What A Day - Full Supreme Court Press
Episode Date: April 20, 2023In the latest in the fight against mifepristone, the Supreme Court has delayed its ruling on the abortion pill until Friday at midnight — extending the continued use of mifepristone for a couple mor...e days.In a 6-3 ruling, the Supreme Court sided with Texas death row inmate Rodney Reed in his years-long effort to get post-conviction DNA evidence to try and prove his innocence.And in headlines: the mother of Tyre Nichols sued the city of Memphis and its police department over the death of her son, the Florida Board of Education voted to expand the state’s so-called “Don’t Say Gay” law, and a Twilight TV series is in the works.Show Notes:What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
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It's Thursday, April 20th.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Juanita Toliver, and this is What A Day,
where geriatric millennials who were wronged by Netflix's
love-is-blind snafu can relax,
because the new Mighty Morphin Power Rangers
has officially debuted on our messiest streaming platform.
If I were Rita Repulsa, I'd be shaking in my boots right now.
On today's show,
three people have been arrested and charged
in connection to the shooting
at a 16th birthday party in Alabama last weekend.
Plus, you might need to send Facebook a Venmo request.
Yikes.
But first, the Supreme Court extended their temporary
stay in the abortion pill case yesterday, and thus they have extended the continued use of
Mifepristone for at least two more days, giving themselves until Friday at midnight to either
uphold or overturn that disgusting ruling out of Texas. That means the abortion medication
can still be used for abortions up
to 10 weeks, and it can still be accessed by mail without a visit to a doctor's office. And for once,
this is a welcome, though brief, respite from the highest court in the land for pregnant people who
may be in need of this critical medication. And I am thrilled, Priyanka, that the extremist
anti-abortion girlies are fuming. Listen, I'm only happy if those girls are fuming.
That's how I want them to stay.
So I don't know.
I think the court should keep it up.
Like we should just keep this around.
We can wish.
But of course, this extension doesn't mean
that we can expect a positive outcome here.
What it does mean, though,
is that the justices are taking additional time
to decide whether or not they're going to effectively
implement a national abortion ban by suspending the FDA's approval of Mifepristone, which is used
to perform about half of abortions in the United States. And when I say that, I'm thinking about
the lower income communities, the rural communities, the black and brown people,
the people living with disabilities, and the migrants who need access to this form of basic
health care. Not to mention, if the Supreme Court need access to this form of basic health care. Totally.
Not to mention, if the Supreme Court institutes a nationwide abortion ban, that would fly
in the face of all of their justifications of states deciding and states' rights that
they referenced when they overturned Roe v. Wade last year.
And y'all may remember us discussing this in recent weeks, but keep in mind that this
entire Supreme Court moment stems from a Texas judge that suspended the Food and Drug Administration's approval of Mifepristone, in which the federal judge refused to use the word fetus, declared it to be unscientific, and opted to use anti-abortion phrases instead.
Wild. I'm not confident in how they'll decide this case, considering that the conservative justices have already overturned Roe, and they've made it abundantly clear that they will jump at the opportunity to take away even more of our basic rights.
But the Biden administration is right to take on this fight for women and pregnant people at the Supreme Court and on the ground.
On top of their legal challenge, Vice President Harris recently rallied with abortion advocates in California, and she convened a task force on reproductive rights at the White House. So the energy is there.
They're bringing it. Totally. They're bringing it. Everyone on the ground is bringing it. It seems
like we know where the vast majority of people in this country stand on this, and we have for some
time. But in addition to the impending Supreme Court decision, there have been reports that a
manufacturer of the generic version of if it wasone has also filed a lawsuit. So can
you tell us more about what that's about? Look, it's all thanks to the chaos from the
anti-abortion groups that are trying to leverage the courts to get mifepristone taking off the
market. GenBioPro, the maker of the generic version of mifepristone, has sued the FDA to
try to protect nationwide access to the medication and to reaffirm that the FDA alone has the right to revoke access to a medication if it is deemed
to be a hazard to the public. Essentially, GenBioPro is asking the judge to prohibit the
FDA from taking any action that would disrupt access to the pills, including suspending its
approval along with mifepristone's approval.
And they're right to be worried because the FDA interpreted last week's ruling from the
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals to include the generic medication. It's also important to note
that according to GenBioPro, they're the ones who produced two-thirds of all of the Mifepristone
sold in the nation. So any change to its FDA approvals
will have massive implications.
Totally.
So how is the FDA responding to this new lawsuit?
Radio silence.
When I tell you they aren't saying a thing,
their official statement was, quote,
the FDA doesn't comment on pending litigation.
Like, what?
Okay.
But you know who is speaking up? Other pharmaceutical companies who
recognize that this case will also have an impact on the FDA's ability and sound standing to approve
medications that they manufacture. Scores of companies have reportedly signed on to an amicus
brief filed with the Supreme Court that called the Texas ruling, quote, an unprecedented assault on
the FDA's approval decisions. So that
bit of support goes to show that this impending ruling will have far reaching impact that extends
well beyond abortion access. So buckle up, y'all. They might be coming for it all.
Totally. I mean, the abortion access, like we can't overstate how important that is. Like we
have said it so many times on this show, you know how we feel, but this also threatens so much more than just this issue. Like this threatens all the notifications
in the United States. Like it really is monumental. So we hope knock on everything that they make the
right decision. Staying on the topic of the Supreme Court, I want to talk about an update in the case
of Rodney Reed. Rodney Reed is a death row inmate in Texas whose case we've talked about on this show previously. Yesterday, in a 6-3 ruling,
the Supreme Court sided with Reed in his years-long efforts to get post-conviction DNA testing to try
and prove his innocence. Before this, Texas had argued that Reed waited too long to bring his
challenge to the federal court, but the Supreme Court disagreed. So now
Reed can go back to a federal court to make his claim for DNA testing. Texas is really just
fucking up with these court rulings, but let's rewind for a second. Can you give us a refresher
on the details of this case? Because it's pretty wild. Yeah, this is truly wild. So back in 1996,
a 19-year-old white woman, Stacey Stites, was raped and murdered in Bastrop County, Texas.
A year later, sheriffs arrested Rodney Reed, a then 29-year-old black man.
At first, Reed denied knowing her, but later revealed that they were having an affair.
His sperm was found inside her, but he has maintained his innocence.
He said that her fiancé, a local police officer, was the last person to see her alive.
As time has gone on, the fiancé's proclivity for violence against women,
threat against states, et cetera, have come out.
This is not a good guy.
Sickening.
But the all-white jury at the time did not believe Reed.
And for this, and on the basis of being suspected of other rapes,
not proven in any way, he received the death penalty.
Reed was set to be executed back in November of 2019,
but a lot of people became very invested in his case.
It got a lot of attention from celebrities
like Kim Kardashian and Rihanna.
The fact that he was denied DNA testing previously
raised a lot of eyebrows,
got a lot of people making calls
and really angry and upset.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
ended up halting his execution
and sent his case back to the lower courts.
Okay, look, we can all recognize the ridiculousness of denying this man DNA testing,
but also an all-white jury just decided to lock him away and throw away the key. Like,
it's dripping in racism, but alas. So how did we get to the Supreme Court on this?
For years, Reid has been trying to get crime scene evidence tested for traces of DNA,
including the belt that Stites was strangled with. Texas has a law that lets people obtain
post-conviction DNA testing under certain circumstances, but his request was denied
by a state judge in 2014. They claimed that the crime scene items were stored improperly,
they could be contaminated, gave a bunch of excuses. He tried to challenge that,
but Texas's highest criminal
court upheld that ruling and ended up denying him a rehearing in 2017. So then in 2019, two years
later, Reed sued in federal court. But when he got there, they told him that he waited too long,
that he should have sued within two years of being denied testing back in 2014, rather than within
the two years of being denied the rehearing in
2017, which is what he did. So the issue of whether or not Reed had actually waited too long to go to
the federal court is why this got up to the Supreme Court in the first place. You know, they're not
talking about, is he guilty? Is he innocent? Like they are talking about this timeframe, the statute
of limitations. And ultimately they sided with Reed. They said that the statute of limitations. And ultimately, they sided with Reed. They said that the statute of
limitations, quote, begins to run when the state litigation ends. In this case, when the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals denied Reed's motion for a rehearing. So they are team Reed and he can go
ahead and re-request this testing. Well, call me surprised because that's not what I was expecting.
Seriously. Break down the final decision vote count on how the justice ended up ruling for us.
Totally.
So it was a 6-3 decision.
Brett Kavanaugh, surprise, surprise, actually wrote the majority opinion.
Broken clock.
We're not giving him credit, but he was right in this case.
He was joined by Chief Justice John Roberts, as well as Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Amy Coney Barrett, and Katonji Brown Jackson.
Justices Alito and Gorsuch maintained that Reed had missed the deadline,
but in completely batshit la-la land, you have Clarence Thomas, who,
Oh, God.
embroiled in scandals of his own right now, as if there isn't enough going on to talk about,
he actually wrote a separate dissent, not only, you know, disagreeing with the majority opinion.
He said
that there is no doubt that Reed did it, did the crime. Huh? He actually ended up appearing to urge
officials in Texas to execute Reed, despite the fact that the court is allowing him to go forward
and request this post-conviction DNA testing. It is just totally, unfathomably crazy. Like,
you can't overstate how nuts that is.
Clarence Thomas is just like, yeah, actually, he's guilty and you should kill him.
I don't care that the rest of his court is like, you know, maybe he should have gotten DNA tests.
When I tell you that someone like Clarence Thomas, who wallows in self-loathing about waking up with melanated black skin every day, this type of behavior is par for the course for him.
And I think a lot of black people listening to this will understand that explicitly because he is never
going to miss an opportunity to condemn another black person, like come through Clarence Thomas,
continuously doing the absolute worst. But here we are. Obviously, this ruling is huge for Rodney
Reed. But can we also talk about the broader implications of this case? Yeah. so this case really draws attention to the matter of timing, like when an inmate can
make a claim to get DNA testing and use technology to bolster their pleas of innocence. According to
the Innocence Project, which represents Reed and others who are seeking post-conviction DNA,
375 people in the U.S. have been exonerated from wrongful convictions because of DNA testing,
including 21
people who were on death row. So in states that were fully ready to execute these people. I mean,
we've been talking about DNA for a long time, but this is bringing a whole new light to the matter
of like when and the timing, the statute of limitations and how that works in these cases
for these inmates who are potentially facing really dire consequences, you know,
being executed by their states. So this is a huge deal. We'll obviously continue to follow
any updates in Rodney Reed's attempts to get post-conviction DNA testing.
But that is the latest for now. We'll be back with some headlines.
Headlines.
Alabama authorities have arrested and charged three people with murder in connection to the
shooting that left four people dead and dozens of others injured at a birthday party last weekend. Two teenagers who are 17 and 16 years old
respectively and a 20-year-old man were each charged with four counts of reckless murder.
And the two teenagers are set to be tried as adults per the state's laws. Authorities didn't
mention anything about a motive citing their ongoing investigation into the shooting, but authorities did say that the boys would likely face more charges as they gather more details about those who were injured.
The suspects will appear for bond hearings in the coming days.
State prosecutors plan to ask the judge to hold them without bail.
Two cheerleaders were shot Tuesday morning in Elgin, Texas,
after one of them mistakenly entered the wrong car after a late
night practice. The shooting happened in a grocery store parking lot that the girls say they used for
carpooling. Cheerleader Heather Roth says she got into a car she believed to be her friend's,
saw a man sitting in the passenger seat, and quickly got out. She then got into her friend's
car and when she saw the man approaching, rolled down the window to apologize. That's when he
started shooting.
Roth was grazed by a bullet,
but 18-year-old Peyton Washington, her teammate,
was shot in the back and leg and is currently hospitalized in critical condition.
This incident comes after 20-year-old Kaylin Gillis
was shot and killed Saturday
when the car she was in accidentally turned
into the wrong driveway in upstate New York.
And after 16-year-old Ralph Yall was shot twice
after he mistakenly rang the wrong doorbell
in Kansas City, Missouri last Thursday.
And if you haven't seen a fucking trend here,
it's all about gun access.
And that is the underlying problem here.
Totally.
And these kids made such an innocent mistake.
Like, it's not that they did anything wrong.
It's a mistake that anyone
could make, you know, turning into the wrong driveway, thinking someone else's car is your
own because you have the same car. It looks really similar. These are such run of the mill things
that this happens to them just like makes you scared to just function in society. Like if
that's how it's going to be, It's so sad and it's really scary.
Yesterday, the mother of Tyree Nichols sued the city of Memphis and its police department over the death of her son. 29-year-old Tyree Nichols died after five police officers brutally beat him
during a traffic stop in January. The lawsuit said that the beating was, quote, the direct
and foreseeable product of the unconstitutional policies, practices, customs, and deliberate indifference of the city of Memphis.
The 139-page civil lawsuit is asking for $550 million.
Here's what his mother, Rovon Wells, had to say during Wednesday's news conference.
This has nothing to do with the monetary value of this lawsuit,
but everything that has to do with accountability.
Those five police officers murdered my son. They beat him to death. And they need to be
held accountable along with everyone else that has something to do with my son's murder. Look, my heart breaks for Rovon Wells and her family, and I completely
understand what she's saying. And the heartbreaking reality is that she fully understands that this
monetary suit is not going to bring her son back. And that's the ultimate injustice to all of this.
Totally. The Florida Board of Education voted on Wednesday to expand the state's so-called don't say gay law, effectively banning discussions of gender and sexuality at
all grade levels in public schools. You may recall that Governor Ron DeSantis signed the
notorious legislation last year. At the time, the rule only applied to grades K through three.
Now it goes all the way up to 12th grade. Like what the actual fuck is the goal here
to just harm LGBTQ kids and their families as much as possible? Because that's all I can glean.
Clearly. To absolutely no one's surprise, Governor Ron DeSantis was the one who requested the change.
The board held a public hearing about the proposal ahead of yesterday's vote and LGBTQ plus advocates
were quick to criticize the measure for how it will further
marginalize queer and trans youth in schools the amended rule will go into effect after a procedural
notice period that lasts about a month i need florida residents to speak up during this notice
period because get on the record about how wrong this is and how harmful it's going to be to lgbtq
people statewide totally i'm amy it makes no sense. Like,
why is Rondo Santos doing this? Is there support for this anywhere? Is anybody asking for this?
Here's the thing. Within the Republican Party, the cruelty is the point. So he's literally flexing
how cruel he can be yet again. It's disgusting. If you or someone, you know, listlessly scrolled
a Facebook feed sometime between May 24th, 2007 and December
22nd, 2022, you may be entitled to just compensation. A $725 million settlement was
tentatively approved last month against Facebook's parent company Meta as a penalty for allowing
third-party organizations like Cambridge Analytica access to users' personal data without their
consent. You may remember Cambridge Analytica as the consulting users' personal data without their consent. You may remember
Cambridge Analytica as the consulting firm that aided Donald Trump's 2016 campaign using that
data. How could any of us forget? And while final legal approval won't come until September,
Facebook users can officially stake their claim to part of that settlement now through August 25th
by going to facebookuserprivacysettlement.com whether or not their data was proven to be compromised.
You may never get back the time
you spent looking through the vacation photo album
of someone you haven't spoken to since high school.
All the muffloads, as we call them in my day.
But Facebook might give you five bucks
for their wrongdoings.
And that's a little something.
Sure.
It's not nothing.
Yeah, it's a black coffee in LA.
No milk. You can't afford milk on that.
Dust off those converse, grab the Team Edward shirt from the attic and hold on tight,
spider monkeys. Lionsgate announced yesterday the studio is in the early stages of developing a Twilight television series based off of Stephanie Meyer's book series turned hit teen
trilogy. The original Twilight films were a massive success, collectively grossing over series based off of stephanie meyer's book series turned hit teen trilogy the original twilight
films were a massive success collectively grossing over 3.4 billion dollars worldwide
this is just the latest popular genre film of the early aughts to get a television rehashing
as the network formerly known as hbo max recently announced they would be adapting the harry potter
books into a multi-season series with anti-trans author J.K. Rowling attached as an executive producer. Who would have thought the
series about the teenage girl with a 104-year-old boyfriend who watches her sleep every night would
be shaping up to be the less problematic adaptation? I am gagged. Truly. I mean, no one.
That was not what our money was on. They pulled off the impossible.
Congratulations to them.
I see no issue with theirs, I guess.
I'm very, very excited.
And I hope that they do the entire Twilight series
with that blue hue that all the movies were.
Listen, I don't think either of these will be good.
What?
You don't think Twilight will be decent?
Not necessarily good
but decently entertaining no i feel like no remake is ever better than like the original
except maybe parent trap we don't have to get into that debate again not today on the show
triggering bring on twilight for me you can keep the harry potter because i'm not giving that anti-trans woman any coins. So let's do it.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go,
we've got some very exciting news for you all.
Crooked is venturing across the pond with our brand new podcast, Pod Save the UK.
This hilarious and insightful new podcast
is your go-to source for everything UK politics.
Hosted by comedian Nish Kumar and journalist Coco Khan,
it's everything you love about crooked podcasts,
but with a British twist and accent.
Listen to the trailer now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Excited about those accents.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe,
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And if you're into reading and not just young adult novels about elderly vampire boyfriends like me, What A Day is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash
subscribe. I'm Juanita Tolliver. I'm Priyanka Arabindi. And 420 responsibly. I feel like it's
a holiday for a lot of folks out there. It's a holiday. It's a holiday
for this whole town here in LA. Right. West Coast doesn't differ from East Coast. My yoga studio has
a 420 themed yoga class. I was like, Oh, okay. I'm into it.
What a day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Our producers are Itzy Quintanilla and Raven Yamamoto.
Jossie Kaufman is our head writer,
and our executive producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka. you