unofan
Well-known member
5-4 which way? Needle or life?
If it's the liberals plus Kennedy, you can guess.
5-4 which way? Needle or life?
Just what I've learned from the Obama presidency!The Dubya presidency taught me that this doesn't work. No matter how terrible a mistake it is, the partisans never admit it, and in the meantime the rest of us who knew along it was a mistake suffer alongside them.
Never try to teach a pig to sing.
2nd one is by Alito for a unanimous court in a case involving the conversation clause in a child abuse case.
3rd one will also be from Alito. No word on it yet, though.
1st one is a death penalty case involving a mentally challenged person. 5-4 along ideological lines, Sotomeyer writing for the liberals and Kennedy.
Whoa, that Walker case was an interesting ruling both in the opinion and the breakdown... Thomas joins the liberals?
Lovers of Justice Scalia and/or the confrontation clause should DEFINITELY check out Scalia's concurrence in the judgment in Ohio v. Clark. It is some sharply worded stuff -- accuses Alito of "shoveling dirt" on the grave of the key precedents, and using intentionally confusing "dicta" to try to undermine the clause's protections.
Holding: When a controlled substance is an analogue, the statute requires the government to establish that the defendant knew he was dealing with a substance regulated under the Controlled Substances Act or Analogue Act.
5th one is from Thomas. Case involves controlled substances that are banned under the "substantially similar" catch all. Unanimous court says a defendant must know the substance was what it turned out to be.
Not sure I agree with this ruling...
I'm going to have to read the opinion on why they went this way. I feel like this basically makes synthetics legal...
That makes it sound like ignorance is now an acceptable defense for breaking the law.
That makes it sound like ignorance is now an acceptable defense for breaking the law.
I read it as you can't convict someone who thinks they're selling oregano if it's actually synthetic pot. They have to know it's synthetic pot
Thomas says the knowledge requirement is met if the defendant knows it's covered, even if he didn't know what it is. It is also met if the defendant knows the features of the substance that would make it a controlled substance.
3 more released today, none of them big ones.
More coming Thursday. 17 total to go, of which I'd probably call 4-5 of them big - gay marriage, ACA, fair housing act, death penalty drugs, and Arizona independent redistricting.
So if he's selling oregano, calling it pot, and it turns out to be pot, would that satisfy the law?
Otherwise, if he's selling a substance that's being "marketed" as a substance to get you high (bath salts maybe?), and it turns out to be a banned synthetic, then he could be convicted...?