The Volokh Conspiracy

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The Volokh Conspiracy

Free Speech

Nevada Math Prof Alleges Discipline for "Voic[ing] Concerns About … the Math Department … Lower[ing] Its Curriculum Standards"

The Ninth Circuit allows his First Amendment claim against his community college to go forward.

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A short excerpt from the >10,000-word Jensen v. Brown, decided yesterday by Ninth Circuit Judge Marsha Berzon, joined by Judges Richard Paez and John Owens:

Plaintiff Lars Jensen, a math professor at [Truckee Meadows (Nevada) Community College], voiced concerns about a policy change that he argues caused the math department to lower its curriculum standards. He alleges that soon after, Jensen was reprimanded, pressured to resign from another faculty member's tenure committee, given two consecutive negative performance reviews, and required to undergo an investigation and termination hearing…. We conclude that the district court erroneously dismissed Jensen's First Amendment retaliation claims….

In June of 2019, the Board of Regents for the [Nevada System of Higher Education] adopted a new "co-requisite policy." Under the co-requisite policy, students would be placed in college level math classes even if they needed remedial math instruction. Students who needed remedial math instruction would be required to take remedial classes as "co-requisites" alongside college level classes, instead of as "pre-requisites" before taking college level math courses.

To maintain course completion rates under this policy, TMCC's math department decided to lower the academic level of certain math classes…. Jensen sent an email to the math department faculty in which he expressed concerns about the department's new standards for coursework….

Julie Ellsworth, the Dean of Sciences at TMCC, facilitated a "Math Summit" to discuss the co-requisite policy's implementation "with the community." During a question-and-answer session following a presentation from Ellsworth, Jensen attempted to comment on the co-requisite policy. Ellsworth cut him off and announced that the question-and-answer session had ended. After Jensen again attempted to speak, Ellsworth directed him to the "parking lot," a whiteboard that was provided for Math Summit participants to post comments.

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Education

Pennsylvania School District Must Disclose DEI Training Materials, Though It Claimed They Were a "Trade Secret"

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In Trethewey v. Downingtown Area School Dist., a Feb. 26 Pennsylvania appellate court decision by Judge Mary Hannah Leavitt (joined by Judges Renée Cohn Jubelirer and Christine Fizzano Cannon), Trethewey sought these records under the Pennsylvania Right-to-Know Law (RTKL):

[1.] Copy of all documents and materials (paper or electronic) and all presentations used by the [DEI] program director and DEI staff that were used to instruct or lead any training or programs to any staff, teacher, counselor or student in the [ ] School District.

[2.] Copy of any Copyright information on materials used (paper or electronic).

[3.] Copy of all documents and materials (paper or electronic) and all presentations that were used to instruct or lead any cultural awareness, courageous conversations, unconscious bias and cultural proficiency training or programs to any staff, teacher, counselor or student in the [ ] School District….

The School District said no, on the grounds that the records were exempt under the RTKL because they "constitute[d] or reveal[ed] a trade secret [or] confidential proprietary information." "[T]he School District's DEI Director, Justin Brown" certified:

[2.] I created the materials requested above, prior to my employment by the [School District] and prior to my appointment as [DEI Director] – they were not created using the resources of the [School District], are protected by copyright and are my personal proprietary training materials.

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Administrative Law

D.C. Circuit Issues Opinion Explaining Stay that Allowed for Special Counsel Dellinger's Removal

The panel did not believe the Office of Special Counsel could be distinguished from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau or Federal Housing Finance Authority.

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Former Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger may have dropped his lawsuit challenging his removal by President Trump, but that did not stop the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit from issuing a belated opinion explaining why it granted the Trump Administration's emergency motion for a stay pending appeal in Dellinger v. Bessent.

The per curiam opinion on behalf of Judges Henderson, Millett, and Walker explains that the panel concluded that the Trump Administration was likely to prevail on the merits. This is because, as a single-headed agency, it is hard to distinguish the Office of Special Counsel from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Federal Housing Finance Administration, and thus hard to see how Dellinger could prevail under Seila Law v. CFPB and Collins v. Yellen. 

From the opinion:

"[T]he Constitution prohibits even 'modest restrictions' on the President's power to remove the head of an agency with a single top officer." Collins v. Yellen, 594 U.S. 220, 256 (2021) (quoting Seila Law LLC v. CFPB, 591 U.S.197, 228 (2020)); see also Trump v. United States, 603 U.S. 593, 621 (2024) ("[T]he President's power to remove 'executive officers of the United States whom he has appointed' may not be regulated by Congress or reviewed by the courts.") (quoting Myers v. United States, 272 U.S. 52,106, 176 (1926)). Granted, Seila Law noted the more "limited jurisdiction" of OSC as compared to the agency at issue there, Seila Law, 591 U.S. at 221, and Collins did "not comment on the constitutionality of any removal restriction that applies to [the Special Counsel]," 594 U.S. at 256n.21. However, the government has shown that the logic of those cases is substantially likely to extend to the Special Counsel.

That is so because the Court in Collins clarified that "[c]ourts are not well-suited to weigh the relative importance of the regulatory and enforcement authority of disparate agencies" and so it did "not think that the constitutionality of removal restrictions hinges on such an inquiry." Id. at253. This case illustrates the point. Compare Dellinger II, 2025 WL 559669, at *11 (Katsas, J.,dissenting) ("The Special Counsel has broad investigative and enforcement powers.") and Mot. 14 (describing OSC's powers as "significant") with Dellinger I, 2025 WL 665041, at *20 ("OSC [is]not . . . vested with significant executive power.") and Opp'n 9 (describing OSC's powers as "extremely limited"). Nevertheless, such parsing of authorities is precisely the inquiry that the district court engaged in below and that Dellinger asks us to undertake now. Dellinger I, 2025 WL665041, at *16–28; Opp'n 6–13. Accordingly, the government is likely to succeed in showing that arguments about the scope and functions of the Special Counsel as a sole agency head do not affect the President's removal power.

Both the district court and Dellinger highlight that Seila Law was particularly concerned about the "significant executive power" that the director there wielded. Dellinger I, 2025 WL 665041,at *19, 20 (quoting Seila Law, 591 U.S. at 220); Opp'n 8 (same). The district court reformulated the removal test as whether an agency can "fairly be likened to a typical administrative agency charged with implementing [congressional] directives in accordance with Presidential policy and priorities." Dellinger I, 2025 WL 665041, at *26. And Dellinger also seeks to distinguish Seila Law and Collins as instances of "principal officers leading single-headed agencies that exercise binding regulatory and enforcement authority affecting private actors." Opp'n 7.

But Collins emphasized that "the nature and breadth of an agency's authority is not dispositive in determining whether Congress may limit the President's power to remove its head." 594 U.S.at 251–52. It is for that very reason that three Justices only concurred in part in the holding, observing that "[a]ny 'agency led by a single Director,' no matter how much executive power it wields, now becomes subject to the requirement of at-will removal." Id. at 273 (Kagan, J.,concurring in part and concurring in the judgment). Whatever the merits of that expansion from Seila Law, it is binding on our court and applies no matter the "nature" or "breadth" of its executive authority.

In any event, the government has sufficiently demonstrated that Dellinger exercises at least enough authority to contradict the President's directives. As Dellinger acknowledges, OSC recently requested "a stay of personnel actions with the MSPB concerning a recent termination of probationary employees at the U.S. Department of Agriculture." Opp'n 13 n.1. In fact, that request involves thousands of employees, Appellant Rule 28(j) Letter 1, and follows Dellinger's earlier successful request for a stay involving six other employees, Mot. 9, 18. Moreover, the Special Counsel's earlier request claimed that the MSPB "must" grant a stay unless the request is "inherently unreasonable." Mot. 18. To be able to obtain the reinstatement of thousands of employees in a single agency, even if only temporarily, with such a vague standard of review seems to suggest the Special Counsel's powers are not as limited as he claims.

In a footnote in his opposition to the stay, Dellinger also argues that he is an inferior rather than principal officer, Appellee Br. 13 n.2, but not even the court below was convinced by that argument, Dellinger I, 2025 WL 665041, at *19 n.18. In evaluating whether an officer is principal or inferior, the Supreme Court has most recently "focused on whether the officer's work is 'directed and supervised' by a principal officer." Seila Law, 591 U.S. at 217 n.3. As the district court observed, only "the President has the authority to remove the Special Counsel" and "he is a Presidential appointee who must be confirmed by the Senate." Dellinger I, 2025 WL 665041, at *19 n.18. Thus, the government has shown that Dellinger is all but certain to be designated a principal officer.

In sum, the government has demonstrated a strong likelihood of success on the merits of its appeal and thus the first factor weighs in its favor.

Supreme Court

Supreme Court Rejects Red State Attempt to Sue Blue States Over Climate Suits

Justice Thomas dissents from the Court's continued unwillingness to hear bills of complaint filed under the Court's original jurisdiction.

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This morning the Supreme Court denied a motion filed by several states to file a bill of complaint against other states for filing state-law-based lawsuits against fossil fuel energy companies. As has become tradition, Justice Thomas (joined by Justice Alito) dissented from the Court's refusal to grant the motion and consider the complaint on the merits.

In Alabama v. California, a red state coalition led by Alabama was seeking Supreme Court intervention to quash lawsuits filed by some blue state attorneys general against fossil fuel companies alleging their actions were actionable under state law. For reasons I've explained before (and address at the tail end of this draft symposium essay), the red state complaints are without merit, particularly in this posture. The idea that one state can sue another for merely filing a lawsuit in state court is quite outlandish. But it is nonetheless problematic that the Supreme Court is so dismissive of state filings seeking to invoke the Court's original jurisdiction. The better course would have been for the Court to grant the petition and then reject the claim on the merits.

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First Amendment

SCOTUS to Consider Whether State Bans on "Conversion Therapy" Violate the First Amendment

A highly significant grant of certiorari for next term.

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This morning, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Chiles v. Salazar, a First Amendment challenge to a Colorado law that prohibits so-called "conversion therapy" for minors. At issue is whether this is a permissible regulation of professional conduct or a viewpoint-based restriction on speech (with potential religious liberty implications as well). This will almost certainly be one of the most watched (and potentially most controversial) cases of next term.

Here is the question presented from the petition for certiorari:

Kaley Chiles is a licensed counselor who helps people by talking with them. A practicing Christian, Chiles believes that people flourish when they live consistently with God's design, including their biological sex. Many of her clients seek her counsel precisely because they believe that their faith and their relationship with God establishes the foundation upon which to understand their identity and desires. But  Colorado bans these consensual conversations based on the viewpoints they express. Its content- and viewpoint-based Counseling Restriction prohibits counseling conversations with minors that might encourage them to change their "sexual orientation or gender identity, including efforts to change behaviors or gender expressions," while allowing conversations that provide "[a]cceptance, support, and understanding for…identity exploration and development, including…[a]ssistance to a person undergoing gender transition." Colo. Rev. Stat. § 12-245-202(3.5).

The Tenth Circuit upheld this ban as a regulation of Chiles's conduct, not speech. In doing so, the court deepened a circuit split between the Eleventh and Third Circuits, which do not treat counseling conversations as conduct, and the Ninth Circuit, which does.

The question presented is:

Whether a law that censors certain conversations between counselors and their clients based on the viewpoints expressed regulates conduct or violates the Free Speech  Clause.

Free Speech

Journal of Free Speech Law: "The Press Clause: Important, Remembered, and Equally Shared," by Eugene Volokh

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This article, which responds to Floyd Abrams, Sandra Baron, Lee Levine, Jacob M. Schriner-Briggs & Isaac Barnes May's The Press Clause: The Forgotten First Amendment (and, in part, to Matthew Schafer's "The Press Clause": A Response to Professor Volokh), is here. The Introduction:

The Press Clause: The Forgotten First Amendment, a Report from the Floyd Abrams Institute for Freedom of Expression, is a powerful argument for a broader understanding of the Free Press Clause. Much of its analysis will, I expect, prove important and useful to judges, lawyers, legal academics, and citizens. But one of its core premises—that the Free Press Clause should be read as conferring extra rights on the institutional press, beyond those possessed by others who speak to the public—strikes me as mistaken.

The Court's current precedents take the view that the First Amendment secures an equal right of everyone to use mass communications technology. These precedents generally do not offer special First Amendment rights to "the press" in the sense of a particular set of businesses or institutions. Rather, they protect the freedom of all to use "the press" in the sense of the printing press and its modern technological descendants. And this is also the approach taken by the great bulk of authorities from before the Framing through the 1800s and 1900s to today.

Under this model, the Press Clause is far from "forgotten" or stripped of "independent meaning or impact": It secures the critically important right of all people to use the means of mass communications. By itself, the Speech Clause could easily have been understood as just protecting "speech" in the longstanding historical sense of face-to-face oral expression. Indeed, in the 1600s and 1700s many governments deliberately tried to constrain printing presses on the theory that mass communication via the printing press was more dangerous than face-to-face oral communication and thus needed to be specially suppressed.

The Press Clause made clear that the use of mass communication technology (originally just the printing press) should be as protected as the use of one's voice. This understanding has ensured that all mass communicators—institutional media as well as others—are constitutionally protected. To the extent that today courts often use "speech" as shorthand for speech and press (and petition), that is a product of the vigor of the Press Clause, not a sign that the Clause has been forgotten.

And, I argue below, the sources cited in the Report's originalist, traditionalist, precedential, and structural arguments do not support special First Amendment treatment for the institutional media. Instead, many of the sources the Report cites actually support the thesis that the right belongs to all who sought to communicate to the public.

You can also see my earlier Freedom for the Press as an Industry, or for the Press as a Technology?—From the Framing to Today, 160 U. Pa. L. Rev. 459 (2012); the Abrams et al. Report in some measure responds to that, and Prof. Schafer's article, true to its name, does as well.

Second Amendment Roundup: Court Seems Disposed to Rule for S&W and Against Mexico

The Court should settle the proximate-cause issue, not just aiding and abetting.

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The March 4 oral argument in Smith & Wesson Brands v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos appeared to go very well for S&W and not well for Mexico.  Mexico's lawsuit seeks to hold America's federally-licensed firearm industry responsible for the cartel violence that plagues Mexico and to prohibit the industry from doing ordinary business in compliance with the federal Gun Control Act.

Congress enacted the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA) in 2005 to prohibit lawsuits against the gun industry for crimes committed by third parties.  Unable to persuade legislatures to enact prohibitionist measures, the anti-gun movement began bringing such litigation in the 1980s to try and destroy the industry via time and resource-consuming lawsuits and discovery.  PLCAA sought to end such abuse of the legal system.

PLCAA requires courts to dismiss any "qualified civil liability action," which means an action brought against a licensed manufacturer or seller of a "qualified product" – a firearm or ammunition – "resulting from the criminal or unlawful misuse of a qualified product by the person or a third party."  15 U.S.C. § 7903(5)(A)(iii).  That excludes an action in which a manufacturer or seller "knowingly violated a State or Federal statute applicable to the sale or marketing of the product, and the violation was a proximate cause of the harm for which relief is sought."

Mexico claims that S&W and other manufacturers violated Federal criminal statutes by aiding and abetting the unlawful sale of guns and ammo by dealers to straw purchasers, who unlawfully transferred the firearms to others, who then (also unlawfully) exported them without a license from the Department of Commerce to Mexico, who transferred them to the cartels, which used them to harm others, which proximately causes harm to Mexico.

From the oral argument, it appears likely that the Supreme Court will rule narrowly in the defendants' favor on aiding and abetting liability. There seemed to be at least six or seven votes for holding that Mexico's complaint does not allege sufficient facts to trigger aiding and abetting liability for the defendant firearms manufacturers whose products are allegedly diverted to Mexican cartels by rogue gun dealers.

During the argument, Justice Barrett had the following exchange with Noel Francisco, counsel for the manufacturers:

JUSTICE BARRETT:  Is there any reason for us to reach the proximate cause question if we conclude for aiding and abetting that you win?

MR. FRANCISCO: If you rule for us on aiding and abetting, that will completely dispose of the case. The reason to also address proximate cause is because it's an extraordinarily important issue that I think applies in many different contexts, which is why there's such a broad range of amici in this case that go well beyond the firearms industry. So, while you could completely resolve it on aiding and abetting, I would … urge you to address proximate cause as well.

The firearms industry is facing a wave of lawsuits in which anti-gun activists are asking courts to hold the industry responsible for the criminal misuse of its products by third parties. E.g., Lowy v. Daniel Defense, et al., No. 24-1822 (4th Cir.) (lawsuit seeking to hold fifteen members of the firearms industry liable for school shooting in Washington, D.C.); Estados Unidos Mexicanos v. Diamondback Incorporate, No. 22-472 (D. Arizona) (lawsuit filed by Mexican government against firearms dealers); City of Rochester v. Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc., No. 23-6061 (W.D.N.Y.) (lawsuit filed by City of Rochester seeking to hold more than two dozen members of firearms industry liable for city's gun violence); Cluney v. Brownells, Inc., No. 24-207 (D. Maine) (lawsuit seeking to hold members of the firearms industry liable for domestic violence incident);  Mitchell v. River City Firearms, Inc., No. 24-CI-000518 (Jefferson Circuit Court, Kentucky) (lawsuit seeking to hold members of firearms industry liable for mass shooting in Louisville).

Relatively few of these cases involve questions of aiding and abetting liability under federal law. Instead, typically the plaintiffs in these cases rely on a state consumer protection law or some other state statute rather than the federal aiding and abetting statute as the basis for alleging unlawful conduct by the industry. And many of these state laws are recently-enacted statutes by the usual suspect anti-gun states seeking to circumvent PLCAA's protections.  The common denominator that unites these cases is not the alleged statutory violation but the theory of causation, under which the plaintiffs claim that criminal conduct by third parties is attributable to the sellers of firearms.

The First Circuit ruled in favor of Mexico on the proximate cause issue with the following bizarre analogy:

Imagine that a U.S. company sent a mercenary unit of combat troops to attack people in Mexico City. Such an attack would directly cause Mexico itself the expense of paying soldiers to defend the city. Proximate cause would be quite clear. So, too, here, where the defendants are alleged to have armed the attackers for their continuing assaults.

This departs sharply from decisions of most other courts that have confronted this issue and black letter principles of tort law. An opinion joined by then-Judge Alito, City of Philadelphia v. Beretta USA (3d Cir. 2002) held that the causal chain "from the manufacturer to Philadelphia streets" was too "long and tortuous."  With limited exceptions, a third party's criminal conduct ordinarily breaks the causal chain for purposes of proximate cause.

If not corrected, the First Circuit's reasoning will be embraced by anti-gun activists in lawsuits going forward. This decision has already created disarray on the issue of proximate cause in the lower courts, and it is certain to metastasize and spread until the Supreme Court intervenes.

As Congress recognized when it passed the PLCAA, burdening the firearms industry with lawsuits of this sort inhibits the exercise of Second Amendment rights. It also did so to ensure a robust domestic firearms industry, which is important for America's military and police officers. This is an important issue that the Court ought to decide sooner rather than later.

The Court should take this opportunity to clarify that the standard for proximate cause under PLCAA is consistent with the standard for proximate cause that the Court has used for other federal statutes, including RICO. As Chief Justice Roberts wrote in Hemi Group, LLC v. City of New York (2010), if multiple steps stand in between the conduct and the harm, then the connection becomes too "remote," "contingent," and "indirect" to satisfy basic proximate cause.  This standard requires a direct connection between the defendant's conduct and the plaintiff's injury.  A causal chain with multiple steps – especially intervening steps that involve criminal conduct by third parties – will not suffice.

Questioning during the oral argument exhibited the utter implausibility of Mexico's case.  Justice Thomas asked Mexico counsel Catherine Stetson whether ATF prosecuted or revoked the licenses of any dealers for the alleged straw sales with which the manufacturers connived.  Ms. Stetson replied that ATF doesn't have the resources to monitor every dealer.  Yet based on a newspaper article, Mexico had argued that Lone Wolf Trading Co. was the epitome of the "rogue" dealer.  If true, ATF would have taken action.  Yet Lone Wolf remains in business today.

Mexico argues that manufacturers are on notice of dealers who conduct straw sales and that they continue to supply such dealers, which is the proximate cause of harm to Mexico.  As Ms. Stetson claimed, "Trace requests from ATF and other agencies alert defendants that guns they sell to specific distributors and dealers are being recovered at crime scenes."  That expressed utter ignorance of how trace requests work.  A trace request begins with the manufacturer, whose name and serial number are engraved on a firearm.  A manufacturer like S&W would inform ATF of the distributer to which it transferred the firearm.  S&W would have no knowledge of which dealers the distributer transferred the firearm to, not to mention the reason for the trace request.

As Justices Jackson, Kagan, and Barrett all pointed out, Mexico didn't sue or even identify any specific dealers who conducted straw sales and were in the chain of proximate cause of harm to Mexico.

Not to mention that a trace request does not mean that a firearm was "recovered at a crime scene."  Given Mexico's stringent firearm prohibitions, firearms are regularly seized from ordinary citizens whose "papers are not in order."  Moreover, Congress has declared by law that "Law enforcement agencies may request firearms traces for any reason, and those reasons are not necessarily reported to the Federal Government. Not all firearms used in crime are traced and not all firearms traced are used in crime."

Perhaps the most ridiculous claim to show proximate cause was that the manufacturers design firearms to appeal to the cartels.  As Chief Justice Roberts characterized the claim, "it [the firearm] looks like a military weapon and it has an American flag" or it "has Zapata's quote about better to die on your feet than live on your knees."  Such things "are not illegal in any way" and appeal to "people who want the experience of shooting a particular type of gun because they find it more enjoyable than using a BB gun."

Ms. Stetson pushed back, claiming that the Colt "Emiliano Zapata 1911" pistol "target[ed] the Mexican market, including the cartels."  In fact, Zapata was a Mexican hero who fought against successive dictatorships, and Colt's pistol with intricate engravings is something even a Gringo would be proud to own.  And that's Mexico's case for Colt's marketing being the proximate cause of cartel violence?

Several Justices commented on how Mexico's version of proximate cause could destroy any number of industries.  If Budweiser is on notice that extraordinary sales of beer take place in a college town, that is the proximate cause of underage drinking and the damage it causes.  Makers of baseball bats and knives are aware that some of their products will be used in assaults and murders for which they are thus responsible.  Those are more reasons why the Court should resolve the proximate-cause issue in this case.

Justice Jackson in particular elaborated at length that in enacting PLCAA, "Congress [was] protecting its own prerogative to be the one to regulate this industry, … and the statute itself says that … we're worried that tort suits are an attempt to use the judicial branch to circumvent the legislative branch of government."  She referred to PLCAA's term "qualified civil liability action" as meaning "you can't bring in court … a civil action resulting from the criminal or unlawful misuse of a qualified product by the person of a third party."

At bottom, even if the Supreme Court could resolve this case by finding that Mexico has not stated a claim for aiding-and-abetting liability, it should also go further and find that its allegations do not suffice to establish proximate cause.  That will facilitate the resolution of numerous other cases under PLCAA, which the Court will otherwise have to resolve in the future.  It will also discourage frivolous suits against American industry in general based on an overly-expansive version of proximate cause.

For more on the case, see my post from 10/22/24.  For background, see my 2004 Chapman Law Review article from when PLCAA was pending in Congress.

Update: As discussed above, Mexico claims that Colt engraved pistols with the name of the freedom-fighter "Zapata" in order to appeal to the cartels.  The irony here, as I just learned, is that Colt did not produce the Zapata 1911s.  While Colt did manufacture the pistols, they were sold to a distributor who sold them to an engraver, who engraved them with the various Mexican themes, and then sold them through dealers.  Talk about "remoteness"!

Politics

"500M Europeans Are Begging 300M Americans for Protection from 140M Russians Who Have Been Unable to Overcome 50M Ukrainians for Three Years"

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A nice line from Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk (Politico.Eu). I have no well-informed view on the proper role of the U.S. in the defense of Europe (though my intuitions are in favor of strong U.S. support for NATO, I can't speak with confidence about the subject). But I thought this was a well-put call for action, from a country that is estimated to have spent 4.12% of its GDP on defense in 2024, compared to a 2.02% average for European NATO members and Canada, and 3.38% for the U.S. "The Polish military is now about 200,000, which makes it the third-largest in NATO after the U.S. and Turkey and the largest among the alliance's EU members."

Tusk added,

By the end of the year, we want to have a model ready so that every adult male in Poland is trained for war, and so that this reserve is adequate for possible threats…. Every healthy man should want to train to be able to defend the homeland in case of need. We will prepare it in such a way that it will not be a burden on people.

By the way, the only other NATO member that spent a higher fraction of its GDP than the U.S. is Estonia, at 3.43%. Latvia and Lithuania are also high, at 3.15% and 2.85%, well above everyone else except Greece at 3.08%. The one behind Lithuania (though closer to the middle of the pack) is Finland, at 2.41%. See a pattern?

"You think it's time to take a seat on the bench? Lol"

"AUSA-1 hoped to convict Mayor Adams as the last notch in his belt before he took a 'seat on the bench.'"

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On Friday, the Department of Justice urged Judge Ho (SDNY) to dismiss the indictment against Eric Adams without prejudice. DOJ has apparently submitted under seal a series of communications to and from unnamed former DOJ officials. Let's just say these emails and letters do not put the officials in the best light. Here, I want to focus on one exchange in particular:

Similarly, prior to making the public claim that only a "coward" or "fool" would sign the Motion, a recently-resigned AUSA from the SDNY prosecution team (AUSA-1) wrote the following regarding the letter that SDNY filed with the Court on January 22, 2025: "[U.S. Attorney-1] obviously has political ambitions, and I think suggesting we doubt that just costs us credibility." . . .

A separate exchange of text messages beginning on November 8, 2024 illustrates why AUSA-1 was later interested in using public filings to send messages to President Trump. Just days after the 2024 election, in response to a text message asking if it was "time" for AUSA-1 to "take a seat on the bench," AUSA-1 responded: "Got to convict Adams before I can think about anything else." Ex. D. . . .

On November 8, 2024, AUSA-1 received a message with the following question: "You think it's time to take a seat on the bench? Lol." Ex. D. AUSA-1's response included, "Got to convict Adams before I can think about anything else." Id. . . .

It is thus apparent from the context that, just as AUSA-1 hoped to convict Mayor Adams as the last notch in his belt before he took a "seat on the bench,"

U.S. Attorney 1 is Damien Williams. AUSA-1 is a Hagan Scotten, whom I wrote about here. I don't think I had ever heard of Scotten before, but he was apparently talked about as as nominee for the Second Circuit.

It is true that individuals see their work in government service as a potential audition for a judicial appointment. Was the Eric Adams prosecution an audition? Or was the resignation the audition? It is impossible to escape the audition trap, right?

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