Blawg Review #117.
Austin Criminal Defense hosts Blawg Review #117. You need to stop whatever you are doing and
read it. Now! Seriously! If you read this far, you are not listening! Sheesh.. kids these days.
Austin Criminal Defense hosts Blawg Review #117. You need to stop whatever you are doing and
read it. Now! Seriously! If you read this far, you are not listening! Sheesh.. kids these days.
Yesterday, the Louisiana Supreme Court announced that this month, the court will begin live webcasts of oral argument:
According to John T. Olivier, Clerk of Court, and Peter Haas, the Louisiana Supreme Court’s Information Technology Director, the stream is provided using a series of three cameras located in the courtroom, which allows for likenesses of the full bench, an individual Justice, and the attorney addressing the Court to be broadcast in real time.
Oral arguments at the Louisiana Supreme Court are scheduled every six weeks, with the next arguments running Tuesday, January 16 through Friday, January 19, 2007. Usually, there are two sessions of arguments each day, beginning at 9:30 a.m and again at 2:00 p.m (There will be no morning session on Tuesday, January 16, 2007 and no afternoon session on Friday, January 19, 2007.)
To view the web broadcast, visit www.lasc.org and look for the icon.
SL&P has an interesting post and comment thread on the issue of whether attorneys for criminal defendants are out of their league when arguing before the Supreme Court, and are unprepared or file briefs that are not comprehensive?
This raises a few issues:
Story here. Now who will we get to explain how the executive can do whatever it wants?
The Gay News Blog has an interesting post entitled,
“Gay-history experts could free man convicted of murder 25 years ago.”
The post states that:
On May 5, the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit will hear arguments in Wayne Blyth Healy v. Luis Spencer… Healy’s lawyer, Wendy Sibbison, is a relatively new legal tactic that uses historical and literary scholarship to help judges and juries better understand how the culture of the past influenced courtroom decisions…. Not only had the state prosecutor used a blatantly homophobic strategy that emphasized a “homosexual element to the murder,” argued [US District Court Judge Michael A. Ponsor], but the state also suppressed (either intentionally or not) vital evidence that no sexual encounter had taken place.
GNB gets the name of the District Court judge wrong, but you can read the DCT's 112-page order regarding an evidentary hearing here.
Senator Lincoln Chaffee recommends former Justice Robert G. Flanders, Jr. of the Supreme Court of Rhode Island to replace Selya. I wonder if this means that there won't be as many big words used in the First. Tnx CA1FDblog
You can read about all the stock he owns here.
Scalia seems to tip his hand regarding detainee procedures. (Though in Hamdan, the petitioner isn’t seeking a “full” jury trial.) I guess it remands to be seen whether Scalia will recuse himself, declare that it is acceptable to prejudge cases , or make a mental note to stop talking to non-lawyers.
In Re Joanne Slokevage, 05-1389. Like most of you, I live in fear of America falling into moral decay. This case finds that some pants are not entitled registration as a trade dress mark. I don’t really know what that means because I was absent the day they taught IP, but I know that the opinion includes the following graphic of the pants.
| Countless judicial decisions and legislative enactments have relied on the ancient proposition that a governing majority’s belief that certain sexual behavior is “immoral and unacceptable” constitutes a rational basis for regulation. |
Their website says that their product is "So unique, it is patented." I forgot how I learned about this, but DoTD has some substantive commentary as does TTABlog. See the motion decision on reconsideration at the PTO here.
The Louisiana State Bar Association has created an Appellate Section, which you can join for a measly $15. According to the recently mailed section-membership application:
The purpose of this Section is to provide a forum to study and discuss appellate-practice issues; to disseminate information regarding recent developments in this area to the mebers of the Association; and to establish liaison with the appellate courts covering Louisiana to further the rule of law, and improve the administration of justice and the practice of law before the appellate courts.
The section-membership applications have been mailed out; they must be returned by March 31 with section dues. If you're interested in the Appellate Section and its goals, please check off the "Appellate" box on the form before you return yours. You can also join by visiting the LSBA web site, clicking on Membership, then clicking on Section Member Application.
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