Thursday, May 01, 2025

BREAKING -- We have a new magistrate judge

Congrats to Detra Shaw-Wilder. The judges voted today and she emerged victorious.  


From her bio:

Detra Shaw-Wilder is a litigation partner at Kozyak Tropin & Throckmorton. She concentrates her practice in complex commercial litigation, business law matters, corporate shareholder disputes and high-level contract and commercial financing disputes. Detra regularly litigates in state and federal court. Having been involved in significant litigation, she has a broad range of trial experience in commercial cases.

Detra frequently participates in panel discussions on complex litigation matters and trial skills programs. She is currently Chairperson of the Business Litigation Committee of the Florida Bar Business Law Section and Vice President of the University of Miami Law Alumni Association. Detra is a past Board Member and Region XI Director for the National Bar Association. She is also a member of the Federal Grievance Committee for the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida and previously served on the Florida Bar Grievance Committee for the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Florida.

Detra is passionate about community involvement and is involved in several charitable organizations and is a co-founder of the Kozyak Minority Mentoring Foundation. Outside of the practice of law, Detra is a dedicated sports mom and enjoys spending time on the soccer pitch or track field watching her two teenage kids participate in sports.

It's Law Day!

 So why not post this heated exchange from the Supreme Court (here's the whole oral argument) earlier this week (via Law&Crime):


“I had an out of body experience listening to what we argued,” Blatt said of the arguments made by opposing counsel, Roman Martinez, who argued on behalf of the child and Assistant to the Solicitor General Nicole Reaves, who argued in support of the child on behalf of the Department of Justice.


Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson interjected, “I’m over here really trying to figure out what you argued below,” and said that it “might be a little unfair” to characterize Blatt’s argument as entirely consistent throughout the litigation.

Blatt pushed back and denied any inconsistency.

“What is a lie and inaccurate is that we ever said that this court should take the same language and should define it differently,” Blatt said, referring to an argument advanced earlier by the DOJ. “They’re adding words to our mouth.”

Justice Neil Gorsuch interrupted Blatt’s rant.

“You believe Mr. Martinez and the Solicitor General are lying?” asked an incredulous Gorsuch.

“In oral argument? Yes, absolutely,” answered Blatt.

As Blatt tried to elaborate, Gorsuch cut in, with a warning.

“I think you should be more careful with your words,” the justice said.

“Okay well they should be more careful in mischaracterizing a position by an experienced advocate of the Supreme Court, with all due respect,” countered Blatt.

Chief Justice John Roberts jumped in and began to read from A.J.T.’s brief in an apparent attempt to provide context for the inconsistency her opponents had referenced.

“That part we never said,” Blatt interrupted, questioning a portion of the brief that quoted her client’s filing. “Are they quoting?”

“Well, they have quote marks around it,” responded the chief justice to a chuckling courtroom.

Later in the argument:

“Well, it’s part of your job, Justice Kavanaugh, to set the law sometimes and I understand it’s easier for you and you have a lot going on not to set the law,” Blatt charged until she was shut down by Gorsuch, who interjected that he was “still troubled” by the suggestion that opposing counsel “lied.”

“Okay, let’s pull it up here,” was Blatt’s quick retort.

Gorsuch requested that Blatt “reconsider that phrase.”

“People make mistakes,” came Gorsuch’s response, sounding calm. “You can accuse people of making mistakes — but lying,”

“That’s fine,” Blatt interrupted repeatedly.

“Ms. Blatt, if I might finish,” said an exasperated Gorsuch. “Lying is another matter.”

Gorsuch next read from Blatt’s brief as Blatt peppered with interruptions of, “yep,” and “right” several times.

When Blatt tried to interrupt again and continue her argument, Gorsuch snapped, “I’m not finished.” The justice went on to ask that while reasonable people could disagree, couldn’t the argument in Blatt’s brief could be interpreted in precisely the way opposing counsel had characterized it in their comments to the bench?

“No,” said Blatt, then tried to continue.

“Ms. Blatt!” interrupted an audibly annoyed Gorsuch.

After a bit more exchange, Gorsuch finally demanded that Blatt withdraw her previous accusations of lying against opposing counsel — which Blatt finally did.

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Showdown

Judge Kathy Williams was rightfully beside herself that the Florida AG instructed the police to defy her order.  From the Miami Herald:

A Miami federal judge said Tuesday she was “surprised and shocked” when state Attorney General James Uthmeier first told police officers to obey her order not to arrest undocumented immigrants entering Florida but later said he “cannot prevent” them from making arrests under a new state law. U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams is considering whether to find Uthmeier in contempt of court. Williams said she would issue a preliminary injunction late Tuesday prohibiting all state law enforcement officials and police agencies from arresting undocumented immigrants who come into Florida. She also scheduled a critical hearing for late May that could lead to Uthmeier being held in contempt of court for flouting her prior restraining order in the immigration case.

Williams said the state attorney general’s directive telling police officers that they could make arrests “threw everything out of whack,” leaving her with no choice but to hold a show-cause hearing to allow Uthmeier to explain why she should not hold him in contempt of her order. The judge gave lawyers for the attorney general a brief break during Tuesday’s hearing to consult with him about withdrawing his advice to police officers to ignore her order, but they said Uthmeier was not retreating from his position. “What I am offended by is someone suggesting you don’t have to follow my order, that it’s not legitimate,” Williams said.

In other news, we need a better logo for the blog... check out this law firm's logo, which apparently a federal judge didn't like (from the NY Times):

A purple dragon dressed in a business suit seemed like a natural choice for a logo when Jacob A. Perrone, a lawyer in East Lansing, Mich., recently opened a new firm and named it Dragon Lawyers.

He noted that some lawyers liked to call themselves “bulldogs” and said the dragon symbolized “aggressive representation.”

But a federal magistrate judge, Ray Kent, was not impressed. He was so disgusted by the dragon that he struck a lawsuit filed by Mr. Perrone on behalf of an inmate who had accused jail officials in Clinton County, Mich., of being “deliberately indifferent” to her when she started vomiting last year.

In a brief order issued on Monday, Judge Kent noted that “each page of plaintiff’s complaint appears on an e-filing which is dominated by a large multicolored cartoon dragon dressed in a suit, presumably because she is represented by the law firm of ‘Dragon Lawyers PC © Award Winning Lawyers.’”


Monday, April 28, 2025

The Dispatch buys SCOTUSblog

It's the end of an era. 

SCOTUSblog has been acquired by The Dispatch.

There have been rumblings about one of the OG Blogs being sold for a variety of factors (including the arrest of one of the founders, Tom Goldstein).

Now it's official.

Amy Howe, Tom's wife and co-founder of the blog, writes about the sale here:

SCOTUSblog is delighted to announce that it has been acquired by Dispatch Media, Inc., and will round out The Dispatch’s coverage of the Supreme Court and the rule of law.

This blog began nearly a quarter of a century ago as a way to promote our legal work. Over the years, it has evolved into a resource on all things related to the Supreme Court, from soup-to-nuts coverage of the cases argued at the court to retirements, confirmations, and other special features. We have scaled back our coverage in recent years as the costs of that coverage grew, but through our partnership with The Dispatch, we will be able to restore SCOTUSblog’s publishing capabilities, including expanded analysis for all merits cases and oral arguments.

The Dispatch plans to maintain SCOTUSblog as our users have come to enjoy it and will continue to offer its existing content to all readers at no cost — while bringing back some of the site’s most beloved features, such as the Stat Pack. The site will also continue to remain a source of unbiased coverage of the Supreme Court.

Another OG blogger, David Lat, will have involvement in SCOTUSblog.  From Lat's newsletter:

And I’m delighted to share that I have a personal connection to this news: as noted in Steve Hayes’s post, I’m partnering with The Dispatch as it works toward becoming, as Dispatch president Michael Rothman put it, “the definitive source for legal news and analysis in the United States.” So in the weeks and months ahead, expect to hear my voice on Advisory Opinions and read my writing in SCOTUSblog.

When I first entered legal blogging around 20 years ago, launching Underneath Their Robes (2004) and then Above the Law (2006), I drew inspiration from Tom Goldstein and Amy Howe, who founded SCOTUSblog in 2002—so it’s wild for me to think that I’ll now be contributing to SCOTUSblog’s pages. 

Congrats to Tom, Amy, David, and The Dispatch.  SCOTUSblog has always been the place to go for Supreme Court news, and I'm sure that will not change.

Friday, April 25, 2025

Big Win in Helms-Burton Act Case

 By John R. Byrne

Little delay in reporting on this, but a big win for a Cuban-American family against Expedia in the first ever federal jury trial under the Helms-Burton Act. The jury awarded the family $29.8 million, finding that Expedia trafficked in property in Cuba that had been wrongfully confiscated from the family by the Cuban communist dictatorship. Expedia promoted and sold bookings at hotels on the property. Nice win for Andres Rivero and Jorge Mestre's firm. Judge Moreno, who presided over the trial, has ordered further proceedings on damages. Herald covers it here.


Thursday, April 24, 2025

Must be 21


Erotic dancers in Jacksonville now need to be of drinking age. The Eleventh Circuit upheld a city ordinance prohibiting erotic dancers under the age of 21 from performing at adult-entertainment establishments.  What’s interesting is that the Eleventh Circuit openly acknowledged that adult entertainment ordinances are effectively graded on a government-friendly curve. Specifically, "although these ordinances are not strictly content-neutral, they are simply treated as such.” So, instead of applying “strict scrutiny” to the ordinance—which would usually kill it—the courts apply the more government-friendly intermediate scrutiny. The reason for this seemingly unprincipled approach is rooted in the so-called “secondary effects” doctrine—the notion that the government really isn’t trying to target a particular kind of speech but, rather, the undesirable effects that flow from that speech (in the case of under 21-year-old erotic dancers, human trafficking).

 

Still, Judge Newsom, who penned the opinion for the majority, also wrote a concurrence, expressing doubt over the “continuing vitality of the secondary effects doctrine.” He wrote: "The problem, as I see it, is that the government’s subjective motivation for imposing a speech restriction—whether virtuous, wicked, or somewhere in between—has nothing to do with the threshold question whether the restriction is, objectively, content- based or content-neutral. That’s a determination to be made on the face of the restriction, not on the government’s underlying purpose or intent."


Probably didn’t help the appellants’ cause that one of the establishments challenging the ordinance goes by “Wacko’s Too”….

 

Opinion below.Wacko's Too Inc. by John Byrne on Scribd

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Some Markus news

My dad Stuart Markus was a lawyer in Miami for over 50 years.  He was an amazing lawyer and a better person.  He absolutely loved the law, but more than the law -- he loved people and fighting for the underdog.  When he passed away, we started the "Markus award" at the University of Miami (where he graduated in 1957), for a clinical student who fought for the underdog.  This year, that award went to Julia Steiner, a graduating 3L in the Children and Youth Law Clinic.  
 
Julia has demonstrated exceptional legal skills, diligence, and sound judgment, achieving remarkable outcomes for her clients. Julia's advocacy was powerfully exemplified in a case where she secured a more appropriate home placement for a vulnerable client, a former foster youth who had endured years of instability in the foster care system. The client, who had been subjected to multiple placements, therapeutic foster homes, and psychiatric hospitalizations, was placed at the age of 17 in a home licensed by the Agency for Persons with Disabilities (APD). This facility, intended for adults with severe disabilities, was profoundly unsuitable for the client’s developmental needs, worsening her distress and contributing to frequent Baker Act incidents as a means of escape.
 
While Julie worked alongside her clinic partner, she was the driving force behind this case, navigating a complex web of legal and administrative challenges. The situation was made more difficult by the shifting of blame between two government agencies, and the separation of powers principles that limit the Court’s ability to specify particular placements.
 
Nevertheless, Julia persisted, bringing clarity and resolution to a case that once seemed intractable. She and her partner secured key testimony and a court order declaring the placement inappropriate. When the child welfare agency deflected responsibility to APD, Julia authored a persuasive motion arguing the placement was harming, not helping, her client. She also navigated APD’s administrative system, prompting the Court to involve the agency. When APD proposed restrictive placements outside Miami, Julia effectively argued for her client to stay close to school, support systems, and a vital guardianship program.
 
Julia built a strong, trusting relationship with her client and never stopped advocating. Her skill, persistence, and compassion led to a life-changing result: a more stable, supportive placement as her client enters adulthood. Beyond the Clinic, Julia enriches classroom discussions and recently co-authored a legal article on public nuisance claims in the opioid crisis with adjunct Professor Frank Citera. 

Congrats to Julia -- my dad would be very proud!

In other Markus news, and something else my dad would have been telling all his friends about -- I made an appearance on David Lat's podcast last week.  You can listen to it here.

Saturday, April 19, 2025

The judiciary strikes back

 1.  A few weeks ago Gov. DeSantis lashed out at Judge Kathy Williams for her TRO, enjoining the enforcement of a state statute that seemed to encroach on things that were exclusively in fed land.  Yesterday there was a hearing, and it appears that police officers were not told to abide by the TRO.  Judge Williams was.... not happy:

At the court hearing Friday, Williams said she was “astounded” by the state’s arguments and said it was “concerning” to learn that state law enforcement agencies, like FHP, do not work “in concert with state officials.” “When I issued the temporary restraining order, it never occurred to me that police officers would not be bound by it,” Williams said. “It never occurred to me that the state attorneys would not give direction to law enforcement so that we would not have these unfortunate arrests.” Williams expressed her dismay at the state’s actions after a group of lawyers suing the state disclosed that at least 15 people were arrested across Florida after the judge had imposed a halt on enforcing the immigration law.

The state is now complying:

Following the court hearing, Uthmeier told the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, the Florida Highway Patrol, the Florida Sheriffs and Florida Police Chiefs to “please instruct your officers and agents to comply with Judge Williams’ directives.” The arrest of the U.S. citizen was made by FHP. While he told law enforcement agencies to follow the court’s order, Uthmeier also made clear that he disagreed with the “scope” of the order. “I must note my disagreement with this order,” Uthmeier wrote in an email obtained by the Herald/Times. “For reasons my office has argued and will further outline in court, this clarification of Judge Williams’ prior order is both wrong on the merits and overbroad in its scope.”

2.  By now, I'm sure you've seen the 4th Circuit Order by Judge Wilkinson.  You should read the whole thing, which starts like this:

Upon review of the government’s motion, the court denies the motion for an emergency stay pending appeal and for a writ of mandamus. The relief the government is requesting is both extraordinary and premature. While we fully respect the Executive’s robust assertion of its Article II powers, we shall not micromanage the efforts of a fine district judge attempting to implement the Supreme Court’s recent decision. 

It is difficult in some cases to get to the very heart of the matter. But in this case, it is not hard at all. The government is asserting a right to stash away residents of this country in foreign prisons without the semblance of due process that is the foundation of our constitutional order. Further, it claims in essence that because it has rid itself of custody that there is nothing that can be done.  

This should be shocking not only to judges, but to the intuitive sense of liberty that Americans far removed from courthouses still hold dear.