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May 13, 2024

Might Justice Alito be a frequent vote for certain criminal defendants on the Supreme Court this term?

GNYo66-WgAA9ul7The question in the title of this post is prompted by this notable new NBC News article headlined "Trump, gun owners and Jan. 6 rioters: Tough-on-crime Justice Alito displays empathy for some criminal defendants."   In a post here last year about articles discussing Justice Alito's jurisprudence, I flagged this 2017 empirical article noting Justice Alito had not once voted in favor a Fourth Amendment litigant in a divided case and explained I could not think of any criminal justice arena in which Justice Alito could be expected to vote for a criminal defendant.  But, as the NBC News article highlights, it seems that the current SCOTUS Term has brought criminal defendants to the Court that seem to be more to Justice Alito's liking.  Here are excerpts from a piece that should be read in full:

Conservative Justice Samuel Alito, a former U.S. attorney with a long history of voting in favor of prosecutors, has shown signs of empathy for defendants in recent cases involving gun owners, Jan 6. rioters and former President Donald Trump.

Alito, appointed in 2006 by Republican President George W. Bush, has a reputation for being the justice on the court most hostile to criminal defendants. Earlier in his career, he was a U.S. attorney in New Jersey and held several other positions in the Justice Department.

He sides with defendants less frequently than any of his eight colleagues, according to numbers crunched by Lee Epstein, a political scientist at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law.

But in several recent oral arguments in some of the most contentious cases currently before the court, Alito has notably raised questions about the Justice Department’s decisions to prosecute certain cases, expressed sympathy for Trump’s argument that former presidents should be immune from prosecution, and aired concerns about gun owners being charged. Rulings in all the cases are due by the end of June....

Alito was among several justices who questioned the Justice Department’s use of an obstruction statute to prosecute people involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. He suggested that if the court allows it to apply to Jan. 6 defendants, prosecutors could also seek to use it against people involved in peaceful demonstrations, such as those that take place in the courtroom from time to time.

In another case on a federal ban on gun accessories called “bump stocks” that allow a semiautomatic rifle to file more quickly, Alito said it would be “disturbing” for people to be prosecuted for owning them when lower courts have questioned the ban’s lawfulness, even if the Supreme Court ultimately upholds it.

Alito also appeared concerned in a separate gun case about the due process rights of gun owners who face having to give up their firearms, and risk prosecution if they don’t, when accused of domestic violence.... At one point, he even cited a friend-of-the-court brief filed by lawyers in California who represent criminal defendants.

The fascinating (and unurprising) graph of voting patterns in criminal cases reprinted here comes the NBC News piece and is based on Epstein's data. Though quite interesting and justifying a focus Justice Alito's apparent affinity for certain criminal defendants this term, I also expect we will see a number of the Justices who are generally much more likley to vote for criminal defendants to be much more pro-prosecution in particular cases this term.  Put simply, certain types of cases and defendants change the political valence of certain criminal justice issues, and we really should not be all that surprised when they also change the views and votes of at least some judges and Justices.

May 13, 2024 at 10:30 AM | Permalink

Comments

Read Alito's dissent from denial of cert. in the Michael Mann/Mark Steyn case. You'll see where he's coming from.

By the way, the very existence of that trial delegitimizes the Supreme Court.

Posted by: federalist | May 13, 2024 10:59:59 AM

federalist, what delegitimizes the Supreme Court are the several judges who suck at the teat of their billionaire patrons.

Posted by: anon | May 13, 2024 12:00:34 PM

Amen, federalist.

It is impossible to defame liars. I thought that was black letter law.

So-called climate scientists enrich themselves enormously with their campaign of deception about the climate and about fossil fuel companies. The National Review and Competitive Enterprise Institute are hard working hard scrabble organizations with an unquestionable history of telling truths, even if sometimes hard ones. They have no reason to lie about anything.

Speaking of hard truths, President Trump is going to be introducing a lot of people in America and around the world to a whole lot of them. Get right or get out! MAGA

Posted by: MAGA 2024 | May 13, 2024 12:03:07 PM

You mean like Sotomayor taking money from a litigant. Yeah, that is bad. But you cannot be heard to complain even if Thomas were being bribed. Burisma baby.

Posted by: federalist | May 13, 2024 12:44:04 PM

Alito is the most partisan hack on the Court.

Posted by: none | May 13, 2024 1:05:02 PM

Oh really, anon? Have you ever read some of the crapola from SS or KBJ?

Posted by: federalist | May 13, 2024 1:07:09 PM

By the way, anon, what's your opinion on the staged photos used against Trump in the Florida dox case?

Posted by: federalist | May 13, 2024 5:42:58 PM

MAGA, Ex-president Trump needs to start measuring the drapes for his cell.

Posted by: anon | May 13, 2024 8:51:22 PM

anon --

"Ex-president Trump needs to start measuring the drapes for his cell."

I've known for years that Lefties were pulling our leg about their supposed reverence for the presumption of innocence, but I didn't expect them to so graphically out themselves.

Posted by: Bill Otis | May 13, 2024 11:43:29 PM

Doug --

"Might Justice Alito be a frequent vote for certain criminal defendants on the Supreme Court this term?"

Might Justice Sotomayor be a frequent vote for most criminal defendants on the Supreme Court this (and every) term?

Posted by: Bill Otis | May 13, 2024 11:45:46 PM

federalist --

"By the way, anon, what's your opinion on the staged photos used against Trump in the Florida dox case?"

His opinion is that the FBI is a bunch of fascists -- except when going after Republican politicians, in which case they (temporarily but assuredly) become saints.

These are the guys who wail constantly about hypocrisy. Far out!!

Posted by: Bill Otis | May 13, 2024 11:49:43 PM

Anon,

My view is a little closer to federalist's, I think. The FBI is only a bunch of fascists when they go after patriots like Matthew Heimbach, Narek Palyan, and the Jan 6 heroes.

Not sure what to make of the Bob Menendez case. I mean, he's a rat politician who deserves to fry, but the cops bust into a man's home and take away his gold bars you've got to feel for him a little bit. Maybe the bars can be auctioned off to someone deserving, whose prepping for the collapse of fiat currency. MAGA

Posted by: MAGA 2024 | May 14, 2024 7:56:46 AM

MAGA writes about the "campaign of deception" from climate scientists.

Consider the following:

1. Atmospheric carbon dioxide highest on record 2023.
https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/climate-change-atmospheric-carbon-dioxide#:~:text=The%20global%20average

2. Swiss glaciers melting at record rate 2023
https://www.dw.com/en/swiss-glaciers-melt-at-record-rate-report/a-66944292#:~:text=The%20glaciers%20lost%20a%20record,decades%20between%201960%20and%2019

3. 2023 was the hottest year on record.
https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/2023-was-worlds-hottest-year-record-eu-scientists-confirm-2024-01-09/#:~:text=BRUSSELS%2C%20Jan%209%20(Reuters),(C3S)%20said%20on%20Tuesday

4. Hottest February on record 2024.
https://www.foxweather.com/weather-news/february-2024-world-ninth-hottest-month
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/06/climate/winter-february-heat-wave.html

That's some deception!!

Posted by: anaon12 | May 14, 2024 9:23:21 AM

MAGA writes about the "Jan 6 heroes." Doesn't mean Jan. 6 traitors?

Posted by: Mary quite Contrary | May 14, 2024 9:24:52 AM

Bill Otis: For such a law an order guy, never figured you for a Trumpite. He is after all a charlatan and grifter who has been indicted in two states and three federal districts for different crimes. I know: presumption of innocence. Let's give him that. He should still start measuring the drapes for his cell.

Posted by: Mary quite Contrary | May 14, 2024 9:29:49 AM

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2024/05/the-lonesome-death-of-tyesha-edwards-2.php

Doug, IMHO, you should post this one. The statement at the end about the victim just being gone is powerful.

Posted by: federalist | May 14, 2024 9:33:29 AM

The FBI's staged photo is very very hard to defend. Charges should be tossed just for that.

Posted by: federalist | May 14, 2024 9:34:07 AM

Hey anon:

I think you're projecting: https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/psakis-shameful-lie/

Posted by: federalist | May 14, 2024 9:37:53 AM

Climate change is a "deception." Canada is on fire again.

https://www.foxweather.com/extreme-weather/2024-canada-evacuations-fires

Posted by: Jimmy the Greek | May 14, 2024 9:51:34 AM

https://sentencing.typepad.com/sentencing_law_and_policy/2013/01/intriguing-massachusetts-developments-in-response-to-scotus-miller-ruling.html

A blast from the past . . . .

Posted by: federalist | May 14, 2024 10:49:49 AM

Mary quite Contrary --

So I'm a "Trumpite"??? It's quite true that Trump did some good and important things for the country. It's likewise true that there's more to the story. If you're actually interested, about which I have some doubt, I gave a talk about the Trump prosecutions at Berkeley Law School, linked in this entry on my Substack: https://ringsideatthereckoning.substack.com/p/why-its-important-to-protecting-the

I start at about 2:42 of the tape.

Posted by: Bill Otis | May 14, 2024 11:30:13 AM

anaon12,

The depth of the conspiracy is incredible, that's true.

Mary quite Contrary,

"MAGA writes about the "Jan 6 heroes." Doesn't mean Jan. 6 traitors?"

No, I don't. Its very simple. Trump was duly elected president in 2016. Everyone agrees. After the most successful presidency in history the rats decided to steal reelection from him in 2020. A heroic patriot preserves the order of things, and villainous traitors try to upset it. We fried the Rosenbergs, we fried Sacco and Vanzetti, and we hung John Brown. More recently we killed a whole desert full of wannabe tyrants who would have turned our great Nation into an Islamic Republic like Iran...we fought them over there so we didn't have to fight them here.

Trump running the country, forever if that's what it takes, is the proper order of things. Sensible people understand that. I applaud Bill Otis for finding his way back even if he went wobbly after his failed confirmation hearing. Everyone else, like Michael Cohen, traitoring his Quisling way to a life of ease in Manhattan even as we speak. I got no sympathy for em. Maximum retribution. Maximum punishment. MAGA

Posted by: MAGA 2024 | May 14, 2024 12:56:01 PM

MAGA 2024 --

"Sensible people understand that. I applaud Bill Otis for finding his way back even if he went wobbly after his failed confirmation hearing."

Could you please tell us the date of, and the vote at, my "failed confirmation hearing"?

This aughtta be good.

Posted by: Bill Otis | May 14, 2024 3:02:52 PM

Bill--

Did they bottle you up in committee? That's a damn shame. The rats should have at least let you say your piece.

Keep fighting the good fight, there's another Trump Presidency coming! MAGA

Posted by: MAGA 2024 | May 14, 2024 4:40:38 PM

Bill, no matter your reservations about Trump, he didn't take showers with his daughter.

https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/ashley-biden-leaked-diary-accusation/

Posted by: federalist | May 14, 2024 5:03:24 PM

Doug, Ashley Biden's letter to the judge is poignant. I still don't believe this case should have been prosecuted given that she left the diary behind, but there is a human being behind the story. Hard not to feel for her.

Posted by: federalist | May 14, 2024 5:04:54 PM

federalist, "reservations about Trump"? What me worry?

1. Former Trump Secretary of Defense Mark Esper calls him a reckless security risk
2. Former Trump National Security Advisor, John Bolton, calls him a reckless security risk
3. Former Trump Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, call him a reckless security risk
4. Former Trump Attorney General, Bill Bar calls him a reckless security risk
5. Former Trump Chief of Staff Kelly calls him a reckless security risk
6. Former Trump U.N. Ambassador Niki Haley says he “was incredibly reckless with our national security…[and] puts all of our military men and women in danger.”

Posted by: Jimmy the Grek | May 14, 2024 5:31:21 PM

Federalist, you say Biden took showers with his daughter. Well, Trump said he would have dated his daughter and told Stormy that she reminded him of his daughter: blond, bosomy, and possessed a very nice slapping technique.

Posted by: Jimmy the Grek | May 14, 2024 5:35:09 PM

Jimmy :

Your way off base here.

Esper, Bolton, Pompeo, Barr, Kelly, and Haley all have a big problem with their credibility: they're traitors.

Same thing is playing out in Manhattan today with Cohen. You can't trust the word or judgment of someone who betrays their oath.

"Well, Trump said he would have dated his daughter and told Stormy that she reminded him of his daughter: blond, bosomy, and possessed a very nice slapping technique."

This is a fallacy of the Internet age called whataboutism and it has no place in a serious conversation.

Also, if Trump talked locker room talk that's not a crime. Pretty sure that being naked under a spray of, or immersed in, water with a close relative is a sex crime of some sort. Third degree incest maybe. So your not really making Biden look any better here.

But pretty much all of this is irrelevant to how Samuel Alito is likely to rule in apellate cases involving criminal statues. You would do well to follow the example of your betters, like federalist, and stay on topic.

HTH MAGA

P.S. Whats a "grek"?

Posted by: MAGA 2024 | May 14, 2024 6:13:29 PM

Another way to frame the question is whether SA is likely to be a vote in favor of very broad executive authority, perhaps even the ability to order the military to kill political opponents. And for SS, whether she is likely to continue to express skepticism about the state use of power in criminal cases. Time will tell, but each of them could find their way to doctrinally consistent outcomes w/o resort to questions about 'which side will they take?"

Posted by: John | May 14, 2024 7:11:37 PM

MAGA, I agree you can't trust anyone who betrays his oath. Trump took an oath to faithfully execute the laws. His inducing an insurrection was a violation of that oath, so we certainly can't trust him, can we? And juries have unanimously convicted many of his cronies for various crimes related to unlawful acts:
Allen Weisselberg, Rick Gates, Paul Manafort, Michael Cohen, George Papadopoulos, Roger Stone, Michael Flynn, George Nader, Elliott Broidy, Steve Bannon

And many of his lawyers have been disbarred or are facing discipline because of their unlawful activity on his behalf:

Robert Cheeley, Kenneth Chesebro, Jeffrey Clark, Matthew DePerno, John Eastman, Jenna Ellis, Michael Farina, Rudy Giuliani, Julia Haller, Scott Hagerstrom, Brandon Johnson, Stephanie Juntilla, Christopher M. Kise, Howard Kleinhendler, Michael Madaio, Armen Morian, Emily Newman, Sidney Powell, Clifford S. Robert, Gregory J. Rohl, Ray Smith, and L. Lin Wood.

Entirely apart from his flagrant adultery, misogyny, mendacity, and xenophobia, Trump remains the most pernicious and dangerous politician since Jefferson Davis.

Posted by: James the Just | May 14, 2024 8:22:51 PM

MAGA, consider the following stats from the Dept. of Justice and then pitch in and help the FBI identify some of your patriot friends:

Jan 6 Arrests made: More than 1,424 defendants have been charged in nearly all 50 states and the District of Columbia. (This includes those charged in both District and Superior Court).

Criminal charges:
• Approximately 510 defendants have been charged with assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers or employees, including approximately 133 individuals who have been charged with using a deadly or dangerous weapon or causing serious bodily injury to an officer.

o Approximately 140 police officers were assaulted on Jan. 6 at the Capitol, including about 80 from the U.S. Capitol Police and about 60 from the Metropolitan Police Department.

• Approximately 11 individuals have been arrested on a series of charges that relate to assaulting a member of the media, or destroying their equipment, on Jan. 6.

• Approximately 1,334 defendants have been charged with entering or remaining in a restricted federal building or grounds. Of those, 127 defendants have been charged with entering a restricted area with a dangerous or deadly weapon.

• Approximately 79 defendants have been charged with destruction of government property, and approximately 62 defendants have been charged with theft of government property.
• More than 355 defendants have been charged with corruptly obstructing, influencing, or impeding an official proceeding, or attempting to do so.

• Approximately 57 defendants have been charged with conspiracy, either: (a) conspiracy to obstruct a congressional proceeding, (b) conspiracy to obstruct law enforcement during a civil disorder, (c) conspiracy to injure an officer, or (d) some combination of the three.

Pleas:
• Approximately 820 individuals have pleaded guilty to a variety of federal charges, many of whom faced or will face incarceration at sentencing.

o Approximately 255 have pleaded guilty to felonies. Another 565 have pleaded guilty to misdemeanors.

o A total of 97 of those who have pleaded guilty to felonies have pleaded to federal charges of assaulting law enforcement officers. Approximately 58 additional defendants have pleaded guilty to feloniously obstructing, impeding, or interfering with a law enforcement officer during a civil disorder. Of these 155 defendants, 145 have now been sentenced to prison terms of up to 151 months.

o Four of those who have pleaded guilty to felonies have pleaded guilty to the federal charge of seditious conspiracy.

Trials:
• 162 individuals have been found guilty at contested trials, including 3 who were found guilty in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. Another 37 individuals have been convicted following an agreed-upon set of facts. 82 of these 199 defendants were found guilty of assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers and/or obstructing officers during a civil disorder, which are felony offenses, including one who has been sentenced to more than 14 years in prison.

Sentencings:
• Approximately 884 defendants have had their cases adjudicated and received sentences for their criminal activity on Jan. 6. Approximately 541 have been sentenced to periods of incarceration. Approximately 172 defendants have been sentenced to a period of home detention, including approximately 31 who also were sentenced to a period of incarceration.

Public Assistance:
• Citizens from around the country have provided invaluable assistance in identifying individuals in connection with the Jan. 6 attack. The FBI continues to seek the public’s help in identifying individuals believed to have committed violent acts on Capitol grounds. Those photos can be found at fbi.gov/capitolviolence

• Additionally, the FBI currently has 10 videos of suspects wanted for violent assaults on federal officers, including (ONE) video of (TWO) suspects wanted for assaults on members of the media on January 6th and is seeking the public’s help to identify them.

• Some of the violent offenders about whom the FBI is seeking public tips to identify or locate include Evan Neumann, Adam Villarreal, Paul Belosic, AFOs #91, #292, #371, and #383. AFO #91 uses what appears to be a stick to strike multiple officers numerous times while in the doorway of the Lower West Terrace, commonly referred to as the tunnel. AFOs #292, #371, and #383 are all shown on video charging at and assaulting officers, and they appear to grab and attempt to take possession of the officers’ batons.

• For images and video of the attackers, please visit https://www.fbi.gov/wanted/capitol-violence. Anyone with tips can call 1-800-CALL-FBI (800-225-5324) or visit tips.fbi.gov.

Posted by: Mary quite Contrary | May 14, 2024 9:03:10 PM

Jimmy it's not me saying that Joe took showers with Ashley--it's Ashley saying it. Donald Trump's comment is awkward, but doesn't come close to approaching Biden's creepiness. But hey. this is today's Democratic party.

Posted by: federalist | May 15, 2024 8:59:20 AM

Mary Mary quite contrary :

The rats may succeed in martyring the Jan 6 patriots. I keep Jefferson's maxim about the tree of liberty always in mind, as should you. But under our legal tradition, President Trump himself is untouchable. I quote you Blackstone's commentaires on the Law of England, still regarded as precedent in the U.S. common law.

"In the several cases before-mentioned, the incapacity of committing crimes arises from a deficiency of the will. To these we may add one more, in which the law supposes an incapacity of doing wrong from the excellence and perfection of the person; which extend as well to the will as to the other qualities of his mind. I mean the case of the king: who, by virtue of his royal prerogative, is not under the coercive power of the law;44 which will not suppose him capable of committing a folly, much less crime. We are therefore, out of reverence and decency, to forbear any idle inquiries, of what would be the consequence if the king were to act thus and thus: since the law deems so highly of his wisdom and virtue, as not even to presume it possible for him to do anything inconsistent with his station and dignity; and therefore has made no provision to remedy such a grievance."

Blackstone was a prophet. I have never read a better description of President Trump. MAGA

Posted by: MAGA 2024 | May 15, 2024 9:23:30 AM

MAGA, in case you forgot, we don't have kings in America. Were Blackstone alive today and were he an American, he would recognize Trump as the most pernicious and malignant force in American politics since Jefferson Davis.

Posted by: Emily | May 16, 2024 9:12:43 AM

Emily,

"we don't have kings in America"

Maybe that was a blunder, and even William F. Buckley conceded that. He said on Firing Line when debating Huey Newton, the Black Panther (an early version of BLM for the youngsters here LOL) that if he'd been alive during the Revolutionary War that he might have sided with the British.

You must always side with America, but when liberals have destroyed America, you have to rebuild America first.

"he would recognize Trump as the most pernicious and malignant force in American politics since Jefferson Davis."

Just like a liberal, forgetting what a great man Jefferson Davis was. Lunatics like John Brown, infected by the treasonous ideas of William Lloyd Garrison and Karl Marx, were trying to destroy America. Lincoln failed to control his left, which was trying to destroy states rights and that's why the SOuth was right to rise and preserve America.

Like Trump, Jefferson Davis was never convicted of anything. That should tell you something. We knew how to respect great men back then. Do we still? Liberals are always on witch hunts and their emotions get way out ahead of the facts. As far as I'm concerned, Trump should return to office and stay forever if he wants. And you can be hysterical and call him King Donald if you want. MAGA

P.S. No one's tearing this one down. https://www.aoc.gov/explore-capitol-campus/art/jefferson-davis-statue

Posted by: MAGA 2024 | May 16, 2024 11:46:18 AM

Emily, you are an idiot.

Posted by: federalist | May 16, 2024 4:40:15 PM

federalist, no, you are the idiot, a clown, a jerk, and a Trump-tushy licker.

Posted by: Emily | May 16, 2024 7:35:42 PM

MAGA, you write, "Lincoln failed to control his left, which was trying to destroy states rights and that's why the South was right to rise and preserve America." The state had rights to enslave black folks? To rape black women? To "wring their bread from the sweat of other men's faces." Are you an American or a Russian troll?

Posted by: Emily | May 16, 2024 7:40:53 PM

Emily::

In a nutshell, yes. Read the ORIGINAL U.S. Constitution, or hell even how it stood when there were only 12 amendment. That was the law. Also read about Thaddeus Stevens and what he tried to push through Congress. The 13th Amendment should have been done correctly, without the disenfranchisement of entire states, or not done at all. We had a legal process and the Union forces ran roughshod over it to get their way. Just like the rat party today.

This is how it always goes with Yankees. The peculiar institution is better quietly accepted than discussed. MAGA

Posted by: MAGA 2024 | May 17, 2024 11:05:33 AM

Oh Emily, I am so offended. I am hardly a Trump TL (if you know your Yiddish).

The reason I called you an idiot is that you cannot seem to answer a basic question--were you good with the suppression of the Hunter laptop story. So are you? Also,. are you good with the Trunp trial, where. to pick one example, they haven't even bothered to identify the concealed crime in the indictment. You libs cannot be in favor of that/.

Posted by: federalist | May 17, 2024 11:24:44 AM

Alito is now the official MAGA mascot: hanging an upside down flag at his home. He hold up that presidential immunity case forever.

Posted by: Dave from Texas | May 17, 2024 6:52:52 PM

Dave from Texas, and Alito blames his wife!!! As if he didn't see the flag every day when leaving the house. What a corrupt, lying, MAGA "Justice" he is. Where are federalist, Otis, and Tarls now?

Posted by: Mary quite Contrary | May 17, 2024 7:14:57 PM

Federalist, now you answer a "basic" question. Any problem for you with Alito hanging an upside down flag at his home?

Posted by: Emily | May 17, 2024 7:16:27 PM

Emily --

I am constrained to defer your view that wives cannot have or express their own opinions on their own property, and are, as was the case in medieval times, mere appendages of their husbands.

You learn new stuff on this blog everyday.

Posted by: Bill Otis | May 17, 2024 7:55:53 PM

Bill Otis writes, "...that wives cannot have or express their own opinions on their own property." Bill, this is a lame response. Even accepting what Alito says is true (and I take his cowardly "blame the wife" response with a grain of salt), his wife not just an ordinary wife, but the wife of a Supreme Court Justice. So Alito says nothing when she hangs the MAGA flag, and he has to pass by it when he goes out and comes in . And would you say nothing were your wife to hang up the same flag outside your house? How about a Nazi swastika? Is Alito now so emasculated and p-whipped by his wife? I think not, but you may be right: maybe Alito, a self-righteous prig, is just a submissive wimp.

Posted by: Emily | May 18, 2024 10:40:07 AM

Emily --

"So Alito says nothing when she hangs the MAGA flag..."

How do you know that?

"...And would you say nothing were your wife to hang up the same flag outside your house?"

I would say, "This seems like a bad idea to me. I understand that you own as much of the house as I do, but could we take this thing down right soon?" P.S. My wife is a former Supreme Court clerk, being a graduate of Yale and U. of Chicago Law School. She is also a Senate-confirmed former high official of the Department of Energy. So if she says something, I listen, apart from the fact that she is legally my equal in the ownership of all our houses.

"Is Alito now so emasculated and p-whipped by his wife? I think not, but you may be right: maybe Alito, a self-righteous prig, is just a submissive wimp."

Glad to see you're doing your share to maintain the level of decorum on this site.

Posted by: Bill Otis | May 18, 2024 7:19:33 PM

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