth phenomenon.    
     New electronic gadgets are  racing to market faster than anybody can buy them (or figure out how  to use them).    
     We are still guzzling gasoline  at record rates.  So is China, but even faster than us.    
     Global Warming seems to have  become an accepted reality:  Unfortunately nobody knows what to do  about it.\
     Tragically, Pakistan's  democratic contender, Benazir Bhutto, was assasinated in the final  week of 2007.
     Reggie's team (my junior in  high school) won the State 3A soccer title. It was only because of  all the hooting and hollering I did personally, from the sidelines.
     We took a vacation to Maine in  July.   
     Life on the outside has gotten  both simpler and more complicated, for me.  As I  become committed  to “working” as some people call it -- making money, a living,  whatever -- I have less time for other more interesting pursuits,  like writing this newsletter.   
     I wish I could describe the  scenery around here better, but here's a stab:  Brunswick is a  railroad town on the Potomac just below the Shenandoah River's  confluence, where Harper's Ferry sits.  Sharpsburg, Shepardstown,  Antietam, Gettysburg are within striking distance.  The C&O  Canal runs from D.C. through Brunswick up to Cumberland and,  presumably, all the way to the Ohio River.  Lots of history here.   Maryland Heights, which housed naval batteries overlooking Harpers  Ferry and the Canal is one of my favorite short hikes.  The view is  awesome from the overlook.  At the top, a good three hour round  trip, is the remains of an old stone fort.  Pres. Lincoln is said to  have climbed up to a point and exclaimed the path was nearly  vertical in places. It is. One can only imagine how many men it took  to haul big guns up these paths.  War sure is a labor intensive  business.   
     That said, here is Prof.  Berman's top ten for 2007.  “By any measure, 2007 has been an  amazing sentencing year, and I am not sure how to rank the  significance of all these events:
  -New  USSC reduced crack guidelines   
  -USSC  decision to to make its new guidelines retroactive Supreme Court's  post-Booker decisions in Rita and then Gall and Kimbrough   
  -The  "celebrity" sentencings of Conrad Black, Paris Hilton,  Lewis Libby and Michael Vick   
  -Commutation  of Lewis Libby's sentence by President Bush   
  -Hub-bub  and eventually striking down of Genarlow Wilson's mandatory sentence    
  -Continued  hub-bub over the former border agent's mandatory sentences   
  -California  and other states' on-going struggles with its prison over-crowding  problems   
  -Sex  offender GPS tracking become more common and thus more costly   
  -Georgia  state supreme court striking down state's sex offender residency  restriction   
  -Heightened  debate over child rape as a death-eligible offense   
  -Abolition  of the death penalty in New Jersey   
  -De  facto moratorium on executions as a result of Baze case before the  Supreme Court”
  Enron: Skilling's  Appeal Marches On  Thanks to White Collar Crime Prof Blog, the 162-page reply brief(!)  filed by Jeff Skilling's legal team in his Fifth Circuit appeal is  accessible online.  The sentencing arguments begin on page 143,  and these disparity arguments are developed starting at page 152.  Recall that Andy Fastow got six after plea agreement to ten.
  Re-Entry  and Sentencing:  The next issue of Federal Sentencing  Reporter is focused on re-entry issues.  The introductory essay  for this issue (FSR Volume 20, No. 2) available at SSRN is entitled  "The Second Chance Act and the Future of the Reentry Movement."   From the abstract:  Recently passed by the House of Representatives  with strong bipartisan support and currently awaiting action in the  Senate, the Second Chance Act of 2007 (H.R. 1593) would authorize  about $340 million in new spending on programs that support the  reintegration of returning prisoners to their communities.  If  enacted, the SCA would represent a new milestone in the growing  influence of the prisoner reentry movement, which has focused public  attention on the daunting obstacles facing returning prisoners who  seek to rebuild their lives as productive citizens. This essay  critiques aspects of the SCA, considers the implications of the  reentry movement for sentencing, and argues that reentry-based  reforms should not be conceptualized primarily as recidivism  reduction measures, but as opportunities to fulfill ethical  obligations to some of the most marginalized and disadvantaged  members of society.
    Although  decreased crime rates are certainly a plausible and desirable  consequence of devoting more attention and resources to offenders  during their transition from prison, conceptualizing the reentry  “problem” as a law enforcement issue misses many of the most  important social welfare and social justice concerns implicated in  the treatment of returning prisoners, and threatens to reinforce,  rather then supplant, the legalist mindset that fuels mass  incarceration.
    I  wonder where that money is going to end up?  And who is going to get  a slice of the pie??  Guesses, anybody? My money is on “the  government” -- state gov't programs, federal gov't programs;  Churches and community action agencies; employment agencies,  education and training.  Prisoners released from prisons: zero. So  here it is:   
  I.  The Second Chance Act
  As  passed by the House, the SCA authorizes about $340 million in  reentry-related
  spending  over two years, most of which would be distributed in the form of  grants to state, local, and tribal authorities. In itself, this  would represent a significant new infusion of resources into reentry  programs, for instance, more than doubling the annual funding  provided under the SVORI. Additionally, because the grants require  substantial matching contributions by the recipients, the SCA may  also induce significant increases in reentry-related spending at the  state and local level. On the other hand, when assessed against the  number and needs of the 1.3 million or so prisoners who will be  released over the two-year period (or, for that matter, the nation’s  nearly $50 billion in annual spending on corrections10), the SCA’s  commitment of funds can hardly be regarded as dramatic. The SCA’s  single largest authorization ($55 million per year) is intended for  adult and juvenile offender demonstration projects. The program’s  requirements exemplify the SCA’s general approach to reentry.  Grant recipients (state, local, or tribal agencies) must develop a  reentry strategic plan containing measurable performance outcomes,  one of which must be a 50 percent reduction in recidivism rates over  five years.11 Other required performance measures include increased  employment, education, and housing opportunities for offenders  released back into the community.12 Grant recipients must  collaborate with corrections, health, housing, child welfare,  education, substance abuse, victims services, employment services,  and law enforcement agencies, and convene reentry tasks forces  comprised of diverse agencies and community organizations.13  Priority must be given to applicants who provide prerelease reentry  planning and continuity in the provision of services.14
    In  another notable provision, discussed by Eric Miller in his  contribution to this issue,15
  the  SCA also authorizes $20 million in grants for state and local  reentry courts.16 Such courts, modeled on the specialized drug  treatment courts that have been implemented in many jurisdictions  over the past 15 years, would give judges a pivotal role not only in  monitoring returning offenders, but also in ensuring that returnees  are provided with “coordinated and comprehensive reentry  services,” including substance abuse treatment, housing  assistance, education, employment training, and the like.17 To that  end, courts receiving grants are specifically required to consult  and coordinate with law enforcement, social service, and community  agencies. Throughout, the SCA emphasizes recidivism reduction as a  primary legislative purpose, but recognizes that this objective is  not just a matter for the courts and law enforcement agencies.  Rather, the bill contemplates that assistance for returning  prisoners in such areas as housing, employment, education, and  substance abuse treatment will also contribute to crime prevention  goals. Moreover, in promoting the delivery of such services, the SCA  also recognizes the importance of planning (at both a global level  and an individual prisoner level), multiagency collaboration, and  continuity through pre- and post-release stages. In short, the SCA  repudiates
  the  notion that recidivism reduction is best achieved through deterrent  threats alone and calls for the delivery of services to former  prisoners, not in a minimal or grudging way, but in a systematic,  proactive fashion.
  II.  Reentry and Sentencing
  As  exemplified by the SCA, a core (perhaps the  core)  principle of the reentry movement
  is  that successful reintegration of an offender often requires the  thoughtful collaboration of
  diverse  actors over an extended period of time. The movement’s logic, as  Michael Pinard suggests in his contribution to this issue, must  inevitably direct attention to the actors who dominate the front end  of the process, including the lawyers and judges who control  sentencing decisions.18 And, indeed, as Ryan King indicates in his  contribution, one of the most provocative recent developments in  state-level sentencing law has been the adoption of legislation in  New York and Oregon that requires consideration of reentry needs at  the time of
  sentencing.19  The remainder of this Part discusses four ways that a reentry focus  might affect sentencing.
  A.  Punishment Culture and Overall Severity  A  reentry focus may contribute to a fundamental shift in the culture  of punishment. Elsewhere, I have argued that American criminal  justice policy has been dominated in recent decades by a legalist  mindset.20 Legalists draw sharp moral distinctions between legal and  illegal conduct, heap moral condemnation on lawbreakers, and  emphasize consistent, severe penal responses to deter crime and  reinforce law-based moral norms. Legalism is premised on the  assumptions that criminals freely choose to break the law, that a  choice to break the law constitutes a basic rejection of the entire  system of shared responsibilities that holds society together, and  that the criminal thereby surrenders any strong claim that he or she  might otherwise have to the respect or support of others in his or  her community. This legalist approach to
  criminal  justice might be contrasted with a harm-reduction approach.  Harm-reductionists eschew unrestrained moral condemnation, recognize  that criminal acts may sometimes represent a failing of society as  much as a failing of the criminal, and emphasize constructive social  responses to crime that are intended to minimize future harm  (including the harm suffered by the criminal as a result of the  conviction and sentence).
    The  reentry movement adheres more to the harm-reduction than to the  legalist paradigm.
  Indeed,  the whole notion of delivering services to offenders is, at some  basic level, inconsistent with legalism. Establishing an affirmative  role for others, in addition to the offender himself or herself, in  addressing recidivism risks dilutes the legalist message that  avoiding crime is a simple matter of making good choices between  clear right and wrong. Moreover, systematic efforts to plan for an  offender’s reentry—particularly at the early stages in the  process, such as sentencing or plea bargaining, before the offender  has had much opportunity to demonstrate remorse and a genuine  commitment to do better in the future—implies that the offender is  entitled to  return and resume membership in the community, thereby undercutting  the legalist project of moral condemnation and harsh deterrence.  Finally, the reentry movement’s  call for individualized planning and treatment of offenders is in  tension with legalism’s emphasis on consistency in punishment and  its assumption that all similar offense conduct has the same moral  significance,
  regardless  of the offender’s personal history and characteristics. In short,  the reentry movement has the potential to join other growing  movements in the criminal justice system with a harm reductionist  flavor (e.g., therapeutic jurisprudence, restorative justice,  problem-solving courts, and, to some extent, victims’ rights) in  weakening legalism’s hold over penal law and policy (which is best  exemplified by truth in sentencing, mandatory minimums, and the  federal sentencing guidelines).21  THE  SECOND CHANCE ACT AND THE FUTURE OF THE REENTRY MOVEMENT,  Michael M. O’Hear,  pp  3-5.   
    Z's  NB. The biggest bang for the buck would be to “legalize”  drugs, esp. marijuana and probably also cocaine, which was at one  time freely available in Coca Cola, which would immediately and  automatically eliminate half or more of all crimes and the  opportunity for crime. Regulate, don't criminalize:  Amsterdam and  Vancouver, B.C. provide the examples. Only then could we get down to  the real business of fighting crime, terrorism, etc. Opportunities  in the illegal international drug trade are just too vast and  inviting. We should simply let the foreign drug cartel(s) do  business legally,  but with the US government, which controls the intra-  national drug trade. Whom could possibly be opposed to this  reform?  Possibly, just possibly, only those who benefit from the  current system: organized crime groups and the law enforcement  agent(s/ies) who make a career of purportedly enforcing those  obsolete and ineffective drug laws.
  Want  More, Give More?  RIO  DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) --  Arrested on a charge of theft, a teenage girl was locked up in an  Amazon jail for weeks with 21 men who would only let her eat in  return for sex. Feminist Law Professors post.
  From  California, (AP  article)  an "advisory panel created by Gov. Arnold  Schwarzenegger considered Thursday how to fix the sex-offender law  passed last year because it fails to say who is responsible for  tracking offenders' whereabouts once they complete parole."   Here are more details:  The initiative, known as Jessica's Law, was  approved by 70 percent of voters in 2006. It stiffens penalties for  sex offenders, prohibits released offenders from living within 2,000  feet of a school or park and requires that they wear satellite  tracking devices for the rest of their lives.   But the  law doesn't specify whether the state, counties or local police  departments should have jurisdiction over offenders once they are  off parole. It also does not include money to pay for lifetime GPS  monitoring and has no penalty for ex-parolees who simply remove the  ankle bracelets.... Representatives of county sheriff's and local  police departments said they do not have enough money or staff to  take over the monitoring program. The corrections department  estimates it could cost about $7 per day to monitor each offender  with a minimal GPS monitoring system. The state's more extensive GPS  system costs about $33 per offender per day, but that includes the  cost of the parole agents.  "We don't know what it's going to  cost, and the conservative estimates are hundreds of millions of  dollars" as more offenders complete parole, said Nancy  O'Malley, chief assistant district attorney in Alameda County.   There are so many interesting and telling dimensions to this story:  the public's broad support for GPS tracking without concern for the  costly particulars; the inevitability of techno-corrections being  impeded by cost concerns; the willingness of Gov. Schwarzenegger to  create a commission to study this issue while he opposed the  creation of a much-needed sentencing commission for his state.
  SCOTUS  Focus  In the January  Calendar, (here  thanks to SCOTUS blog) seven of the twelve cases so far scheduled  are clearly criminal, including the lethal injection case. The  Supreme Court will open with constitutional issues surrounding the  lethal injection method of execution Jan. 7, Baze  v. Rees  (07-5439), the Kentucky case raising three issues about the  three-drug protocol for execution, now used in 36 states. Two  combined cases from Indiana on requiring photo IDs to vote will be  heard in the first hour on Wednesday, Jan. 9.   
  Monday, Jan. 7 Baze  v. Rees  (07-5439) — constitutionality of lethal injection protocol.  Dada  v. Mukasey  (06-1181) –postponement of agreement for alien to voluntarily  leave U.S.
  Tuesday, Jan. 8   Gonzalez  v. U.S.  (06-11612) — waiver of right to Article III judge to preside over  jury selection when counsel agreed to have a U.S. magistrate instead
  Boulware  v. U.S.  (06-1509) —  taxation on diversion of corporate funds to shareholder of a firm  that has no profits
  Wednesday, Jan. 9   Crawford  v. Marion County Election Board  (07-21) and Indiana  Democratic Party v. Rokita  (07-25) — constitutionality of requiring voters to show a photo ID  before they may vote (Cases consolidated for one hour of argument)
  Kentucky  Retirement Systems v. EEOC  (06-1037) — scope of age bias in disability benefits packages
  Monday, Jan. 14   Virginia  v. Moore  (06-1082) — lawfulness of search following an arrest that violates  state law  Preston  v. Ferrer  (06-1463) — federal preemption of arbitration agreement on talent  agent’s fees
  Tuesday, Jan. 15   U.S.  v. Rodriquez  (06-1646) — crimes that qualify for enhanced sentence under armed  career criminal law; specific issue involves state drug crime  conviction  Begay  v. U.S.  (06-11543)– whether felony drunk-driving is a violent felony for  purposes of enhanced sentencing under armed career criminal law
  Wednesday, Jan. 16   Quanta  Computer v.  LG Electronics  (06-937) — definition of exhaustion of patent rights when licensee  sells products containing the patent Meadwestvaco  Corp. v. Illinois Department of Revenue  (06-1413) — validity of state tax on sale of investment in  LexisNexis
     I looked briefly  at  (a  link) the Fourth  Amendment case and the Virginia Supreme Court was right on this one.  If states refuse to provide a remedy for violation of state law, law  that is "within the scope or reach" of a (intentionally)  similar provision of the Bill of Rights, they should be held to the  federal remedy. The states should not be invited to re-write the  Bill of Rights and fail to enforce the revision.
The Gitmo  Detainee Cases march on: here is link  to reply briefs.
The fallout from Carey v Musladin is beginning  to hit the ground, as seen here,  in a brief in opposition to certiorari, involving defendant's habeas  relief under either Cronic or Strickland. The brief does an  exceptional job of clarifying the notion of "clearly  established law"... as well as the distinctions among Hill,  Cronic, Strickland lines of ineffectiveness of assistance of counsel  claims.   
    SCOTUSblog  details "petitions to watch" at the Justices' private  conference scheduled for January 4, 2008:   
    Docket: 07-61  Case name:  Mathias v. United States-Issue: Whether an escape conviction  following a failure to return to a work release program is a violent  felony for purposes of the Armed Career Criminal Act. (Note: similar  issues are presented in No. 06-10751, Golden v. United States, and  No. 06-11206, Chambers v. United States.)
  Docket:  07-343  Case name: Kennedy v. Louisiana-Issue: Whether the Eighth  Amendment bar on cruel and unusual punishment prohibits capital  punishment for the crime of child rape.
  Docket:  07-452  Case name: Schriro v. Lambright-Issue: Whether, under  Tennard v. Dretke (2001), a court may consider the lack of any  causal connection between potential mitigating evidence and the  crime in determining whether the failure to introduce the evidence  prejudiced the defendant.
  Docket:  07-478 Case name: Hartmann v. Burris-Issue: Whether seeking  discretionary state court review of a criminal conviction tolls the  one year filing requirement under AEDPA.
  From  Grits: Sign Our Judicial Complaint Against Judge Sharon Keller.   If you are as shocked as we were by Judge Sharon Keller saying "We  close at 5" and refusing to accept an appeal 20 minutes after 5  PM by lawyers representing a man about to be executed, then sign on  to this complaint. We will submit this complaint to the State  Commission on Judicial Conduct on November 16, 2007, which is also  the day we will have a protest at the Texas Court of Criminal  Appeals at 4:45pm. Anyone can sign the complaint. In order for your  name to count on the complaint for the submission, you must provide  all the requested contact information, including your phone number  and occupation. If you would like to download a copy of the  complaint for your records, click here.  If you would like to help  us with a donation, please click the button to the left or send a  check made out to Texas Moratorium Network to 3616 Far West Blvd,  Suite 117, Box 251, Austin, Texas 78731. Donations are not  tax-deductible. If you have questions, please call 512-302-6715.
  "quis  custodiet ipsos custodes?"    
  - "Who will guard the  guards?" wrote the Roman poet Juvenal. Citing numerous  instances of CEO robbing the public coffers with huge payoffs to  self after losing billions of shareholder $$$, so also asks William  Lerach, Plaintiff's lawyer and shareholder advocate, here,  as he prepares to go to jail to serve a one year sentence for boldly  stepping over the line in his advocacy, as he put it:  “in my zeal  to stand up against this kind of corporate greed over the years, I  stepped over the line.”  It turns out that the legal system is a  lot tougher on shareholder lawyers than it appears to be on Wall  Street executives.