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From:
"Ingulli, Elaine" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Academy of Legal Studies in Business (ALSB) Talk
Date:
Fri, 1 Jul 2005 19:57:12 -0400
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Well, that certainly cheered me up.

Another reason to move to Canada.



	-----Original Message----- 

	From: Academy of Legal Studies in Business (ALSB) Talk on behalf of Bill Shaw 

	Sent: Fri 7/1/2005 6:18 PM 

	To: [log in to unmask] 

	Cc: 

	Subject: A washingtonpost.com article

	

	



	>Possible Nominees to the Supreme Court

	>

	>Samuel A. Alito, Jr., 55, is a judge on the U.S. Circuit Court of

	>Appeals for the 3rd Circuit.

	>

	>  Nominated by President George H. W. Bush to the court in 1990,

	>Alito was educated at Princeton University and Yale Law School. His

	>work experience includes stints as assistant to the Solicitor

	>General and deputy assistant to the Attorney General during the

	>Reagan Administration, and as U.S. Attorney for the District of New

	>Jersey.

	>

	>  Alito has voted to uphold regulations on abortion, notably as the

	>lone dissenter in a 1991 case in which the 3rd Circuit struck down a

	>Pennsylvania law's requirement that women tell their husbands before

	>having an abortion. The three-judge panel preserved most elements of

	>the abortion control law, including a 24-hour waiting period and a

	>requirement that minors notify their parents. But Alito argued in

	>his dissent that the spousal notification provision did not impose

	>an "undue burden" and also should have been upheld.

	>

	>  In other rulings, Alito wrote for the majority in 1997 in finding

	>that Jersey City officials did not violate the Constitution with a

	>holiday display that included a creche, a menorah and secular

	>symbols of the Christmas season. In 1999, he and his colleagues

	>found that a Newark policy that allowed medical, but not religious,

	>exemptions to a ban on police officers having beards violated the

	>First Amendment.

	>

	>  -- Christopher Lee

	>

	>  Sen. John Cornyn, 53, is the junior senator from Texas, elected in 2002.

	>

	>  Since his election, Cornyn -- nicknamed "Johnny Boy" by Bush -- has

	>been an outspoken proponent of the president's administration and

	>the conservative branch of the GOP. But prior to arriving in

	>Washington, Cornyn's reputation as Texas Attorney General and as a

	>Texas Supreme Court justice was that of a moderate Republican.

	>

	>  His seven-year tenure on the court was characterized by decisions

	>favoring business and limiting government control. But he also wrote

	>the majority decision in 1995 upholding Texas' so-called Robin Hood

	>school finance law in which wealthier school districts share money

	>with poorer ones, a plan that Republicans have been trying to

	>abolish since.

	>

	>  During his four years as state attorney general, Cornyn angered

	>some local Republicans for trying, unsuccessfully, to modify a

	>ruling by a previous attorney general that eliminated affirmation

	>action programs at Texas colleges. He sued auto and home insurance

	>firms for underpaying claims and for deceptive trade practices and

	>prosecuted unscrupulous nursing home operators, as well as appeared

	>before the U. S. Supreme Court to defend a small Texas school

	>district that broadcast student-led prayer before football games.

	>The court ruled against the school-sponsored practice.

	>

	>  In the Senate, Cornyn, 53, has led efforts to defend Bush's

	>judicial nominees and to fight filibusters of nominees, writing

	>National Review articles that label opponents as "liberal special

	>interest groups" engaged in "vicious politics." He spearheaded the

	>push to adopt constitutional amendments banning gay marriage and

	>flag-burning and favors school vouchers, prayer in public schools,

	>extending the Bush-initiated tax cuts beyond 2010 and privatizing

	>Social Security. He opposes abortion and partial birth abortions

	>except when a woman's life is endangered.

	>

	>  -- Sylvia Moreno

	>

	>  Emilio M. Garza, 57, is a judge for U.S. Court of Appeals for the

	>5th Circuit and has been on the short list for a Supreme Court

	>nomination before.

	>

	>  Justice Department officials interviewed Garza in 1991, when he was

	>among a handful of candidates being considered by President George

	>H. W. Bush to succeed Justice Thurgood Marshall. But Garza then had

	>only three years of experience on the federal bench and his views on

	>many issues were unknown. Bush nominated Clarence Thomas instead.

	>

	>  Garza, who will turn 58 in August, would make history as the first

	>Hispanic ever nominated to the high court.

	>

	>  The former Marine captain earned bachelor's and master's degrees

	>from the University of Notre Dame and graduated from the University

	>of Texas School of Law. He practiced law in his native San Antonio

	>for 11 years and served as a state district judge for a year before

	>President Reagan nominated him to the U.S. District Court 1988.

	>Three years later Bush elevated him to the 5th Circuit.

	>

	>  Since then Garza has developed a reliably conservative judicial

	>record that includes criticism of the Roe V. Wade abortion decision

	>of 1973. In 1997, Garza sided with the majority in upholding a lower

	>court decision that struck down parts of a Louisiana law requiring

	>parents to be notified when a minor child seeks an abortion. In his

	>concurring opinion, however, he expressed doubts about whether Roe

	>v. Wade was well-grounded in the Constitution.

	>

	>  "[I]n the absence of governing constitutional text, I believe that

	>ontological issues such as abortion are more properly decided in the

	>political and legislative arenas," Garza wrote. ". . . . [I]t is

	>unclear to me that the [Supreme] Court itself still believes that

	>abortion is a 'fundamental right' under the Fourteenth Amendment. .

	>. ."

	>

	>  Garza would be the first Hispanic chief justice.

	>

	>  -Christopher Lee

	>

	>  Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, 49, has less time on the

	>bench than the other likely Supreme Court candidates but has one

	>crucial advantage: the close friendship of President Bush.

	>

	>  Gonzales grew up as the son of impoverished Mexican immigrants and

	>went on to graduate from Harvard University law school. Bush, then

	>the governor of Texas, hired him as his general counsel and later

	>appointed him to the Texas Supreme Court. Bush brought Gonzales to

	>Washington as his White House counsel in 2001.

	>

	>  The Senate narrowly approved Gonzales as attorney general in

	>February after he faced sharp criticism from Democrats over the role

	>he played in approving controversial detention and antiterrorism

	>policies.

	>

	>  Yet legal experts say that the strongest opposition to Gonzales as

	>a Supreme Court candidate would likely come from the right, due

	>primarily to positions he has taken on issues like abortion and

	>affirmative action.

	>

	>  While on the bench in Texas, Gonzales sided with a majority in a

	>2000 case allowing an unidentified 17-year-old girl to obtain an

	>abortion without notifying her parents, finding that she qualified

	>for an exception to that state's parental notification law. In a

	>concurring opinion, Gonzales said that to side with dissenters in

	>the case would amount to "an unconscionable act of judicial

	>activism."

	>

	>  Gonzales also testified at his attorney general confirmation

	>hearing earlier this year that he recognized the Roe v. Wade

	>decision legalizing abortion as "the law of the land."

	>

	>  Advisors close to the White House have said that Bush likes the

	>idea that Gonzales would be the first Hispanic chief justice.

	>(Benjamin Nathan Cardozo, a justice in the 1930s, was of Portuguese

	>and Jewish descent.)

	>

	>  -- Dan Eggen

	>

	>  J. Michael Luttig, 51, has been a favorite in conservative legal

	>circles for decades, going back to his clerkship for then-Judge

	>Antonin Scalia on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in

	>1982-83.

	>

	>  A graduate of Washington and Lee University and the University of

	>Virginia law school, Luttig also clerked for Chief Justice Warren E.

	>Burger in 1983-84, practiced law in the private sector from

	>1985-1989, and then served in a variety of Justice Department

	>positions during the first Bush administration, where his duties

	>included helping current Justices Clarence Thomas and David H.

	>Souter win Senate confirmation.

	>

	>  President George H.W. Bush appointed him to the Richmond-based U.S.

	>Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in 1991, when Luttig was

	>just 37 years old. Ever since, he has been spoken of as a likely

	>choice for the Supreme Court should a Republican president have a

	>chance to name him. His many supporters on the right, including

	>ex-law clerks sprinkled throughout the Bush administration, think

	>now is Luttig's time.

	>

	>  This has sometimes led him to clash with other members of the 4th

	>Circuit, including fellow conservative J. Harvie Wilkinson, also

	>thought of as a Supreme Court contender. In 2000, he dissented from

	>a ruling by Wilkinson that upheld a Fish and Wildlife Service

	>regulation limiting the killing of endangered wolves on private

	>land. He also disagreed with Wilkinson in 2003, when he wrote a

	>dissenting opinion that supported the Bush administration's position

	>that it could designate and detain "enemy combatants" with little

	>judicial scrutiny.

	>

	>  In 1998, he upheld Virginia's ban on the procedure known as a

	>partial birth abortion -- but agreed to let it be struck down after

	>the Supreme Court struck down a similar Nebraska law in 2000.

	>

	>  -- Charles Lane

	>

	>  Michael W. McConnell, 50, has been a judge on the U.S. Court of

	>Appeals for the 10th Circuit, based in Denver, since his appointment

	>by President Bush in 2002.

	>

	>  Before then, he was mostly a legal academic, having served as a law

	>professor at the University of Chicago from 1985-1996 and

	>subsequently at the University of Utah.

	>

	>  McConnell's good standing with the legal professoriate helped him

	>immeasurably during the confirmation process; more than 300 of his

	>fellow professors, including many liberals, endorsed him for the

	>bench.

	>

	>  An eclectic thinker who served both as a law clerk for the liberal

	>icon Justice William Brennan and as an official in the Reagan

	>administration, McConnell has expressed his opinions on a wide range

	>of subjects, including a Wall Street Journal op-ed in December 2000

	>in which he expressed doubts about the legal reasoning of the

	>Supreme Court's Bush v. Gore decision.

	>

	>  But his outspoken disagreement with Roe v. Wade has earned him the

	>condemnation of liberal advocacy groups (though at his confirmation

	>hearing he called it "settled law.") Conservatives like his writings

	>favoring government "neutrality" toward religion.

	>

	>  As a judge, McConnell has upheld Congress's power to criminalize

	>the possession of homemade child pornography; in a case soon to be

	>reviewed by the court, he voted to prohibit enforcement of federal

	>anti-drug laws against people who consume hallucinogenic tea as part

	>of a religious ritual.

	>

	>  -- Charles Lane

	>

	>  John G. Roberts, 50, has long been considered one of the

	>Republicans' heavyweights amid the largely Democratic Washington

	>legal establishment. Roberts was appointed to the U.S. Court of

	>Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in 2003 by President George W. Bush.

	>(He was also nominated by the first President Bush, but never

	>received a Senate vote). Previously, he practiced law at D.C.'s

	>Hogan & Hartson from 1986-1989 and 1993-2003. Between 1989 and 1993,

	>he was the Principal Deputy Solicitor General in the first Bush

	>administration, helping formulate the administration's position in

	>Supreme Court cases. During the Reagan administration, he served as

	>an aide to Attorney General William French Smith from 1981-1982 and

	>as a an aide to White House Counsel Fred Fielding from 1982-1986.

	>

	>  With impeccable credentials -- Roberts attended Harvard College and

	>Harvard Law School, clerked for Justice William H. Rehnquist on the

	>Supreme Court and has argued frequently before the court -- the

	>question marks about Roberts have always been ideological. While his

	>Republican party loyalties are undoubted, earning him the opposition

	>of liberal advocacy groups, he is not a "movement conservative," and

	>some on the party's right-wing doubt his commitment to their cause.

	>His paper record is thin: as Deputy Solicitor General in 1990, he

	>argued in favor of a government regulation that banned

	>abortion-related counseling by federally-funded family planning

	>programs. A line in his brief noted the Bush administration's belief

	>that Roe v. Wade should be overruled.

	>

	>  As a judge on the D.C. Circuit, Roberts voted with two colleagues

	>to uphold the arrest and detention of a twelve-year old girl for

	>eating french fries on the Metro train, though his opinion noted

	>that "[n]o one is very happy about the events that led to this

	>litigation." In another case, Roberts wrote a dissenting opinion

	>that suggested Congress might lack the power under the

	>Constitution's Commerce Clause to regulate the treatment of a

	>certain species of wildlife.

	>

	>  -- Charles Lane

	>

	>  Theodore B. Olson, 64, is the former Solicitor General and now an

	>attorney in private practice in Washington at the firm Gibson, Dunn

	>& Crutcher.

	>

	>  He has been with the firm since 1965 except for two forays into

	>government, serving as President Bush's Solicitor General from

	>2001-2004 and as Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal

	>Counsel for three years during President Ronald Reagan's first term.

	>

	>  He argued Bush's case before the Supreme Court that decided the

	>outcome of the disputed 2000 presidential election.

	>

	>  His other cases have included representing Cheryl Hopwood, who

	>argued that affirmative action in admissions at the University of

	>Texas was a violation of the Constitution. In 1996, a federal

	>appeals court agreed with Olson and Hopwood that the university's

	>policy was unconstitutional. That same year, he represented the

	>Virginia Military Institute before the Supreme Court against claims

	>that the school's admissions policy discriminated against women and

	>lost.

	>

	>  Olson was legal counsel to Reagan during the investigation of the

	>Iran-contra affair. And he represented Jonathan Pollard, who was

	>convicted of selling government secrets to Israel, in his failed bid

	>for a reduction of his life sentence.

	>

	>  While President Bill Clinton was in office, Olson railed against

	>the administration in the conservative American Spectator magazine,

	>where he was a contributing writer and a member of its board of

	>directors.

	>

	>  But his passion threatened his confirmation as solicitor general.

	>During hearings, Democrats asked Olson if he played a role in the

	>"Arkansas Project," an attempt by American Spectator to uncover

	>scandals involving President Bill Clinton and his wife, Hillary.

	>Olson said he did not, but a Spectator staff writer, David Brock,

	>told the Judiciary Committee that Olson was directly involved. Olson

	>was confirmed, but not until after an inquiry into charges that his

	>testimony was untruthful.

	>

	>  --Darryl Fears

	>

	>  Larry D. Thompson, 59, is a senior vice president and general

	>counsel for PepsiCo.

	>

	>  He was the deputy Attorney General--the No. 2 person at the Justice

	>Department--for much of President Bush's first term.

	>

	>  During his tenure at Justice, he had daily involvement in the war

	>on terror and headed the corporate crime task force that pursued

	>prosecutions against Enron Corp., Worldcom Inc. and HealthSouth Corp.

	>

	>  He was one of the highest-ranking African Americans in the Bush

	>administration and if appointed to the court, would be the third

	>African American justice.

	>

	>  Thompson is a longtime acquaintance of Justice Thomas and was a

	>member of the legal team that assisted Thomas during his

	>confirmation hearings in 1991.

	>

	>  Around the same time, Thompson angered some civil rights groups

	>when he wrote that certain black leaders "stressed . . . black

	>people as victims" and ignored problems like their "lack of respect

	>for the law, kids having children too soon and fathers who were not

	>taking their responsibility seriously."

	>

	>  He is a graduate of the University of Michigan Law School, served

	>as a U.S. Attorney in Georgia and practiced at the Atlanta firm of

	>King & Spalding.

	>

	>  --Darryl Fears

	>

	>  J. Harvie Wilkinson, 61, was appointed to the 4th Circuit by

	>President Reagan in 1984.

	>

	>  Before his appointment he was the No. 2 official in the Justice

	>Department's Civil Rights Office from 1982-1983.

	>

	>  Unlike most other leading candidates for the court, Wilkinson has

	>not practiced law in the private sector; he has more experience in

	>journalism and teaching.

	>

	>  From 1978-1982, he was the editorial page editor of the

	>Virginian-Pilot in Norfolk, Virginia, and from 1973-1978, he was a

	>professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, where he

	>received his own law degree before moving on to a clerkship for

	>Justice Lewis F. Powell.

	>

	>  His paper trail is, accordingly, immense. He has written not only

	>legal opinions, but also books, speeches and journal articles in

	>which he sketches a self-consciously moderate conservative

	>philosophy. A typical example was a 2003 Virginia Law Review article

	>titled "Why Conservative Jurisprudence is Compassionate."

	>

	>  Powell, an old family friend, is a role model and mentor for

	>Wilkinson, whose own gentle, courtly manners remind some of the late

	>justice's demeanor.

	>

	>  His rulings have included a 1987 opinion striking down a minority

	>set-aside program for city contractors in Richmond and a 1996

	>opinion upholding the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy for

	>homosexual service members.

	>

	>  -- Charles Lane

	>

	>

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