Strict Scrutiny - SCOTUS's Porn Problem
Episode Date: January 20, 2025Leah, Melissa and Kate cover some breaking news, including Biden’s last-minute declaration that the Equal Rights Amendment is the law of the land. Then, it’s a rollicking ride through Free Speech ...Coalition v. Paxton, one of the more entertaining oral arguments of late. Come for the hosts’ sharp legal analysis, stay for Justice Alito’s questions about whether Pornhub features longform journalism.  Follow us on Instagram, Threads, and Bluesky
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Mr. Chief Justice, please report. It's an old joke, but when a man argues against two beautiful our brethren is that they take their feet off our necks.
So one of the parties here is the owner of Pornhub, right?
Yes.
And what percentage of the material on that is not obscene as to children?
Well, Your Honor, if we're talking about the youngest minors, I would agree that most of it is, and that is how we read a lot.
Is it like the old Playboy magazine?
You have essays there by the modern day equivalent
of Gord Vidal and William F. Buckley Jr.?
Not in that sense.
Wow.
He was really specific.
So sorry listeners, we should have given you a content warning to let you know that it
seems that friend of the pod Samuel Alito thinks people visit Pornhub to read the articles.
In any event, we thought the clip
would be a perfect way to usher in the second Trump term.
So hello, and welcome back to Strict Scrutiny,
your podcast about the Supreme Court
and the legal culture that surrounds it.
We're your hosts.
I'm Leo Littman.
I'm Kay Shaw.
And I'm Melissa Murray.
And here's what we have in store for you today.
We'll start off with some breaking news from the outgoing Biden administration,
and then we'll bring you up to speed
on the special counsel report, or at least
where it stands as of Friday, which is when we're recording.
We're then going to briefly talk about how some of what we've
already seen from the incoming Trump administration
is the product of our good friends at the United States
Supreme Court.
And then we're going to recap last week's arguments,
focusing mostly on the corn one, because, whoo,
that was quite a ride.
No pun intended.
And we will then wrap up with some quick additional court
culture that will cover the two opinions of the court
recently issued, as well as some cases that the court has
added to its docket.
So onward.
In the aftermath of the November 2024 election,
Joe Biden almost seemed to be quite quitting the presidency.
We didn't hear a lot from him.
But then in the last month, Biden
has been really turning up the gas to safeguard his legacy.
Much has been made of the flurry of pardons and commutations
that Biden has issued, the most extensive use
of the clemency power in American history.
But on Friday, Biden shifted gears
to another aspect of his legacy, safeguarding women's
rights and equality.
The outgoing president issued a statement
in which he stated his view that the Equal Rights
Amendment to the Constitution is the law of the land
and that when Virginia ratified the ERA in January 2020,
the ERA, which would guarantee men and women equal rights
under the law, became the 28th Amendment to the Constitution.
So I'm going to say good energy, but this
feels a little too late.
Listeners, as you know, the ERA was first proposed in the 1970s
and was on target to be ratified by the appropriate number
of state legislatures until self-professed
St. Louis housewife Phyllis Schlafly launched her very successful Stop ERA campaign. The
ratification energy stalled at the state level. A handful of states even rescinded their ratifications
and the deadline for the ratification of the ERA actually passed. Fast forward then to 2016 when Donald Trump's unexpected
victory over Hillary Clinton prompted new interest
in the ERA.
There was a flurry of activity around ratification.
And this was exacerbated by the concerns around safeguarding
abortion access that has, again, crested
with the court over ruling Roe versus Wade in 2022.
So the question now is, what does this statement
from the Biden administration really do vis-a-vis the ERA,
which is apparently kind of parked on the sidelines?
And maybe this is Biden's way of taking this car out
for a ride, but I'm not sure that this car
is going to go very far.
Yeah, so what does it do?
I don't think we know really.
I mean, there's something, one interesting thing about the way
Article 5 sets up procedures for amending the Constitution
is it really conspicuously doesn't involve the president,
right?
It's the two houses of Congress.
It's ratification in the states.
Presidents have sometimes taken a lead role
in advocating for ratification of or passage in Congress
of constitutional amendments.
But he cannot, by fiat, just announce that something is in the Constitution. But, but you know, he cannot by fiat
Just announced that something is in the Constitution
But that's not really what he is purporting to do
he's purporting to acknowledge or recognize that it has already been ratified as the Constitution contemplates and we should just start talking about it as
the 28th amendment and
You know, I actually think it's a valuable thing for him to be using the bully pulpit to do on his way out the door
I mean the the very last day. Well, look, he's in his YOLO phase, obviously. And so
he's doing a lot. Who knows what the weekend holds or recording on Friday. But if it effectively
was ratified in 2020, it does raise questions about whether his administration should have
said something about that when Dobbs was being litigated and decided in 2022. So that is one of the many open questions that this announcement
leaves, and one of which is what the National Archivist, who formally certifies amendments
to the Constitution, is going to do. And it seems as though the answer is nothing. She's
actually said she's not going to certify that the ERA has been ratified, and I highly
doubt that whatever archivist Trump installs to replace her is going to certify that the ERA has been ratified. And I highly doubt that whatever
archivist Trump installs to replace her is going to take a different position. But I do think that
galanizing new rounds of public debate about the Constitution and sex equality and also maybe
teeing up litigation that the Supreme Court will ultimately decide. I mean, even as I speak the
sentence, like, is there any way that anything is resolved
productively in the Supreme Court? Not really. But in some ways, like, an answer that allows activists to start over, if that's what is required, might be valuable because we have
been in this liminal space now for years. Here's my thing, though, Kate. Like, it is the Friday
before the new administration comes in. I mean, we've had a long time since November 5th to do things like this. Like, why now?
As you say, this could have been really useful in 2022.
I mean, I guess I'm just sort of A-plus for effort.
I get it.
But it feels largely symbolic and a little bit
like weak sauce right now, because it's just
going to get lost in all of the pomp and circumstance
of whatever happens on Monday, whatever follows after the event. And so I think that's a good thing. weak sauce right now because it's just going to get lost in all of the pomp and circumstance
of whatever happens on Monday, whatever follows
after the inauguration.
I just don't think this is going to sustain a lot of energy.
And that's really unfortunate because you're right.
It should.
I mean, on some level, Better, Late, Than, Never,
and a part of me wonders, did he delay doing that
and other things because he was, for example,
trying to get a last batch of judges confirmed
by razor thin margins in the Senate.
I don't totally know.
I agree it would have been better earlier.
And I also think it could be productive in part
for the reasons Kate is giving.
To the extent it convinces or helps convince the public
that the ERA is part of the Constitution,
that is an important part of the fight, even
if the Supreme Court ultimately says it's not. And I think there is a long history of
various parts of the amendment process, procedural aspects of it, kind of not being ignored,
but the amendments take force, you know, if people across the aisle talk about them and
treat them as they are part of the Constitution. Obviously, I harbor no illusions that that is going to happen anytime soon
here, but right, I do think this is a step. This is basically like us refusing
to acknowledge Doge as an actual department. Yeah. Yeah. But like, I'm still moving forward.
Like, yeah. Yeah, it's fine. Yeah. I'm just, yeah. Call me on Monday, though, when
you're looking for your equal rights.
Call me.
We have them over the weekend, and then not on Monday,
and not there.
No, actually, we actually don't have them, it turns out.
Still not.
Still not.
This weekend's going to be like rum springing for us.
Like, OK.
Do all the things.
Vote.
Do, like, have jobs.
Everything.
And it's all going to come crashing down on Monday.
At noon.
All right, but we've got a lot to cover, so let's press on.
The next thing we wanted to cover was the special counsel report.
During our last regular episode, America's next top SCOTUS justice slash Florida district
court judge slash self-appointed 11th circuit judge slash self-appointed DC district court
judge, you probably know who I'm talking about now,
America's top prosecutor Eileen Cannon,
had blocked, at least temporarily,
the release of special counsel Jack Smith's reports
on the federal election interference case
and also the obstruction and misappropriation
of classified materials case, AKA the US secrets in Mar-a-Lago
bathrooms case.
But in her benevolence as the consummate lawyer
and professional that she is, Judge Cannon allowed the special counsel to release
the report on the election interference case. We thought we'd go through some of
the highlights or lowlights as a case may be from the report. One is the
report's conclusion, quote, but for Mr. Trump's election and imminent return to
the presidency, the office assessed that the admissible evidence was sufficient to obtain and sustain a conviction at trial,"
end quote.
I can imagine John Roberts just laughing to himself
while doing the usher, watch this move.
He was never going to let that happen.
Well, speaking of Donald Trump, P. Otis responded on Tuesday
with a post on Truth Social,
claiming that he was, quote-unquote, totally innocent.
He then proceeded to call Jack Smith, quote,
a lame-brain prosecutor who was unable to get his case tried before the election.
End quote. He then added, for emphasis, the voters have spoken.
He's losing it on the nickname front.
Lame-brain prosecutor. The best he could come up with.
I found that disappointing.
He really needs those women who are running the New Jersey
Twitter feed to step in here.
They could really jazz this up.
In any event, we don't have time to go through the entire report.
But we did want to point out one thing that the report highlighted
about the special counsel's investigation,
which is the office's dealings with Twitter slash X.
The report details that a search warrant was issued to Twitter and a district court issued
a non-disclosure order that prevented Twitter from informing Trump about the warrant. Twitter,
however, refused to comply, complaining that the non-disclosure order, quote,
impinged on its first Amendment interests, end quote.
Twitter was later fined $250,000 for failing to comply with the order.
LARIE So other than that, the report itself does
not break much new ground. Although I was struck by the strength of its assertion that
basically, one, there was no world in which they could not have charged Trump, his violations
of law were in their estimation so egregious.
And two, that a jury would have convicted the hell out of him.
Those are really unqualified statements in the report.
But I also found Smith's short cover memo, which mentions actually both cases, both the
documents and the January 6th case, a really good read that people should read even if
they don't want to read the full report.
It is just unsparing in its description of Trump's conduct.
It doesn't pull any punches because Trump will be the head of the executive branch,
you know, hours from when you hear this episode.
And it is just totally uncowed.
Jack Smith is like public enemy number one to Donald Trump.
And he affixes his name and this extremely forceful language to a report that just says
like, yeah, there
were a lot of crimes here. We charged them. We should have. We would do it again in any
parallel universe. And it is just enraging that this document is the result of the Office's
hard work and investigation. But it also, you know, is really insistent on the principle
that law matters and the rule of law matters. And I liked the possible trolling quotation
of post-Watergate Attorney General
at Levy. And I'll just read one quote from it. Quote, in a society that too easily accepts
the notion that everything can be manipulated, it is important to make clear that the administration
of federal justice seeks to be impartial and fair. And people might find that just like
totally depressing like note or delusional. That's, I think, a fair read of this cover note.
I found it actually stirring and somewhat comforting
going into this next era, honestly.
So this is what I got from the cover memo.
We often talk on the show about how
the court is the charret Whitfield of Housewives.
Like, who going to check me, boo?
This Jack Smith memo was the Neini leaks of the real housewives
because it was like I said what I said like you have a white refrigerator fuck you I said what I
said yeah Kate you brought up the levy quote a quote that has been with me is actually something
one of my colleagues wrote Don Herz Herzog, when he said,
no doubt having a rule of law isn't enough for a society
to qualify as a good one, but those inclined to denigrate it
should contemplate societies without it, end quote.
Separately, on Wednesday night, outgoing President Joe Biden
delivered his farewell address to the nation,
in which he warned of a rising class of oligarchs
and the looming dangers of an unchecked oligarchy
on democratic institutions, to which we say, coincidence?
You noticed.
Great.
Basically.
Yeah, correct.
It was an unexpected turn 10 minutes in or whatever
to the address.
It did. It took a dark, dark turn. But you know. It was an unexpected turn 10 minutes in or whatever to the address. It did.
It took a dark, dark turn.
But you know.
It took a dark turn.
Again, I'm not sure this three days out
is the best time to be beginning to raise alarms,
but I'm happy that he said it.
I fear that this is the kind of address
and the content of this address will only
become resonant and meaningful over time.
And I say fear this because I think what we're going to see is going to be like,
we're going to then come back to this and be like, yeah, Joe
Biden was exactly right.
In the same way, we now talk about Eisenhower's farewell
address, because he identified the military industrial
complex.
I think in five years, what comes after this,
we're going to be talking about this.
Like, yeah, that was the moment where he tried to tell us.
If we're still podcasting, we'll going to be talking about this." Like, yeah, that was the moment where he tried to tell us. rather than Article 2. But we also did want to highlight the ways in which Article 3 has shaped what is happening with Article 2. Part of what we had flagged as concerning about
the next Trump administration in our immediate post-election recap episode was the sheer
amount of grift and corruption there would likely be. The new administration has not
even taken office yet, but the grift has begun. There have been multiple million-dollar donations
to the president's inaugural fund by tech companies, who
somehow didn't feel similarly compelled to donate
to Biden's inaugural fund.
Curious.
And then Amazon, whose founder and CEO, Jeff Bezos,
is reported to be attending the inauguration from a prime,
see what I did there?
I did.
Seat on the viewing platform.
He's purchased the rights to make a Melania Trump
documentary for the bargain basement price of $40 million.
Now, listeners, this is obviously not a bribe.
This is obviously a pure business transaction
that is based on the obvious market
value of the story of one of the most compelling First
Ladies in the history of the United States.
I think only the second first lady to be foreign born
points if you know who the first one was.
Anyone?
Louisa Adams.
JQA, the first Nepo baby's wife and first lady.
Anyway, all to say, this is obviously something
that viewers have been angling for.
And it makes perfect business sense.
And this is not at all a coincidence,
even though the timing does seem a little sus.
So we wanted to briefly explain the links between this grift
and others and the Supreme Court.
The court has been on a tear shredding
federal anti-corruption
laws, which Kate has written about in her article
Partisanship Creep, if you want a longer treatment.
But just to take some examples, two terms ago
in Percoco versus United States, the court
shut down a public corruption prosecution
of a private individual who was formerly in government
and about to go back into government.
The court reasoned that the courts below
and the federal government had too freely
said that a private individual could violate
anti-corruption laws.
They are those guaranteeing honest services.
And the porousness of the boundary
between the private and the public capacities
of the Trumps and their businesses
is at the heart of much of the anticipated grift.
There was also last term Snyder versus United States
where the Republican justices said
that it did not violate laws against kickbacks
to tip a state or local official after the fact
if there wasn't an explicit quid pro quo agreement in place.
And again, the distinction between a tip and a quid pro quo
was pretty fine.
We were slicing the baloney pretty thin there,
as Elena Kagan might say.
But all to say that these decisions taken together
all facilitate a kind of open corruption
and seems to have created a climate in which there
is likely to be even more grift and graft going on
as we head into Trump 2.0.
And it's not going to be grift and graft, because it's all perfectly legitimateff because it's all perfectly legitimate now. Right. It's just the way politics works.
Yeah. Yeah. And to be clear, we're talking in general terms, not about specific
transactions that would even under a correct interpretation of federal
anti-corruption laws be criminal. But the idea is that the court has really
created this climate in which it is very unlikely that any or at least many of
the existing, you know, non-gutted federal anti-corruption laws will be enforced. So
that is going to facilitate an environment in which grift and corruption are prevalent
in Washington. And when that happens, make sure to think of and to thank Chief Justice
John Roberts. Strict scrutiny is brought to you by Naked Wines.
I'm a wine plebe, like really a novice.
I have no idea how to describe wine.
People say fruity, but they don't taste fruity to me.
Anyways, because I'm such a novice, I love our next sponsor, Naked Wines.
It's 2025.
Crap, how did that happen?
So don't shop for wine like they did in 1789.
No reason to be an originalist unnecessarily. Naked Wines is a service that directly connects
you to the world's finest independent winemakers so you can get award-winning wine delivered
straight to your door. Use our code STRICKT for the code and password at NakedWines.com
and get their incredible deal of 6 bottles for just $39.99.
I'm super excited to try Naked Wine's bottle of pink Moscato.
I'm going to enjoy it, by which I mean cope with the slow motion disaster that is the
federal courts and the law.
So how does Naked Wine's do it?
Naked Wine's connects winemakers and wine drinkers directly, allowing for vineyard to
your door delivery at up to 60% off what you would pay in store by cutting out the traditional retail middleman costs
and markups.
Winemakers can pass those savings on to you.
I like Naked Wine because my tastes are a little bit more limited than my partner's
so I don't drink reds or oaky whites so we can split a box and it all works out.
Naked Wines has been around for over 15 years and funds over 90 independent winemakers around the
world. With no commitments or membership fees, you can enjoy Naked Wines hassle-free. And don't
forget you can pause or cancel at any time, so just because you've got a trip coming up doesn't
mean you can't enjoy Naked Wines before or after that much needed vacation.
Now is the time to join the Naked Wines community.
Head to nakedwines.com slash strict, click enter voucher, and put in my code strict for
both the code and password for 6 bottles of wine for just $39.99 with shipping included.
That's $100 off your first 6 bottles at nakedwines.com slash strict. And use the code and password strict for six bottles of wine
for $39.99.
Now on to the argument recaps.
In our coverage of Project 2025, as well as
in some recent judicial confirmation hearings,
we highlighted just how obsessed certain segments of the Republican Party are with pornography.
Project 2025 proposed banning pornography and adopting Clarence Thomas's view, at
least his current view, that porn is not protected by the First Amendment.
Josh Hawley insisted on using basically all
have a speaking time at Justice Katanji Brown Jackson's
confirmation hearings to talk about pornography, which
is also a big focus of his recent book, Manhood, which
we reviewed in the Michigan Law Review.
And the Republican Supreme Court justices,
courtesy of the great state of Texas,
recently got an opportunity to express their concerns about pornography during the argument in free speech And the Republican Supreme Court justices, courtesy of the great state of Texas, recently
got an opportunity to express their concerns about pornography during the argument in free
speech coalition versus Paxton.
And weirdly, several of them sounded an awful lot like Project 2025 slash Josh Hawley.
Let me just say that this was the most entertaining Supreme Court argument in quite some time.
Oh, for sure.
Definitely.
I mean, I think probably objectively,
it was just like hilarious.
But also, they have not taken a lot of really interesting cases
this fall, and so it really stood out.
And it went on for a long time, but some
of these long arguments, sort of your attention can wane.
This one really kept my attention.
It's the article's hate.
First of all, so, Gore Vidal, can't stop reading him. Anyway, here's what the article's hate. Gourvardal. Can't stop reading him.
Anyway, here's what the case is about.
So at issue is the constitutionality of a Texas statute that imposes certain obligations
on commercial websites when at least a third of what they publish is sexual material that
is harmful to minors.
The statute requires covered websites to verify that an individual who's attempting to access
the materials is 18 years of age or older.
The act permits various forms of verification, including digital identification, government-issued
identification, and other commercially reasonable methods, though the precise methods that are
permissible is actually kind of unclear.
And the question is whether the Texas verification requirement is subject to strict scrutiny,
which is not only the name of our podcast, but also usually the standard of review that
is applicable to content-based restrictions applicable to adults, which this law is. But naturally,
the Fifth Circuit ignored that well-settled principle and said, no, we're going to use
rational basis review because porn.
So, the Supreme Court has allowed states to restrict obscene material as to adults and
non-obscene material as to minors. But it has closely scrutinized and subjected
to strict scrutiny laws that burden adults access
to non-obscene materials, even when the laws are
designed to protect minors.
And just to be clear, the categories
of sexually explicit and indecent and even
pornographic are not necessarily synonymous with obscene.
Obscene is a narrow set of materials
that can be regulated that lack constitutional protection.
But again, porn is not synonymous with obscenity.
So several Supreme Court justices
seemed interested in maybe jettisoning those presidents
entirely, maybe because stare decisises for suckers.
Maybe it's a subtle dig at this podcast.
But really, it did seem to be because porn.
Several justices, the chief Alito Barrett Kavanaavanaugh went on and on about how porn has gotten worse
It's become more available because of technology not like lower quality worse. They were not quite going there
You could read it that way
More people, you know
Look at it and are addicted to it and all of the harms that may flow from the consumption of pornography and
Several of their questions proceeded along the lines of,
well, sure, our cases say strict scrutiny applies
to content-based restrictions, including restrictions on porn.
But maybe we should just ignore all of those cases
because of changes in technology.
I think that view really came across in Justice Barrett's
questioning of Schaeffer, who was the lawyer arguing
on behalf of the Free Speech Coalition.
Again, it's worth sort of just highlighting where some of the justices are coming from.
Justice Barrett is one of the few mothers on the court.
The other is obviously Justice Katanji Brown Jackson.
But what seemed to come across in her question, and she asked a lot of questions about the
applicability of strict scrutiny.
And it seemed to suggest that as the mother of teenagers,
she's pretty consumed, maybe even preoccupied
with the challenge that many parents face of trying
to regulate her children's consumption of online content
and that this is especially challenging given
the availability of pornography online.
So here's a clip of her exchange with the petitioner's lawyer.
Well, let's see. In Ashcroft II, the court expressed anxiety about the fact that technology moves so
fast that the five years between the district court findings in that case and the case being
at the Supreme Court,
that technology may have moved beyond the record
at that point, it's been 20 years since Ashcroft.
The iPhone was introduced in 2007,
and Ashcroft was decided in 2004.
I mean, kids can get online porn through gaming systems,
tablets, phones, computers.
Let me just say that content filtering
for all those different devices, I
can say from personal experience,
is difficult to keep up with.
And I think that the explosion of addiction to online porn
has shown that content filtering isn't working.
I think the precedents are very clear here,
but I also think that this kind of common sense approach
to the regulation of pornography with regard
to the First Amendment is going to be really appealing
to some members of the court, and maybe even
with many members of the public.
David French had an op-ed in the New York Times
this week that talked about, what's up?
I'm agreeing with Ken Paxton.
This is weird.
I think the real question here, and I
wish that the lawyer for the petitioners
had made more of this, isn't about what
these precedents necessarily mean
in the context of pornography.
But if you loosen up strict scrutiny here
because it is pornography and because you are concerned
about online access reminders, what then
does that mean for First Amendment jurisprudence
in other contexts where the speech might not necessarily
be objectionable to the public, but could still
be objectionable to someone like Ken Paxton?
So I mean, the question here to me
isn't how do you regulate pornography
and whether strict scrutiny should apply.
The question is, if you relax strict scrutiny here
because it is pornography, what then
will you be able to regulate going forward
irrespective of the First Amendment?
And I'm not sure that came out as sharply as it could have.
Well, so I actually think Justice Kagan pretty pointedly
framed that issue, as we'll get to later on.
But back to this idea of the court's cases pretty clearly
say strict scrutiny applies when you
are restricting pornographic material as to adults,
Justice Sotomayor was not impressed with her colleague's suggestion that the court should just abandon
its cases because porn slash technological changes as you can hear here.
So the answer to Justice Gorsuch is let's treat every medium under the scrutiny that
applies to the people affected, correct?
Yes, Justice Sotomayor.
So that's strict scrutiny.
That is strict scrutiny.
For us to apply anything else would be overturning at least five precedents.
That's my count as well.
There are a host of cases.
I'm not going to rattle off all five.
I'll just note two.
You know, Sable, for example, involved a federal law
that prohibited dial-up or telephone services containing
constitutionally protected material for adults
but that were inappropriate for minors.
And strict scrutiny applied, even though the government said
it was trying to protect minors.
More recently, there was Ashcroft,
where a federal law prohibited online transmission
of content that's obscene for minors,
absent age verification,
the court applied strict scrutiny. And again, those are just two of the examples.
Lyleen O'Hara Yeah. And if I can just say something to go
back to the Justice Barrett question for a minute, there's just like a real question
I thought that was called by the case, not just what Melissa you were saying, which I
totally agree with that this case is about much more than just porn. It's about the First
Amendment like much more broadly, but also are they doing law here or no? Because a lot of the
questions were like, eh, it seems like maybe this is fine because it's really hard otherwise
to use filtering or to use blocking software. So, I mean, that's a fine conversation for
the Texas legislature or the U.S. Congress to be having, you know, with a constitutional
sort of backdrop. But the backdrop part was what I wasn't sure. It kept falling out of the conversation as they were talking about, like, how to deal with
this problem of porn, which is just not something that judges are supposed to be doing. And just to
be fair to them, if you're in strict scrutiny land, it is actually reasonable to ask about, you know,
what the government interest is and then what the different ways government might use or adopt to
pursue that interest. So it's not like it's never reasonable for them to ask these questions, but the register in which they were
asking them was really the register of pure policy and not law, as far as I can tell.
LWK Can I say, like, I think if you read this argument alongside their recent decision in the
TikTok case, I think you get a better sense of what they understand their role to be in this
scenario. So if you recall when we did
that emergency episode on TikTok, we highlighted the Frankfurter quote that the court identified
in and used in the TikTok case. Like this whole idea like we have to sort of think about
not embarrassing the future. We have to think about how to update certain rules in light of
changes in technology. I don't think that they think this question is one for the Texas legislature or one that
should be hashed out in the political process.
I think they understand themselves to be in a situation where technology has changed,
they have a set of existing rules, and it's their duty to figure out whether the rules
should stay as they are and be just applied as they would be to this new technology or if they
should be modified somewhat.
And the whole discussion that you just identified,
Kate, about should there be content regulation?
There are all of these different ways
that the government might achieve its interests
without unduly burdening speech.
They were talking about this and Justice Barrett
kept going on like content regulation is just really hard.
It doesn't work.
We have an IT department here at the Supreme Court. That doesn't work. I think they understand themselves to be living this
problem right now. And they have a role that is perhaps complimentary to the legislature,
but they get to say how the existing rules should be applied given changing circumstances.
And I think that's just like, that's just how they're thinking about themselves.
And a dose of pragmatism is, I honestly generally a good thing but like if this court
could be trusted to exercise a degree of humility it would be one thing but because it is not
I am just very nervous about them legislating from the bench to like you know recycle an
old phrase based on their idiosyncratic experiences and sort of dressing it up as enduring legal
principle. But anyway back to the cases that Leah was just taking through, there was one
Justice, Sam Alito, who wanted to fixate on not those cases that Justice Sotomayor mentioned,
but another case called Ginsburg. And he offered some idiosyncratic theories about what that case
held. So Ginsburg upheld the conviction for selling what the opinion actually called,
quote, a girly magazine, that's in the opinion, although it's in quotes in the opinion,
to a minor.
The case said that when states restrict minors' access to indecent materials that aren't obscene
for adults, the laws are subject to rational basis review and not subject to strict scrutiny.
But that's really just about restricting sales to kids.
And Sam said, ha, but the law also affected adults because the shopkeeper who was challenging
his conviction was an adult.
And then the briefs in the case talked about burdens on adults.
So Sam says, ergo, we can apply rational basis to this Texas law.
The problem, of course, is that as Justice Sotomayor and every other justice who apparently
is literate and reads on a regular basis pointed out, in the Ginsburg opinion,
unlike the briefs that were filed in the case, the opinion only resolves the question of what standard of review
is applicable when a statute is challenged on the ground
that it restricts minors access to pornography.
So in other words, Ginsburg, the opinion,
never specifically addressed what should happen
when the law burdens adults.
And Sam Alito was basically in rare form.
That was just sort of a warm up for him.
He was in rare form during this argument
as the opening to this episode suggested.
So let's replay this clip and this exchange
between Alito and Mr. Schaeffer,
who represented the coalition.
So one of the parties here is the owner of Pornhub, right?
Yes.
And what percentage of the material on that
is not obscene as to children?
Well, Your Honor, if we're talking about the youngest minors, I would agree that most of it is,
and that is how we read the line. Is it like the old Playboy magazine? You have essays there by
the modern-day equivalent of Gore Vidal and William F. Buckley Jr.? Not in that sense.
This is yet another great example
of what it means for a workplace to have masculine energy,
I'm pretty sure.
I also frankly loved the lawyer's response,
not in that sense.
What do you say to that question?
I thought that was perfection.
I don't know.
Do you all have others you want to add to that clip?
Because there are more related clips that I want to add here.
Yes. Okay. There are two that I thought we needed to throw in. One was at a certain point
he seemed to be seeking more information on other porn sites. He knew Pornhub, but he
wanted to know what the other ones were so he could have those names down.
All right. Let's go down to what's the second most popular porn site?
Your honor, I don't have the exact name.
You don't know who you represent these people.
A part of me wondered, is he hoping to get a recommendation for flag-related porn?
I mean, I'm sure it's out there.
People are into everything.
He had the same kind of energy he had in 303 Creative
where he was just like all black Santa, Ashley Madison.
Like you're just like, what are you,
what do you do on the weekends?
Like what are your hobbies?
Right, remember in the 303 Creative case,
which was about a wedding website designer,
he brought up Ashley Madison.
And I think this entire-
You forgot that K.A.?
I remember that.
I just don't remember that.
It was on my brain.
I didn't remember it was in the 303.
It is raising some real flags.
And then Black Santa.
No, Black Santa, I remember, obviously.
Well, yes, Black Santa.
I mean, that was, just to refresh our listeners,
him throwing out this absolutely outlandish,
offensive, hypothetical about a Black Santa
being forced to take photographs with kids in KKK costumes. I mean that is as Melissa
notes the energy he brought to this argument. And should we offer another
clip in this register? There's one. Why if a particular website has some hardcore
pornography that is obscene as to minors and then it has you know videos of
somebody reading Lady Chatterley's Lover or something like that. Can the latter be segregated?
At this point, I want to reiterate the apology from up top. You know, we did warn you this
episode has a lot of Sam Alito and porn, a grouping of words you never want to hear.
In terms of what he's fishing for in some of these questions, not the sort of flag content,
but I was wondering whether this was like him looking
for a recommendation for some dramatic readings by Roger
Jean-Page, who for more recent listeners
was our intern in early seasons of the show.
Or so we claim.
Not actually.
So we did want to cover some of the other justices
interventions in this case, some serious and interesting,
some not.
I'll start with another one of Brett Kavanaugh's
contributions. You can guess what category that falls into. So Brett Kavanaugh wanted everyone
to know that Europe uses age verification systems for indecent materials, so therefore, obviously,
it's constitutional. Foreign law, obviously, very appealing source of law to him. Also, not sure he
knows this, but Europe has a massively better
system of data privacy protections, so those laws are less burdensome, but no matter.
It was like in the Dobbs oral argument where the Chief Justice noted that in Europe and other
systems, the timing for terminating your pregnancy is much earlier than in the US,
and Julie Riegelman had to remind him. And they also have socialized health care.
So this isn't like super burdensome for a lot
of different reasons.
Yeah, so surprising that they would just
fixate on one thing and yank it totally out of context.
I think that's the only thing that matters.
StrixRootney is brought to you by Cozy Earth.
It's 2025, which means we're all going
to have some days when we won't want to get
out of bed, and we're probably just going to stay in bed. So make things comfortable where you are
with Cozy Earth's best-selling bedding. Even though it's winter, we love sleeping in Cozy Earth's
bamboo sheet set. They're not thick like flannel, so they don't feel heavy, but they're somehow
perfect for the polar vortex temperatures here in Michigan. They also don't pill with washing, they remain super soft,
which makes them extra sleepable. Cozier's bedding and bath products have a 10-year warranty,
that's how much they believe in them. And really, the ultimate ingredient for a luxurious
sleep is softness, which Cozier's products maintain. Cozy Earth's use of only
the best fabrics and textiles enhance that. And I need, we all need, all the rest we can get
to handle this onslaught. Cozy Earth Bedding products have a 100-night sleep trial and a
10-year warranty, so you can't go wrong. Create your personal retreat today. A better year starts with better sleep.
Wrap yourself in Cozy Earth.
Don't wait.
Head to CozyEarth.com slash Scrutiny now
and use my exclusive code Scrutiny for up to 40% off.
That's CozyEarth.com slash Scrutiny.
If you get a post-purchase survey,
say you heard about Cozy Earth from Strict Scrutiny podcast.
about Cozy Earth from Strict Scrutiny podcast. Okay, so let's turn to some of the other justices.
Justice Kagan had some really useful interventions which seemed to very pointedly frame the calculus
and the considerations in the case, both hearken back to things we were just talking about.
One was really about age verification systems and whether they're better and more effective
and also whether filtering technology is better. And still another was about kind of how easy or
difficult it is to bypass or evade filtering technology. And then another one which really
seemed to capture the issues in the case asked Deputy Solicitor General Brian Fletcher, who
was arguing in support of the group that was challenging the law, how to think about the
risks of what the court might say, including in other domains.
So on the one hand, Justice Kagan pointed out that the court could say here that strict
scrutiny applies, but because many people think that the state must and should have
ways of restricting access to minors, courts might be applying a more watered down or tepid
version of strict scrutiny. And that might, in turn, affect how the strict scrutiny
standard is applied in other contexts
where it should be more robust.
And this is sort of what I was getting at.
And I wish that the lawyer Schaefer for the coalition
had made this point.
But she really kind of stepped in and lawyered some
of his stuff for him.
She did.
And it seemed to register with her colleagues.
She did so very effectively. She did point out it seemed to register with her colleagues. She did so very effectively. Yeah.
She did point out as well that if the court said
intermediate scrutiny applied, which
is a less rigorous form of scrutiny than strict scrutiny,
then the court might be opening the gates
to a lower level of scrutiny in other content-based
restrictions, other than restrictions
on porn for minors.
And that could have real repercussions
for the development of First Amendment jurisprudence.
And so she basically asked, which one is worse here?
And that actually might be the question
that the court decides to resolve in this case.
What didn't seem to be on the table naturally
is what the Fifth Circuit did, which
is to apply rational basis review.
No one seems to be talking about rational basis.
The lowest level of scrutiny.
Listeners, nothing the Fifth Circuit says or does
is right on the law is a good rule of thumb to generally have.
A listener asked, why does it matter?
What standard of review applies?
It matters because it affects the degree to which courts
examine the justifications for the law, whether the law advances
those aims and whether the law has less restrictive, that
is less burdensome mechanisms to do so.
Or even if the aims are worthy.
Right, how important the justifications are.
It makes it more difficult to uphold the law
if you apply a more rigorous form of scrutiny.
So all of this, that is the options on the table versus what the Fifth Circuit did, led
to Justice Jackson highlighting a straightforward way to resolve the case that I thought was
kind of amusing.
It's because it seems to me that you've asked us to apply strict scrutiny in a circumstance
in which it would have been easy, as the government suggests, to just say wrong standard Fifth Circuit and send it back.
There was also an excruciating moment in the Texas SG's
argument that came about from Justice Jackson's questioning.
So we're not going to play that clip here,
because it's very long.
But Justice Jackson simply asked the Texas SG
about what the court's decision in Packingham
versus North Carolina meant for this case.
And Packingham is a First Amendment case
about social media and technology
where the court invalidated a state law that
made it a felony for a registered sex offender
to access a social networking site that permitted
minor children to be on the site.
So this case would seem to have a lot of things
to say about children and technology and social media
and the internet and the First Amendment.
And the Texas SD responded that he hadn't read Pacquiam.
And I have to say, this was an easy mistake
to make because the case was not cited
in the briefs for this case.
But it was on point.
But this is kind of an understandable mistake to make.
And to be fair to Justice Jackson,
she was very gracious about it and explained it
and then allowed him to respond.
But did you not cringe for him?
It was very painful.
I have to say, I respected the decision to just say,
I did not read that before today.
I thought I read everything, as opposed
to trying to bullshit your way through the exchange.
Like, oh, don't I'm not
sure it really speaks to this question you know he didn't try he was just forthright
and I at least appreciated that but yes I definitely did cringe.
All right moving on the court also heard argument in an important sentencing case Hewitt versus
United States at issue in Hewitt is the proper interpretation of the First Step Act.
Hewitt concerns a practice known as stacking so a a federal law, section 924C, prohibits
using or carrying a firearm in connection with certain crimes. Before the First Step
Act, prosecutors used to be able to stack 924C convictions in pretty outlandish ways.
So let's say you were holding a gun while you sold three bags of drugs within a 20-minute
period, one and then the other and then the other. The prosecutors might say those were three separate 924c crimes and the law used to say that judges had to stack
those sentences such that if you had one 924c conviction you'd get five years and then
if you had a second you'd get 20 years on top of that, a third it's an additional 20
years. So this resulted in just savagely long sentences.
And the First Step Act curbed that practice.
And it applied the new, more reasonable rules
not only to offenses committed after the act was passed,
but also to, quote, any offense committed
before the date of enactment if a sentence for the offense
has not been imposed as of such a date, end quote.
The question here is what it means if a sentence has not yet
been imposed.
Does it apply only to a defendant who
was originally sentenced after the First Step Act?
Or does it include a defendant who was originally sentenced
before the First Step Act, but then their sentence
was vacated such that they had to be resentenced
to a new term of imprisonment after the First Step Act's
enactment?
So that issue had divided the lower courts.
As a Court of Appeals judge, Amy Barrett had said the act did not apply to
resentencing, whereas Judge Bebas on the Third Circuit, who was a former full-time criminal law and criminal procedure professor and actually is still teaching at Penn,
where he's Kate's colleague, had said that it did. I obviously think he's right.
And so does the federal government, who agrees that the law applies to
resentencing. So the Supreme Court appointed an amicus to argue it does not.
And of course, the court went with their usual type,
a white male former SCOTUS clerk.
Yeah, they do have a type here.
Hewitt comes down to whether you think a sentence imposed
refers to a historical event or an operative sentence.
The federal government and the defendant
emphasize that the law is written
in the present perfect tense, which they said
connotes an ongoing condition, i.e. an operative sentence.
And this led Sam Alito to make this remark.
Well, it's always fun to talk about grammar and usage.
Not as much fun as porn, I guess.
What a textualist, that guy.
The breakdown between the justices seemed to be that Justice Barrett, Kavanaugh, Alito,
and maybe, possibly, probably the Chief Justice
were with the court-appointed amicus here.
And justices Sotomayor, Gorsuch, and Jackson
were all with the defendant.
It's unclear where Justice Thomas was on this.
He maybe wanted to pursue a third theory about whether
a sentence was vacated before or after the act.
And I guess we'll see where that leads.
And that means the real question is, where is Justice
Kagan on all of this?
She seemed to be kind of on the fence.
She did bring up what she described
as a somewhat unique amicus brief filed by senators Durbin,
Grassley, Booker, and Lee, who were the sponsors of the act.
And as she observed, not guys who link arms very often.
And their brief pretty emphatically
said they understood the text and purpose and background rule
to be that the act would apply to resentencing.
There were also other pieces of evidence, some of which
she invoked, that favored the defendant and federal
government's position.
One was pressed most effectively by America's public defender,
Justice Katanji Brown Jackson.
She explained the normal rule is laws
don't apply to people who committed an offense before the law
was passed but were sentenced after,
but Congress had changed that rule here.
And in modifying the usual rules,
Congress expressed that it wants the law
to apply to sentencings, which include resentencings.
And she pointed out applying the law to resentencings
wouldn't actually disrupt any finality interests because those defendants have to be resentencings. And she pointed out applying the law to resentencings wouldn't actually disrupt any finality interests
because those defendants have to be resentenced anyway.
The other key point, which the federal government seemed
to distance itself from at some point,
strangely, is the idea, a principle of sentencing law,
that a sentence that was imposed but has been vacated
is not a sentence at all.
It is void.
So we'll see what these guys are going to do,
as RuPaul says, don't fuck it up.
They probably will.
The court also heard a federal criminal case,
Thompson v. United States, about whether 18 USC, section 1014,
which prohibits making a false statement
for the purpose of influencing certain financial institutions
and agencies, prohibits making a misleading statement.
At least, that's what the court thought
the case was about when it granted Sarsourari,
because it seems the court, once again,
failed to realize that a case didn't actually
present the question that the justices were trying to decide.
So here are the facts of the case.
Patrick Thompson sought to refinance mortgages on his home.
He borrowed $110,000 from Washington Federal.
He later borrowed another $20,000 two years later, He borrowed $110,000 from Washington Federal. He later
borrowed another $20,000 two years later, and then $89,000 three years later. Washington
Federal subsequently failed and was taken over by the FDIC, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation. And in a conversation with the loan servicer, after he received notice of
what he owed, Thompson expressed confusion about the amounts. Looking at the balance, which was for over 200,000, he said, I borrowed 100,000. And I mean, I borrowed the money, I owe the money,
but I borrowed 100 thou, 110, I think it was 110,000. I want to quickly resolve all this and,
you know, what I owe. He had a similar conversation with FDIC contractors in which Thompson talked
again about the $110,000 loan. So Thompson was charged with false statements to both FDIC contractors in which Thompson talked again about the $110,000 loan. LESLIE KENDRICK So Thompson was charged with false statements to both FDIC and Planet Home
lending on the theory that talking about the $110,000 loan implied that that was the extent of it.
And the justices seemed to think that he made a false, not a misleading statement when he did so,
because his statement conveyed, signaled, or meant that he owed only $110,000, not
the full $200,000 plus, even Justices Jackson and Sotomayor,
who are often the most open to arguments
by criminal defendants, raise that possibility.
And there were debates in the argument
about what exactly is the difference between false
and misleading, or what it might mean for a statement
to be false in context, or did the court below say
people could be convicted for misleading statements.
But at the end of the day, it seemed that most justices
thought the defendant made a false statement.
And the government's lawyer, Carolyn Flynn, go blue,
seemed to make headway in convincing the justices
that the jury was instructed that they should convict
if they found the statement false.
The court also heard argument in Watzig versus Halliburton Energy
Services.
And this was a case about whether a voluntary dismissal
without prejudice under federal rule of civil procedure 41
is a final judgment, order, or proceedings
under federal rule of civil procedure 60B,
such that a court can relieve a party or its legal
representative from said final judgment, order, or proceedings.
Last but not least was a case where
friend of the pod Sam Alito also really
showed out and that is an important anti-discrimination case Stanley versus City of Sanford, Florida.
This case involves a firefighter, Karen Stanley, who was still working when her employer, the city,
changed its benefit plan from one that provided health benefit subsidies to disability retirees
until age 65 to a plan that terminated subsidies two years after retirement.
While she was on the job, Stanley developed Parkinson's and decided to retire, and two years
after she retired, the city discontinued her health insurance. So Stanley sued, arguing that the new
policy and the policy change discriminate against her on the basis of disability. The United States
agrees and is supporting her. The case is a little
strange in that it seems the geniuses on the court, once again, didn't quite realize they
were taking a case that didn't necessarily present the question that they were interested
in answering. They thought they were taking the case to answer whether a former employee
can sue under the ADA if an employer alters post-employment benefits in a discriminatory
way after the employee retires.
Here, however, the employer altered the benefits package while Stanley was still employed.
That matters because the ADA prohibits employers from discriminating against a qualified individual
who is someone who can perform the essential functions of employment that such individual
holds or desires.
At the time of the allegedly discriminatory policy change,
Stanley was a qualified individual.
She was an employee at the time of the alleged discrimination,
though she didn't feel the effects until after.
Deepak Gupta, who was representing Stanley,
did a great job hammering this.
But the harder question would be,
what happens if an employer changes
post-employment benefits on a discriminatory basis
for someone who is already a retiree.
So part of the argument here was devoted to, well, should we just resolve the case on narrower grounds?
As Justice Kagan pointed out, it, quote, seems a little bit odd to decide the bigger, broader question when as to this particular person, it's academic.
The justices also noodled over whether the narrower ground was technically preserved in the courts below.
It probably was, but that was a topic of discussion.
We wanted to highlight one particularly cringe-worthy,
rage-inducing moment from our friend, Troledo.
We'll play the clip, and then we'll explain
why it is really something.
I think that all of what you said makes sense. There was a period during her employment when she had a claim for disability discrimination.
The period between the onset of her disability and her retirement, at least toward the end of that period. She was agree
I think it was predictable that she might face this situation after she retired.
And so there she was aggrieved and I think there was sufficient injury, a sufficient
threat of injury in fact to give her Article III standing. But that doesn't get you home
because she didn't file on that claim within the prescribed
time.
So what you need is the Lilly Ledbetter Act to save you.
And the outcome would depend on how you read the Lilly Ledbetter Act.
It could be read as sort of an extension of the statute of limitations, which would allow her to pursue that claim at any point
in the future when she is not getting the benefits to which she thinks she's entitled.
That's one way to read it.
But another way to read it, which does have support in the statutory language,
is that the Act does not extend to the statute of limitations.
It says that an unlawful employment practice occurs
when an individual is affected by application
of a discriminatory compensation decision or other practice.
So record scratch.
What is going on here?
The name Lily Ledbetter should sound familiar.
She was the plaintiff in a major anti-discrimination case
that was about whether she could sue because her present day
salary was substantially lower than her male cohorts
due to discriminatory practices from decades ago, which
had continued to infect her salary.
Guess who wrote the opinion saying she could not
sue for said discrimination?
I know, I know.
Sam Alito.
I know you know that was for our listeners. Now, guess who disagreed with Sam Alito
about whether people like Lilly Ledbetter could sue?
Congress, who passed the Lilly Ledbetter Act.
And guess who's now trying to undermine the Lilly Ledbetter
Act by giving it a crabbed interpretation such
that it doesn't benefit victims of discrimination.
Sam Alito.
So last week we played a Kagan throwback clip and there's another Kagan throwback that
seems really on point for this one.
So this clip is from Jarkusie versus SEC.
Nobody has had the, you know, chutzpah to quote my people.
That's real chutzpah. Sam Alito has chutzpah. He really does.
No vergonya and chutzpah.
But plenty of chutzpah.
Put it on a flag.
Yep.
Strict scrutiny is brought to you by skins.
I never managed to find bras and underwear with the right fabric.
Some were too shiny and underwear with the right fabric.
Some were too shiny and almost cold on my skin,
some were too thick and clunky,
others got destroyed in the wash,
and then came Skims, which, as you know, I'm obsessed with.
My drawers, yes I have multiple drawers of them,
I love them that much, is now full of the most comfortable,
stretchy and supportive pieces.
Trust me, once you try Skims,
you'll understand why everyone is obsessed.
My favorite pieces are the Fits Everybody Boy Short and the Fits Everybody Scoop Bralette.
The fabric in the Fits Everybody line is, and I mean this, to die for. It stays buttery soft
through all the washes. And I like Boy Short Fits, but the problem has been with Boy Shorts you can
often see the lines, but skims is so seamless I don't have to worry about bulky fabrics showing.
And my Fits Everybody Scoop Braulette is my go-to braulette. I don't like stuff with a lot of
padding, but sometimes that means shapeless ill-fitting bras or flattening ones, but not
this one. It's unlike any sports bra that can feel restrictive and flattening, it's the kind
of braulette you forget you're even wearing.
And it has the same amazing soft buttery fabric that I am obsessed with in the Fits Everybody
boy shorts.
And I haven't even gotten to tell you about my jammies.
I am obsessed with my skim soft lounge pajamas.
I have multiple sets because I need to wear them every day or I can't relax or sleep.
The fabric is again what makes them.
They're silky smooth, but also thick enough to keep me warm.
But also I don't get hot. They feel luxurious and we all need to be swaddled in luxury and comfort these days.
Shop Skims Best Intimates, including the Fits Everybody collection and more, at skims.com and
Skims New York flagship on 5th Avenue. After you place your order, be sure to let
them know we sent you. Select Podcast in the survey and be sure to select our show in the
drop-down menu that follows.
All right, so let's move on to the opinions. We got two unanimous opinions we're going
to briefly mention. The first was in EMD sales versus Carrera, and the court concluded that a preponderance
of the evidence standard applies when employers are seeking an exemption from the Fair Labor
Standards Act.
Justice Kavanaugh wrote that opinion and his friend, Lisa Blatt, who testified in favor
of his confirmation prevailed.
So nice for her.
The second opinion was in Royal Canaan versus Westschleger.
There the court held that when a plaintiff, after removing a case to federal court,
amends their complaint to delete the federal claim
that enabled the removal,
the federal court loses supplemental jurisdiction
over state claims and the case has to be remanded.
Justice Kagan wrote that opinion.
And now for some quick additional court culture.
So as we were recording this episode,
the Fifth Circuit issued its much anticipated
DACA Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals decision. Unfortunately, the decision is largely as we predicted, a majority
of the Fifth Circuit concluded that at least portions of the DACA program, which protects
from deportation, people who are brought to the United States as children and allows them to seek
authorization to work, are illegal. So it concluded that the policy can forbear from enforcing
immigration law as to DACA recipients that is announced that the administration
will not prioritize their removal, but it concluded that the benefits portions of
the program, that is the authorization to work, eligibility for Social Security,
that those portions are illegal. Now the court did limit its ruling to Texas, the lead plaintiff in the case, not entirely clear what that means portions are illegal. Now, the court did limit its ruling
to Texas, the lead plaintiff in the case.
Not entirely clear what that means in this context.
And it also put the decision on hold.
That is, DACA recipients won't immediately
lose their work authorization.
But it does tee that issue up, and honestly, potentially
the entire validity of DACA for the Supreme Court,
which is terrifying. Because the last time DACA made itsA for the Supreme Court, which is terrifying.
Because the last time DACA made its way to the Supreme Court,
that was when the Trump 1.0 administration attempted
to end the program by a 5-4 decision
with Chief Justice Roberts joining
the then four Democratic appointees.
The court invalidated that rescission.
But the dissenters in that case, Justices Thomas Alito, Kavanaugh, and Gorsuch, pretty strongly signaled
their view that DACA is illegal.
And now that Justice Barrett has replaced Justice Ginsburg,
there's a real possibility the Supreme Court could
be on the verge of ending the DACA program.
All right, some more uplifting news
also from Fifth Circuit adjacent land.
Judge Matthew Kazmarek, also known as America's Next Top
Research Scientist, is apparently really jealous
that Eileen Cannon, America's Next Top Scodas judge,
is getting all of the attention.
And so he took that personally because no one puts Matthew
Kazmarek in a corner.
I wonder if he knows that dirty dancing is entirely
catalyzed by the need for an illegal abortion.
Probably not.
Anyway, so Judge Kaczmarek went ahead and issued
a redonkulous ruling in which he allowed Idaho, Kansas,
and Missouri to continue to press the lawsuit challenging
Mifflipristone, one of the drugs used in the medication abortion
protocol.
That keeps the suit alive because remember,
the Supreme Court said only that the private plaintiffs,
the doctors and dentists who didn't want to prescribe or use
Mephistone didn't have standing.
They didn't say on the merits that the challenges
to medication abortion and the FDA's regulation
of medication abortion were baseless.
So Casmeric's ruling keeps this case alive
after the plaintiffs dismiss their case.
And importantly, it puts the defense of medication
abortion in the hands of the Trump administration.
At best, this means that John Sauer, who's the Solicitor General designate, will be writing
the briefs to defend it.
At worst, it means the administration could go ahead and agree and team up with the states
to press the position that abortion medication was
wrongfully approved or should have additional restrictions placed on it. Now, that wouldn't
mean the case would end there. The drug manufacturers who had intervened earlier in the last round
of litigation could still defend against the lawsuit. But the point is that by prolonging
the case, Kaczmarek and the Supreme Court have created the possibility of jeopardizing
medication abortion access after the election, during the Trump administration, and actually very,
very early in the Trump administration. Kaczmarek also allowed the suit to continue in his court,
even though none of the new plaintiffs are the state of Texas. I actually don't understand
why Texas isn't in on the action, but it is other anti-abortion states, not Texas, that were
the subject of this order. And I mean, Kaczmarek, like Cannon, contains multitudes. And, you
know, I worry he's just getting started. Wait, Leah, were you going to say, would you know
why Texas is not in the suit?
I don't know why Texas is not. I was just going to say that Ken Paxton is experimenting
with other vicious anti-abortion litigation, as we will touch on in a second. So, you know, limited
number of cases in which he can be on the lead on probably.
Yeah. And if you can have other states somehow with no real business being in Texas convinced
Kaz Merrick to let you proceed, then you may as well know how and how to get your attention
elsewhere. Yeah. It's probably done.
So other pieces of news we wanted to note, we got some new grants. The Supreme Court
decided that it wasn't
set to do enough damage this term,
so they added a few other doozies,
slapping October term 2024 and saying,
we can fit a few more bad boys in here.
So let's go through some of the cases the court added.
First up is an Affordable Care Act case, Braidwood.
I remember the Affordable Care Act.
Remember how it narrowly survived
in the first Trump administration?
Well, guess what?
It's back.
And this time, health insurance coverage
for preventative services could be taken away.
The case is a challenge to the structure of the Preventative
Services Task Force.
This is the entity responsible for designating
what preventative services health insurers must
cover under the ACA.
And the case has been brought by an employer
who objects to having to cover PrEP,
which is the pre-exposure prophylaxis drugs,
which minimize the risk of contracting HIV.
The employer also objects to covering contraception,
another preventative service that is covered under the ACA.
If the employer is successful here,
this would disable the mechanisms by which insurers
are told what preventative services must be covered.
And again, that has real repercussions
for a range of medication services,
including not just PrEP and contraception,
but other kinds of preventative services
that many Americans need.
So yikes.
Yep.
They did deny a cross petition raising a non-delegation doctrine question. So, yikes. Lylea
So I guess, you know, small mercies.
But they did take up a case involving a challenge to a state tax exemption, which is a religious
charity arguing that it is constitutionally entitled to a state tax exemption because
we are a Christian nation.
That's not technically what they argue, but kind
of is. That's a reference to an old Supreme Court case, the Church of the Holy Trinity.
One more case they took up, a case about who gets to sue the EPA because everyone is clamoring
to do so now. And one more case about whether doctors and patients can challenge a state's
decision to defund Planned Parenthood by kicking Planned Parenthood out of the Medicaid program.
This case will essentially decide whether states can kick Planned Parenthood out of the Medicaid program. This case will essentially decide whether states can kick Planned Parenthood out of
the Medicaid program without repercussions because the other possible enforcement mechanism
to challenge the decision to do so would be the federal government withdrawing Medicaid
funds and we all know the Trump administration isn't going to be out there safeguarding
women's healthcare.
So this challenge is the only way that states are going to be prevented from essentially
kicking Planned Parenthood out and making it impossible for it to do its work in states is the only way that states are going to be prevented from essentially kicking
Planned Parenthood out and making it impossible for it to do its work in
states where it's desperately needed. Excellent. And on Friday the court agreed
to take up a parental rights case, Mahmood versus Taylor. This case is about
whether it violates parents religious rights when schools instruct their
children on gender and sexuality in ways that contravene the parents'
religious beliefs.
So it's going to be something for the Supreme Court
to uphold that parental rights claim at the same time
that it probably will uphold bans on gender-affirming care
for minors, where it is admittedly not directly
addressing a parental rights claim, but still.
We've mentioned Ken Paxson a few times,
but I wanted to call back a development that
occurred a little earlier this year that we
haven't had time to get to.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has been doing the most recently,
not just with this pornography case that we recently discussed
here, but also with regard to abortion.
So he's the same guy who personally threatened hospitals
with liability if they provided a medically necessary
abortion to Kate Cox.
This time, he is again pressing this anti-abortion stance by initiating a lawsuit against a New
York doctor who, Ken Paxton alleges, helped a Texas woman obtain an abortion via medication
abortion.
The case is seen as a test case for how much anti-abortion states can extend their laws beyond their own borders
and into blue states.
And it's also a test to see exactly what
blue state shield laws can do.
And a side note here is that this abortion came to light
because the father of the fetus reported it to the authorities.
So ladies, always choose a bear.
In fact, Carolyn Kitchener at The Washington Post
just released a story about how anti-abortion groups are pushing
for men to basically report on their girlfriends and wives
and partners.
So this is part of a concerted strategy.
We also wanted to briefly note, I know this episode is long,
but a major figure in the Supreme Court world,
Supreme Court bar Tom Goldstein, who
was the founder of SCOTUSblog, was recently
indicted on multiple counts of tax fraud.
The indictment alleges he used money from his firm
to pay off personal and gambling debts and also women
that he was engaged in personal relationships with,
and also that he didn't report income from gambling.
Again, a major figure in the Supreme Court world,
I think a pretty shocking indictment that we at least
wanted to acknowledge.
A grab bag of a few other things we wanted to mention
before we wrapped.
As they were headed out the door,
Senate Democrats released a report
titled An Investigation of the Ethics Challenge at the Supreme Court.
You know, the title could have been tweaked, I think, and improved dramatically if it had read
the ethics challenge that is the Supreme Court or the ethics challenge of the Supreme Court,
but it's close.
Good at it.
Yeah, they didn't ask.
So, the report documents the vast largesse bestowed on Clarence Thomas, noting that,
quote, the number value and extravagance of the gifts accepted by Justice Thomas have no comparison
in modern American history.
This includes 20 rides on Harlan Crowe's private jet,
seven times Thomas or Thomas's family
stayed at a particular Crowe resort, Camp Topridge.
So much of this is known, but it's still
useful to have it in one place.
The report also concludes that friend of the pod, Samuel Alito,
created the appearance
of impropriety when he failed to recuse in some cases.
It also places some blame on Chief Justice John Roberts, noting that Roberts, quote,
refused to appear before the Senate committee and rather than investigate the conduct consuming
the court, produced a non-binding statement on ethics principles and practices of the
justices purported to follow,"
end quote.
All true, I guess.
But fear not, America.
If you really care about judicial ethics
and penalizing judges for doing bad things,
you should take solace in the fact
that some federal judges are, in fact,
being disciplined for criticizing Justice Sam Alito.
An investigation concluded that a district court judge engaged
in misconduct when he published an essay in The New York Times
arguing that the display of flags associated
with the Stop the Steal movement at House Alito
breach judicial ethics rules.
Again, the problem here wasn't the flag.
The problem was writing about the flags.
That was the impropriety.
So just so you're clear.
How about some good court culture, like good news,
which we actually have some.
So it seems that some folks are catching on
to the Supreme Court.
A Gallup poll from the end of last year
found that public confidence in the American legal system
has plunged over the last four years,
putting the United States in the company of countries
like Venezuela, Syria, and Myanmar.
And between 2020 and 2024, confidence
in the judicial system dropped by a staggering 24 percentage
points to 35%.
Wow.
I am still taking this as a send strict scrutiny to more friends
challenge.
But we did want to recognize John Roberts and company
for some well-deserved recognition they received,
namely a Golden Duke Award.
John Roberts and the conservative justices
won the Golden Duke Award for best scandal general interest,
where they beat out Donald Trump, Senator Bob Menendez,
and the billionaire owners of the Washington Post and LA Times.
Congratulations, sirs.
We know you worked for it.
And finally, we covered on our year end episode, KBJ's star turn on Broadway.
We wanted to treat you now to some highlights from her appearance in the musical and Juliet,
which the show has now posted to Instagram. Welcome to the first day of rehearsal.
You're so excited to be here. This has been a dream of mine.
I got the eye of the tiger, the fighter, dancing through the fire, cause I am a champion and you're gonna hear me roar
Show me the meaning of being lonely
Is this the feeling I need to walk with?
Tell me why I can't be there when you are
There's something missing in my heart
Sorry, did you all date Romeo?
Yes!
Oh, we used to do more than date.
He used to come to my balcony all the time.
I did it! I made it to Broadway!
Yeah, come on!
We hope that brought a smile to your face.
And now for a little housekeeping before we go.
Crooked friends at Vote Save America Action and Crooked Ideas have set up a disaster relief
fund to benefit those impacted by the horrific wildfires in Los Angeles.
And it's super easy for you to make one donation that's then split among incredible charities
doing important work for our neighbors and first responders in Los Angeles.
Among those charities are the Latino Community Foundation, the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank,
the Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation, United Way of Greater Los Angeles, the California
Community Foundation, Wildfire Relief Fund, and Inclusive Action. Thanks to you, we've raised nearly
$154,000 for these great groups so far. And you can continue to make this a broader effort
by learning more and making a tax-deductible donation
to this effort at votesaveamerica.com slash
relief.
While California is racing to contain wildfires
as weather conditions improve, MAGA leaders
are blaming diversity, equity, and inclusion for the crisis
instead of focusing on real solutions.
And this isn't new.
Many companies are also rolling back DEI programs
as the new Trump administration approaches.
That's why this week on Assembly Required,
Stacey Abrams and NYU law professor Kenji Yoshino
tackled the myths, legal arguments, and share
why DEI is not the problem.
It's a solution.
Listen to this episode now on the assembly required feed. Strict Scrutiny is a Crooked Media
production hosted and executive produced by Leah Lippmann, Melissa Murray and me,
Kate Shaw. Produced and edited by Melody Rowell, Michael Goldsmith is our
associate producer. Audio support from Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis. Music
by Eddie Cooper. Production support from Madeleine Herringer and Ari Schwartz.
Matt DeGroote is our head of production thanks to our digital team,
Phoebe Bradford and Joe Matoski. Our production staff is proudly unionized
with the Writers Guild of America East. Subscribe to Strict Scrutiny on YouTube
to catch full episodes. Find us at youtube.com slash strict scrutiny podcast.
If you haven't already be sure to subscribe to Strict Scrutiny in your
favorite podcast app so you never miss an episode. And if you want to help other people find the show, please rate and review
us, it really helps.