Friday, June 3, 2011

FLYING UNDER FALSE COLORS - THE DISGRACED JOHN EDWARDS

John Edwards
Former Democratic Vice Presidential nominee and candidate for President, John Edwards, has been indicted by a federal Grand Jury from the Middle District United States District Court of North Carolina.
It is alleged that Edwards used money from his failed primary campaign for the Democrat's 2008 Presidential nomination as a slush fund to pay off his mistress.  The lady in question is Rielle Hunter, she and Edwards produced a child from their illicit union.
The Washington Post's Jerry Markon reported "[t]he indictment, returned by a federal grand jury in North Carolina, says the illegal contributions paid for Hunter’s living and medical expenses, along with travel needed to shield her from reporters. Prosecutors said this violated federal election laws that limit individual contributions to a campaign and require reporting of donations."
John Edwards was a man of promise and potential.  Like many politicians who are unable to keep their pants zipped up, Edwards presented himself as a solid family man.  He was flying under false colors. He is in a heap of trouble now.
David Vitter
Infidelity and sexual indiscretion do not necessarily spell the end of a two-timing politician's career.  For reasons I do not understand the good citizens of Louisiana sent a notorious whore monger, David Vitter, back for another term.  Perhaps those living in the Bayou State felt their families were better keeping Vitter at a distance.   Vitter too flies under false colors, presenting himself as a Christian with strict moral values on the topic sexual mores.  Vitter demanded President Clinton's resignation after the Lewinski scandal.  Vitter reversed course when his sexual addiction to prostitutes became public.
Newt Gingrich
Former Speaker Newt Gingrich was also engaged in a meretricious relationship when he led House Republicans to impeach President Clinton.  Gingrich continues to covet the presidency.  I don't know if  he persists in cheating on his current wife.
Vitter and Gingrich had the good sense not to pay anyone off.  Edwards, whose brilliant legal career launched his political career, showed bad judgment if the allegations in the indictment are true.
John Esign
John Edwards' being charged in a criminal complaint must be giving former Nevada Republican Senator John Ensign a bout of insomnia.  It is alleged that Ensign, like Edwards, crossed the line in the payoff  for his extramarital affair with a staffer.  Ensign, some claim, was playing Nookie Hookey with a staffer whose husband, the alleged cuckold, was likewise employed by Ensign.  Money, it is reported, was paid to the former staffers from Ensign's enabling parents and Ensign got the alleged cuckold a job lobbying the Senate in apparent violation of federal law.
Harry Truman at the piano
I shed no tears for Edwards or Ensign.  I have no respect for Vitter or Gingrich.  I  am a liberal Democrat who looks at these things the way Harry Truman did.  Harry  said he had to make a choice early in life to be either a piano player in a whorehouse or become a politician.  Harry claimed fidelity to Bess but said he didn't blame any bee for getting a little honey on his stinger.  Truman said he saw little difference between playing piano in the bordello and professional politics.
Jimmy Carter
We can learn a lesson from our last Baptist Sunday School Teacher President.  Yes, Democrat Jimmy Carter admitted that he lusts after women, in his heart, everyday.  The difference between the moral Mr. Carter and Edwards, Ensign, Gingrich, Vitter, and others of their ilk is that Jimmy didn't act on his baser instincts. 
Jimmy Carter and Harry Truman flew under true colors.    

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

USA v. ARIZONA - THE SB1070 CASE ON APPEAL - PART NINE

Judge Bea concurs with the majority as to §§ 3 and 5(C) as to their result.  Where Bea differs with the majority is on §§ 2(B) and 6.  Section 2(B) pertains to Cooperation and assistance in enforcement of immigration laws; indemnification.  Section 6 is the Arizona SB 1070 provision permitting warrantless arrests.
Judge Paez, like Judge Bea pivots his legal analysis from a case called United States v. Salerno.  Paez sees the Salerno standard as requiring the challenger to establish that no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid.  That's what I refer to as the inconceivable standard.
Judge Bea begins from the inconceivable standard. However Bea finds a set of circumstances under which no complexity existed, murder.  If an illegal alien commits murder then that alien is subject to murder. Bea fails to recognize that the sweep of Section 6 goes far beyond his hypothetical.  SB1070 is, under Bea's analysis surplusage.
 
Judge Paez immediately refutes Judge Bea in his footnote 20.  "Arizona argues that we should construe section 6 so as to require officers to confirm with federal authorities that an alien has committed a public offense that makes the alien removable before making a warrantless arrest under section 6. 

Even if we interpreted Section 6 as Arizona suggests, the provision would still permit more intrusive state arrests than Congress has sanctioned, because it permits arrests on the basis of misdemeanor removability, which Congress has not provided for in 8 U.S.C. § 1252c. Further, even if a law enforcement officer confirmed with the federal government that an individual had been convicted of murder—a felony that would clearly result in removability, see 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii)—Section 6 would still expand the scope of § 1252c by permitting warrantless arrests." (emphasis added).
Honestly, I have to say that Judge Bea seems to have gone far from orthodox legal analysis when it comes to his opinion regarding Section 2(B).  In his mind the States may assist federal law enforcement with immigration enforcement and no written agreement is needed.  Well, that's true.  But really Judge Bea, there is big difference between assisting and meddling.  I reckon that is why the federal statute outlined a set of perimeters for state assistance.  The cooperation between the federal government and the governments of the States is not limited by the federal statute.  Neither is the language in the federal statute carte blanche for the States to devise their own immigration schemes.

Judge Paez's opinion provides an example of cooperation in footnote 21.  "The dissent argues that “the Supreme Court explicitly recognized—in one of our California cases—that state police officers have authority to question a suspect regarding his or her immigration status.” Dissent at 4887 (citing Muehler v. Mena, 544 U.S. 93, 101 (2005)). The dissent mischaracterizes the issue in Mena and the facts of the case in order to make it appear relevant to the case before us now. The Court explained that “[a]s the Court of Appeals did not hold that the detention was prolonged by the questioning, there was no additional seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Hence, the officers did not need reasonable suspicion to ask Mena for her name, date and place of birth, or immigration status.” 

 In summarizing the facts of the case, the Court explained that, 

“[a]ware that the West Side Locos gang was composed primarily of illegal immigrants, the officers had notified the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) that they would be conducting the search, and an INS officer accompanied the officers executing the warrant. During their detention in the garage, an officer asked for each detainee’s name, date of birth, place of birth, and immigration status. The INS officer later asked the detainees for their immigration documentation.”  

Thus, contrary to the dissent’s contention, Mena did not recognize that state officers can enforce federal civil immigration law with no federal supervision or involvement." (emphasis added).

Unfortunately, Judge Bea pinned his Section 2(B) analysis to Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There, in THE ANNOTATED ALICE: THE DEFINITIVE EDITION 213 (Martin Gardner ed., Norton Publishers) (2000).  Judge Paez refuses to follow Judge Bea into fantasy land. 

In his footnote 6 Paez says "We have carefully considered the dissent and we respond to its arguments as appropriate. We do not, however, respond where the dissent has resorted to fairy tale quotes and other superfluous and distracting rhetoric. These devices make light of the seriousness of the issues before this court and distract from the legitimate judicial disagreements that separate the majority and dissent." (emphasis added).
A dispute among the Circuits has reared its head during this case.  The majority's view conflicts with the Tenth Circuit's.  See United States v. Vasquez-Alvarez, 176 F.3d 1294 (10th Cir. 1999). In Vasquez-Alvarez, the Tenth Circuit affirmed the denial of a motion to suppress where the defendant’s “arrest was based solely on the fact that Vasquez was an illegal alien.”  The arrest did not comply with the requirements of 8 U.S.C. §1252c, and the defendant argued that the evidence found as a result of that arrest should be suppressed. The Tenth Circuit disagreed, holding that §1252c “does not limit or displace the preexisting general authority of state or local police officers to investigate and make arrests for violations of federal laws, including immigration laws.”
The majority says the pertinent part of the federal statute " Subsection (g)(10) neither grants, nor assumes the preexistence of, inherent state authority to enforce civil immigration laws in the absence of federal supervision. If such authority existed, all of 8 U.S.C. §1357(g)—and §1252c for that matter—would be superfluous, and we do not believe that Congress spends its time passing unnecessary laws."
Footnote 24 provides more detail on the lack of inherent power of the States. 
"The U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel (“OLC”) issued a memorandum in 2002—at which time OLC was headed by then Assistant Attorney General Jay S. Bybee, now a United States Circuit Judge, as Arizona emphasizes—concluding that (1) the authority to arrest for violation of federal law inheres in the states, subject only to preemption by federal law; (2) a 1996 OLC memo incorrectly concluded that state police lack the authority to arrest immigrants on the basis of civil deportability; and (3) 8 U.S.C. §1252c does not preempt state arrest authority. 
"To conclude that §1252c does not preempt inherent state arrest authority, the OLC memo relies entirely on the Tenth Circuit’s decision in Vasquez-Alvarez—the logic of which we have already rejected.
"The dissent quotes from the 2002 OLC memo in claiming that § 1252c is not made superfluous by interpreting it to have no preemptive effect. We are neither persuaded, nor bound by the arguments in this memo. It is an axiomatic separation of powers principle that legal opinions of Executive lawyers are not binding on federal courts. The OLC memo itself demonstrates why this is: the OLC’s conclusion about the issue in the 2002 memo was different in 1996 under the direction of President Clinton, and was different in 1989, under the direction of President George H.W. Bush.
"The dissent also claims that “Congress has authority to enact legislation which is designed merely to clarify, without affecting the distribution of power.” The dissent cites language from the Reaffirmation—Reference to One Nation Under God in the Pledge of Allegiance, stating, “An Act to reaffirm the reference to one Nation under God.” Pub. L. No. 107-293 (2002). The dissent’s argument is unavailing, as § 1252c contains no reference to anything remotely related to a “reaffirmation” of a state’s alleged inherent authority to enforce the civil provisions of federal immigration law."
Another battle line was drawn on the question of inherent powers of a State.  Do the States have inherent power to arrest only for violations of federal criminal statutes, or do the State have authority to arrest for violations of federal civil statutes.  The Tenth Circuit favors inherent authority for both categories.  The Ninth Circuit does not see a legal basis for the States to go arresting persons for violations of the federal civil code.
I think Judge Bea's dissent was weak and far reaching.  Judge Noonan by contrast provided a far more serious, and seriously reasoned opinion.  

Thursday, May 26, 2011

ERIC CANTOR & HOUSE REPUBLICANS WILLING TO HOLD JOPLIN HOSTAGE

MIND BOGGLING, Lynn Jenkins in Campaign 2010 described Eric Cantor as America's Next Great White Hope. Never mind the blatant racism, just think about what Cantor thinks about those of us who live in or near Kansas' Second Congressional District. He thinks that when our cities are obliterated by Mother Nature, called Acts of God, that we can well be on our own.

Cantor says that there can be no federal relief for Joplin until we find budget offsets first. That's right, Jenkins' Great White Hope is using the pain and suffering of Joplin as a political football.

Republicans like Cantor and Jenkins have worked tirelessly to make sure that America's most wealthy get to keep paying little to no taxes while demanding that we can no longer afford Medicare. These Republicans now want to let an entire American city go to oblivion, being held hostage to their radical agenda.

Missouri's Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill said: "There is no question we have to be careful about the way we spend federal money, but with all due respect to Congressman Cantor, I have a hard time believing that if this were in his congressional district he would be talking about how additional disaster relief would not be available unless we found some other program to take it from"

Missouri's Republican Senator, Roy Blunt, echoed McCaskill telling Cantor to find the offsets. Politico reported the Senator's statement: "We need to prioritize spending, and this needs to be a priority. I’m sure Eric [Cantor] will help find the necessary off-sets."

In the end Lynn Jenkins' Great White Hope, Eric Cantor, caved to the pressure. He "Our hearts are w/ victims of #Joplin tragedy. House #GOP ready to help & has found offsets for emergency $$$". Cantor suddenly found the offsets.

Southwest Missouri auctioneer and Representative to Congress, Billy Long, responded to Cantor's tweet saying "Our deficit is not because we are taxed too little but because Washington spends too much. I was sent to Washington to rein in wasteful government spending. While we need to look everywhere to make spending cuts, making sure our first responder, disaster relief, and national defense communities have the tools they need will always be a priority while I am in Congress."

Talk about double talk. HEY BILLY what will you give me for an EF5? Our deficit is because too many American corporations pay little to no taxes. Our deficit is because the effective tax rate of the richest Americans is at the lowest point in our nation's history." Our deficit is because American jobs have been shipped overseas. We can learn from history.  Do you recall how Give 'em Harry watched the way we spent our dollars when he was in the Senate? Harry Truman showed us how during World War II.

For her part Lynn Jenkins has managed to not say a word about Joplin. Some leadership!

Meanwhile the Topeka hate group masquerading as a Baptist church plans to protest in Joplin. This may be the wrong town at the wrong time for the Wierdos from Westboro. Knowing Southwest Missouri as I do, well let me say that the Phelps Clan best be prepared to meet their Maker.





Wednesday, May 25, 2011

The Power of Simile

Call it the power of simile that roused me suddenly full awake at a quarter to three early this morning. I knew the tornado watch continued on to three but the chief meteorologist of my favorite evening news station said it wasn't likely. The National Weather Service from Topeka, she said, let a weather balloon loose not long ago. The data the balloon sent back showed calm air above the six mile level.

The killer tornados in central Oklahoma were topping out at about six miles according to Doppler radar. The jet stream was providing volatility to the winds aloft. An upper level low pressure system steered in to enhance vertical wind shear over Oklahoma. But now the air above the Sunflower state was placid. Sure we'd see the thunder storms move through, but not the evil appendages hooking on to their rear flanks.

With my mind set to rest I gathered grandchildren to their beds. Sleep came quickly. Then suddenly I was awake. A faint roll of thunder off in the distance was being drowned out by the steadily increasing roar of what sounded like a freight train.

I can't recall when the last time was when I moved so quick. In a split second I had spun to a sitting position and had my feet on the floor. I hit the television remote and the mute button. The television would provide light in less than a second.

My mind raced as I stood up and changed channels to the local stations. I heard it as the first station appeared. There were no local warnings and the engineer finally let loose with his whistle. The deafening sound of an approaching freight train turned out to be a freight train.

If tornadoes sounded like older women walking down wooden halls in orthopedic shoes, a sound not uncommon to my youth, then I'd not have been fooled by the train. That's the power of simile.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Blogger Wierdness & the case of the Missing Followers

The Blogger dashboard assures me that this blog has four followers.  I appreciate my followers.  When the magic number hit four the icons identifying the followers disappeared from the blog.

I know you faithful four are out there and hopefully this glitch will go away as fast as it came. Thanks for following.

USA v. ARIZONA - THE SB1070 CASE ON APPEAL - PART EIGHT

Judge Bea starts with the premise that determining Congressional intent is the touchstone from which judicial inquiry of America's immigration laws and Arizona's SB1070 must begin. There he agrees with the majority in the way two persons on opposite sides of a fence on the otherwise open range see that fence.

Judge Bea tips his hand early in his lengthy concurrence/dissent. He frames the issue differently than did Judge Paez. Bea says "[t]hus, this court is tasked with determining whether Congress intended to fence off the states from any involvement in the enforcement of federal immigration law."

The way a legal question is framed often leads to an obvious conclusion. Bea is not asking what are the perimeters Congress established whereby the States may become involved with enforcement of federal immigration law. In Wild West fashion Bea assumes that the range is either open or fenced, either the States can't engage or they may Willy-nilly do as they please.

Bea feathers the framing of the legal issue writing "[m]oreover, it is the enforcement of immigration laws that this case is about, not whether a state can decree who can come into the country, what an alien may do while here, or how long an alien can stay in this country. Bea is correct in this part of his analysis but he conveniently ignores the impact of ad hoc immigration enforcement schemes by the States on the uniform federal scheme written by Congress and enforced by the Executive branch.

Judge Bea seems to want to hang his hat on 8 U.S.C. § 1357(g)(10)(B) which says:

Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to require an agreement under this subsection in order for any officer or employee of a State or political subdivision of a State—

(A) to communicate with the Attorney General regarding the immigration status of any individual, including reporting knowledge that a particular alien is not lawfully present in the United States; or

(B) otherwise to cooperate with the Attorney General in the identification, apprehension, detention, or removal of aliens not lawfully present in the United States.

The question now remains whether Judge Bea sees SB1070 as cooperation with the Attorney General. I am fairly certain that Attorney General Eric Holder sees SB1070 as anything but cooperative.

Does SB1070 reflect and mirror the laws of New Jersey and Rhode Island? That is Judge Bea's opinion. There are significant differences. Most glaring is that neither New Jersey nor Rhode Island enacted a statute. Arizona's SB1070 is statutory law, and that law has an express intent which strikes in stark defiance at the uniform federal scheme adopted by Congress and enforced by the President. Arizona's intent is attrition through enforcement. That statutory intent which Judge Bea is ignoring distinguishes the way Judges Bea and Noonan see this case.

Here are those New Jersey and Rhode Island directives, which come from Judge Bea's footnotes (always remember and never forget to read the footnotes).

In August 2007, the attorney general of New Jersey issued a directive which stated:

When a local, county, or State law enforcement officer makes an
arrest for any indictable crime, or for driving while intoxicated,
the arresting officer or a designated officer, as part of the booking
process, shall inquire about the arrestee’s citizenship, nationality
and immigration status. If the officer has reason to believe that
the person may not be lawfully present in the United States, the
officer shall notify [ICE] during the arrest booking process.

Anne Milgram, Attorney General Law Enforcement Directive No. 2007-3.

Rhode Island Executive Order 08-01, “Illegal Immigration Control
Order,” issued March 27, 2008, states at paragraph 6:

It is urged that all law enforcement officials, including state and
local law enforcement agencies take steps to support the enforcement of federal immigration laws by investigating and determining the immigration status of all non-citizens taken into custody, incarcerated, or under investigation for any crime and notifying federal authorities of all illegal immigrants discovered as a result of such investigations.
For his part Judge Paez sees SB1070 much differently than does Judge Bea. In Paez's analysis of §2 (B) he addressed the distinction between the majority and minority views in his footnote number 7.

The dissent claims that Section 2(B) “merely requires Arizona officers to inquire into the immigration status of suspected” undocumented immigrants; that “simply informing federal authorities of the presence of an[undocumented immigrant]. . . represents the full extent of Section 2(B)’s limited scope.” Dissent at 4873-74. Section 2(B) requires much more than mere inquires—it requires that people be detained until those inquiries are settled, and in the event of an arrest, the person may not be released until the arresting agency obtains verification of the person’s immigration status. Detention, whether intended or not, is an unavoidable consequence of Section 2(B)’s mandate.
Next we will look at Judge Bea's legal analysis beginning with United States v. Salerno and the law about facial challenges and what I call the Inconceivable Standard.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

ARNOLD & MARIA

Arnold: "I'll be back!"

Maria:  "Let me say this about that!"