Saturday, November 18, 2006

Man Gets New Trial After Juror's Comment

From Associated Press
November 16, 2006 9:26 PM EST

NEW CUMBERLAND, W.Va. - A man facing robbery charges will receive a new trial after a juror was overheard to say the defendant should be convicted quickly so jurors could go home. The statement was allegedly made when the 12 jurors were taking a lunch break in Glenn A. Stewart's trial in Hancock County Circuit Court.

Circuit Judge Martin J. Gaughan declared a mistrial Tuesday after questioning two jurors. One denied making the remark and the other couldn't verify that the remark was made.

"Someone came in off the street, someone known to the court system, and said he heard one of the jurors say, 'We have to find this guy guilty in a hurry so that we can get home,'" Gaughan told the Weirton Daily Times. "The obligation is to give the guy a fair trial is so strong that this is the best way to handle it."

The 21-year-old Newell man is being held in the Northern Regional Jail pending his new trial. A spokeswoman in the Hancock County prosecutor's office said Thursday that Stewart's trial has been rescheduled for Nov. 30.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Thursday, October 26, 2006

'Bong Hits' Banner Gives Supreme Court Chance to Clear the Air on Student Speech

Legal Times
10-26-2006

Conference Call summarizes the roughly 15 percent of all non-pauper petitions that are the most likely candidates for certiorari. The Supreme Court's jurisdiction is almost entirely discretionary, and justices in recent years have annually selected roughly 80 petitions from the approximately 7,500 that are filed.

Conference Call is prepared by the law firms Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld and Howe & Russell, which together publish the Supreme Court weblog . Tom Goldstein, who is the head of Supreme Court litigation for Akin Gump, selects the petitions from the docket of non-pauper petitions. Various attorneys for the firms then prepare summaries of the cases. If either firm is involved in a case mentioned in this column, that fact will be disclosed.

A popular bumper sticker poses the question, "What would Jesus do?" When an Alaska high school student unrolled a banner explaining what he would do for Jesus, his answer -- "BONG HITS 4 JESUS" -- earned him a 10-day suspension.

But unlike most students, he took his suspension to court, and on appeal, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held that the suspension violated the student's First Amendment rights. In its private conference Friday, the Court will consider whether to grant certiorari in No. 06-278, Juneau School Board v. Frederick, and revisit its case law dealing with the regulation of student speech.

In January 2002, the Olympic torch relay passed through Juneau, Alaska, on its way to the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City. Students at Juneau-Douglas High School were permitted to leave class to watch the relay, which passed by the school while it was in session. Eighteen-year-old Joseph Frederick was absent from his classes before the relay. As the torch neared the school, however, Frederick was standing on the sidewalk across from the campus, where he and several friends unfurled a large banner bearing the phrase "BONG HITS 4 JESUS." ("Bong," the petition explains helpfully, is "a slang term for drug paraphernalia commonly used for smoking marijuana.") After he declined a request from Principal Linda Morse to take down the banner -- arguing that he was not on the school's campus and invoking his First Amendment rights -- Frederick was suspended for 10 days.

After unsuccessful appeals to the school's superintendent and school board, Frederick filed a suit in federal court against Morse and the school board. The district court held that neither defendant had violated Frederick's First Amendment rights and granted their motion for summary judgment.

On appeal, the 9th Circuit unanimously reversed. Relying on Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969), in which the Supreme Court upheld a student's right to wear an anti-war armband, the panel held that Frederick could not be punished because school officials could not show that the banner caused disruption to the school's educational function.

The other two cases in the "trilogy" of Supreme Court decisions addressing the First Amendment rights of public high school students were, according to the panel, irrelevant: Bethel School District No. 403 v. Fraser (1986), upholding the punishment of a student who gave a sexually suggestive speech at a school assembly, applied only to speech of a "sexual nature," and Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier (1987), upholding a school's right to not publish controversial articles in a school-funded student newspaper, applied only to cases (unlike Frederick's) involving school-sponsored speech. And Morse was not entitled to qualified immunity because, in the panel's view, her actions had violated Frederick's "clearly established rights."

Represented by former Solicitor General and Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr, Morse and the school board urge the Supreme Court to grant certiorari to clear up the "doctrinal fog infecting student speech jurisprudence." They explain that although courts have "wrestled with the Tinker-Fraser-Kuhlmeier trilogy" in considering pro-drug messages in schools, prior decisions had at least "reached a bottom-line consensus" that restrictions on such messages were constitutional. The 9th Circuit's decision, they warn, not only upsets that consensus but will, in fact, "eviscerate" similar anti-drug policies nationwide unless schools can show "substantial and material disruption to school operations."

The school officials also urge the Court to either summarily reverse or grant certiorari to review the 9th Circuit's holding that Principal Linda Morse was not entitled to qualified immunity. First, they contend that because the panel conceded that there was "no 9th Circuit authority precisely on point," Frederick's right to display the banner could not have been "clearly established" -- particularly when all prior cases have upheld restrictions on student speech promoting illegal drugs. Second, the school officials say that, in holding that a reasonable public official would be aware of the illegality of her conduct for the very reason that the right was clearly established, the panel upended the Supreme Court's admonition in Saucier v. Katz that the "dispositive inquiry in determining whether a right is clearly established is whether it would be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted."

Opposing certiorari, Frederick depicts his case as both fundamentally different from the one described in the petition and a "unique factual setting that is not likely to recur." Represented by Douglas Mertz of Juneau, he emphasizes that the torch relay was not school-sponsored; that he had not stepped on school property at all before unfurling the banner; that "BONG HITS 4 JESUS" was intended to be -- and was regarded as -- purely a humorous message; and that the unfurling of the banner did not cause any disruption. Based on these facts, he concludes, his case "does not present the issue of school authority over student expressions on campus or in a school-sponsored activity."

Moreover, any consensus regarding a school's ability to regulate drug references weighs in his favor, not the school board's: Courts of appeals have consistently rejected efforts to regulate such references, while none of the district court cases cited by the school officials as upholding regulation involved off-campus speech. Far from being the outlier portrayed in the petition, the 9th Circuit's holding in this case is actually "consistent with decades of established law." And in any event, the facts of the case are so "idiosyncratic" that the case is neither an appropriate vehicle for Supreme Court review nor -- contrary to the school officials' assertion -- likely to jeopardize schools' existing anti-drug policies.

Finally, Frederick argues that the 9th Circuit's holding that Linda Morse was not entitled to qualified immunity was similarly a
"straightforward" application of Supreme Court precedent. Review is not warranted, he concludes, simply because the school officials disagree with the outcome of that application. -- Amy Howe

Other cases up for review include the following:

* 05-983, Winkelman v. Parma City School District: Whether a nonlawyer parent of a disabled child may file a lawsuit, without a lawyer, to enforce the child's rights under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. (Calls for view of solicitor general)

* 05-1056, Microsoft v. AT&T: Whether software object code can be a component of a patented invention and whether foreign-made copies of such a component are to be considered "supplied" by the United States. (Calls for view of solicitor general)

* 05-1527, Schmidt v. Van Patten: Whether a defendant's Sixth Amendment right to effective counsel was violated because his counsel participated in a no-contest plea hearing by speakerphone.

* 05-1631, Scott v. Harris: Whether a law enforcement officer violates a fleeing suspect's Fourth Amendment rights by using deadly force to terminate a dangerous high-speed pursuit.

* 06-78, Omar v. Babock: Whether the standard for imposing liability under Section 1983 in child abuse should be the "professional judgment" standard or the "deliberate indifference" standard.

* 06-97, Stolt-Nielsen v. United States: Whether federal courts have the authority to enjoin federal prosecutors from breaching a binding contractual obligation "not to bring any criminal prosecution" against a company and its executives.

* 06-273, Cox v. DaimlerChrysler: Whether Michigan laws that restrict inmates to only a prison bank account impose a burden on a private pension plan by requiring the plan to send an inmate-pensioner's payments to the prison for deposit into the inmate's account.

Stephanie McCoy
Paralegal

Cohen Kennedy Dowd & Quigley, P.C.
The Camelback Esplanade I
2425 East Camelback Road, Suite 1100
Phoenix, AZ 85016
Ph. 602.252.8400
www.ckdqlaw.com

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Humans living far beyond planet's means: WWF

By Ben Blanchard Tue Oct 24, 6:29 AM ET

BEIJING (Reuters) - Humans are stripping nature at an unprecedented rate and will need two planets' worth of natural resources every year by 2050 on current trends, the WWF conservation group said on Tuesday.

Populations of many species, from fish to mammals, had fallen by about a third from 1970 to 2003 largely because of human threats such as pollution, clearing of forests and overfishing, the group also said in a two-yearly report. "For more than 20 years we have exceeded the earth's ability to support a consumptive lifestyle that is unsustainable and we cannot afford to continue down this path," WWF Director-General James Leape said, launching the WWF's 2006 Living Planet Report. "If everyone around the world lived as those in America, we would need five planets to support us," Leape, an American, said in Beijing. People in the United Arab Emirates were placing most stress per capita on the planet ahead of those in the United States, Finland and Canada, the report said.

Australia was also living well beyond its means. The average Australian used 6.6 "global" hectares to support their developed lifestyle, ranking behind the United States and Canada, but ahead of the United Kingdom, Russia, China and Japan. "If the rest of the world led the kind of lifestyles we do here in Australia, we would require three-and-a-half planets to provide the resources we use and to absorb the waste," said Greg Bourne, WWF-Australia chief executive officer.

Everyone would have to change lifestyles -- cutting use of fossil fuels and improving management of everything from farming to fisheries. "As countries work to improve the well-being of their people, they risk bypassing the goal of sustainability," said Leape, speaking in an energy-efficient building at Beijing's prestigous Tsinghua University. "It is inevitable that this disconnect will eventually limit the abilities of poor countries to develop and rich countries to maintain their prosperity," he added. The report said humans' "ecological footprint" -- the demand people place on the natural world -- was 25 percent greater than the planet's annual ability to provide everything from food to energy and recycle all human waste in
2003.

In the previous report, the 2001 overshoot was 21 percent. "On current projections humanity, will be using two planets' worth of natural resources by 2050 -- if those resources have not run out by then," the latest report said. "People are turning resources into waste faster than nature can turn waste back into resources."

RISING POPULATION
"Humanity's footprint has more than tripled between 1961 and 2003," it said. Consumption has outpaced a surge in the world's population, to 6.5 billion from 3 billion in 1960. U.N. projections show a surge to 9 billion people around 2050. It said that the footprint from use of fossil fuels, whose heat-trapping emissions are widely blamed for pushing up world temperatures, was the fastest-growing cause of strain. Leape said China, home to a fifth of the world's population and whose economy is booming, was making the right move in pledging to reduce its energy consumption by 20 percent over the next five years. "Much will depend on the decisions made by China, India and other rapidly developing countries," he added. The WWF report also said that an index tracking 1,300 vetebrate species -- birds, fish, amphibians, reptiles and mammals -- showed that populations had fallen for most by about 30 percent because of factors including a loss of habitats to farms. Among species most under pressure included the swordfish and the South African Cape vulture. Those bucking the trend included rising populations of the Javan rhinoceros and the northern hairy-nosed wombat in Australia.

(Additional reporting by Alister Doyle in Helsinki)

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Mental Health Inquiry Is Halved for Conn. Bar Applicants

Douglas S. Malan
The Connecticut Law Tribune
10-24-2006

Beginning in February, Connecticut Bar exam applicants will only be asked to reveal mental health issues that occurred within the previous five years rather than the previous 10, as the inquiry now requires. But opponents of such questioning argue that the screening process should focus more on current conduct than personal history.

The Connecticut Bar Examining Committee recently voted to adjust the language in questions 34 and 35, starting with the February 2007 Bar exam application.

Question 34 now asks if a person has been hospitalized for treatment of a disorder or condition "since you graduated from college or for the past five years, whichever is shorter ... ." Question 35 inquires about treatment "during the last five years" for a host of disorders and health conditions, including "major depressive mood disorder."

The inclusion of those four words on the July 2006 Bar exam application created a furor from those who believe the question was unnecessarily invasive, leading to delayed acceptance into the Bar and discouraging applicants from receiving treatment. Depression had been off the list for six years prior to its reintroduction in 2000.

"It's an incremental improvement," said Jon Bauer of the upcoming change. Bauer, a clinical law professor at the University of Connecticut School of Law, is one of the application's most vocal critics. "It makes some significant difference, though I feel it doesn't go far enough."

The adjustment allows for a typical law school graduate to avoid having his or her possibly turbulent adolescent years fall under bar examiner's scrutiny, Bauer said.

"It was a way for the committee to tweak the application to make it as least invasive as possible," said Rome McGuigan attorney Anne C. Dranginis, chairwoman of a CBEC subcommittee that analyzes the application questions. "We're making slow and steady progress. I've been advocating that we ... ask conduct questions, but I'm in the minority."

Discussions are ongoing regarding the wording and appropriateness of the questions, said Dranginis, a former state Appellate Court judge.

CBEC Chairman Raymond W. Beckwith has downplayed the impact of the questions concerning mental health history. He said, in his 15 years with the committee, he has heard from only one applicant who objected to the questions, adding that "there's no stigma attached" to applicants who disclose mental health issues.

Stephanie McCoy
Paralegal

Cohen Kennedy Dowd & Quigley, P.C.
The Camelback Esplanade I
2425 East Camelback Road, Suite 1100
Phoenix, AZ 85016
Ph. 602.252.8400
www.ckdqlaw.com

This from the guy who gave us tent city and is busing illegals back to the border.

Arpaio starts 2-week mandatory English classes for inmates

Oct. 24, 2006 12:00 AM

Go directly to jail. Do pass a competency exam.

Non-English-speaking inmates in Maricopa County jails began mandatory English classes on Monday.

At the end of their two-week course, inmates must take a test to see how well they learned about American government, the words to God Bless America and the communication of health and safety needs.

"These inmates happen to be incarcerated in the United States of America and in Maricopa County where I run the jails," Sheriff Joe Arpaio said in a statement. "And we speak English here, not foreign languages."

Classes will last two hours a day. The curriculum comprises the three branches of government, how a bill becomes law, state government, law enforcement and court services, and jailhouse "situational" terminology.

Most students will be native-Spanish speakers. Of the 10,000 prisoners in Maricopa County jails, about 3,000 are Hispanic, including roughly 1,000 undocumented immigrants.

Stephanie McCoy
Paralegal

Cohen Kennedy Dowd & Quigley, P.C.
The Camelback Esplanade I
2425 East Camelback Road, Suite 1100
Phoenix, AZ 85016
Ph. 602.252.8400
www.ckdqlaw.com

Computer Search Turned Back at the Border

By Amanda Bronstad
The National Law Journal
10-23-2006

Government officials must have reasonable suspicion under the Fourth Amendment to search someone's laptop at U.S. borders, according to a recent ruling in Los Angeles.

The decision by U.S. District Judge Dean D. Pregerson of the Central District of California is the first within the area of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to address whether searching a person's laptop is more than routine and therefore subject to the search and seizure protections of the Fourth Amendment. U.S. v. Arnold, No. 2:05-cr-00772 (C.D. Calif.).

The Oct. 2 ruling expands upon a previous decision by the 9th Circuit that permitted the search of temporary cache files in a man's laptop. U.S. v. Romm, 455 F. 3d 990 (9th Cir. 2006). The decision could lead to a potential circuit split, given a conflicting 4th Circuit ruling last year in a similar case.

Under existing law, border officials must have a reasonable suspicion to conduct a nonroutine or invasive search, such as a body cavity search or X-rays. In most cases, that standard of proof is relatively low given the nation's heightened security concerns at the borders.

Previously, the only other case that addressed whether a laptop search is intrusive was U.S. v. Ickes, 393 F.3d 501 (4th Cir. 2005.) In that case, the 4th Circuit upheld a man's conviction in ruling that a laptop search at the border did not violate his First Amendment right of expression.

In July, the 9th Circuit upheld the conviction of a man with a prior criminal record in ruling that border authorities could search the temporary cache files in a laptop. But the circuit declined in Romm to address the issue of whether searching a laptop was routine or intrusive.

The recent case involves Michael Timothy Arnold, a 43-year-old man with no previous criminal record who was indicted on child pornography charges after customs officers searched his laptop and other computer equipment at Los Angeles International Airport in July 2005.

The government contended that the search was routine and therefore not subject to Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches.

"While not physically intrusive as in the case of a strip or body cavity search, the search of one's private and valuable personal information stored on a hard drive or other electronic storage device can be just as much, if not more, of an intrusion into the dignity and privacy interests of a person," Pregerson wrote. Given that conclusion, the government failed to prove reasonable suspicion.

Marilyn Bednarski of Pasadena, Calif.-based Kaye, McLane & Bednarski, who represents Arnold, hailed the ruling. "The search of a computer is different because it's like looking into somebody's mind," she said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Carpenter said prosecutors are deliberating about whether to appeal.

Stephanie McCoy
Paralegal

Cohen Kennedy Dowd & Quigley, P.C.
The Camelback Esplanade I
2425 East Camelback Road, Suite 1100
Phoenix, AZ 85016
Ph. 602.252.8400
www.ckdqlaw.com

Sunday, October 22, 2006

UM Study: Meth May Lessen Stroke Damage

From Associated Press
October 12, 2006 8:25 PM EDT

MISSOULA, Mont. - Methamphetamine appears to lessen damage to the brains of rats and gerbils that have suffered strokes, a new study by a group of University of Montana scientists shows.

"Methamphetamine is a drug that has been shown to exacerbate stroke damage or make it worse when administered before a stroke," Dave Poulsen, a UM research assistant professor, said in a news release. "But we have seen roughly 80 to 90 percent protection of neurons when administered after a stroke."

During the study, Poulsen and his team kept thin slices of rat hippocampus - the part of the brain used for memory and learning - in culture for nine days. The slices were then deprived of oxygen and glucose for 1 1/2 hours, mimicking stroke conditions.

The team used a special dye to reveal the damage.

When low doses of meth were administered, the scientists saw less damage in the stroke slices than the non-stroke slices.

"Don't ask me how - we are trying to figure that out," Poulsen said. "But methamphetamine is clearly protective."

The researchers found that small amounts of meth created a protective effect, while higher doses increased damage.

They also learned that lower doses of the drug helped lessen damage up to 16 hours after a stroke. This discovery was significant because the current leading clot-busting drug used for strokes must be administered within three hours, said Poulsen, a faculty member of UM's Department of Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences.

The researchers also used live gerbils in their study. The animals that suffered strokes became twice as active and agitated as normal gerbils. But those given a low dose of meth were calmer, and dissection showed that their neurons were as intact as those in animals that hadn't had strokes.

In contrast, nontreated animals that suffered strokes showed profound neuronal loss.

Poulsen said he stumbled upon the apparent protective aspect of meth while helping other UM researchers study the toxicity of the drug on the lungs.

"The reality of it is, we initially used meth and stroked the animals to try to increase the damage, and surprisingly the cultures looked better," he said. "We repeated it four times, and it worked again and again."

The work is preliminary, and more research is needed to confirm and expand the findings; however, Poulsen said someday humans may use meth to lessen stroke damage.

He will present the findings during the Oct. 14-18 Society of Neuroscience conference in Atlanta.

Partners in the study included the Montana Neuroscience Institute of St. Patrick Hospital and Health Sciences Center and UM's Center for Structural and Functional Neuroscience.
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Saturday, October 21, 2006

Drug Therapy May Help Women Looking to Quit Smoking

Naltrexone shows early promise when used with nicotine patches and counseling, study found

MONDAY, Oct. 9 (HealthDay News) -- Women -- but not men -- hoping to kick the smoking habit may be helped in the short-term by taking an opiate blocker drug in conjunction with standard nicotine patch treatments and counseling, new research suggests.

The medication -- naltrexone -- has been around for about 30 years and is already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of alcohol and heroin dependence.

Naltrexone also prevented the weight gain that commonly comes with quitting smoking. Those who did not get the drug gained about four pounds in the first month after quitting; those who took the drug gained only one pound, the study found.

The new findings suggest that a two-month regimen, incorporating naltrexone, nicotine patches and behavioral support, improves by nearly 50 percent a woman's ability to abstain from smoking for the duration of the program, compared to the same program minus naltrexone.

But, naltrexone doesn't appear to offer similar help for men, according to the study, which was published in the October issue of Nicotine and Tobacco Research.

"Women have historically not responded as well as men to smoking-cessation treatment, so treatment strategies that show promise with helping them are very interesting," said study author Andrea King, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Chicago.

The study authors noted that naltrexone is thought to reduce cigarette and alcohol craving by blocking drug-induced brain signals that convey pleasure.

King and her colleagues studied the potential benefits of the drug among 110 men and women who smoked between 15 and 40 cigarettes a day for an average of 25 years. The study participants ranged in age from 21 to 65, and all were healthy and motivated to stop smoking.

As part of the two-month program, all the participants attended six counseling sessions with a therapist, and all used daily nicotine patches of decreasing intensity over the course of the first four weeks.

Half the participants also took 50 milligrams daily of naltrexone for eight weeks, while the other half took a placebo.

Weekly assessments were conducted, as was a post-program check-up six months after the initial quit date.

King and her colleagues evaluated cigarette use, cravings, and treatment side effects. They found that at the end of the two-month period, men had better overall success at quitting than women did -- a typical result observed in most standard cessation therapies.

But, they noted that most of the difference was confined to the non-naltrexone group.

Among those taking naltrexone, both men and women had similar two-month cessation success rates: 62 percent among the men and 58 percent among the women. Men not taking naltrexone had nearly the same cessation success rate as their naltrexone counterparts. However, the women not taking the opiate blocker had only a 39 percent success rate.

The researchers noted that naltrexone appeared to help women reduce their cravings for cigarettes as well as the typical discomforts associated with tobacco withdrawal.

Yet, while the drug didn't appear to influence the men's quit rate, King and her team did find that naltrexone reduced both male and female weight gain commonly experienced by quitters.

Those on the medication gained only one pound in the first month after quitting, while the non-drug group gained approximately four pounds.

Most naltrexone side effects, such as nausea and light-headedness, were mild, and only light-headedness persisted beyond the first month.

On the minus side, the researchers noted that at six months after treatment, the overall success rates ultimately dropped to around one-third of all study participants. It could be that a longer initial regimen including naltrexone would offer better and longer-lasting results, the scientists said.

"This is a treatment option that needs more study, but I am optimistic," said King. "And, in the end, it may be that this kind of aggressive treatment somehow addresses both psychological and biological issues that are at play which could account for the complexities of smoking as they specifically relate to women."

King said she's now conducting a study that's three times larger than the first one. She hopes it will help unravel the mechanisms that underlie the drug's affect.

Dr. Joseph R. Di Franza is a professor of family medicine and community health at the University of Massachusetts School of Medicine who has studied smoking cessation. He said he was surprised because he's never heard of a quit-smoking strategy that worked better for one sex than the other.

"I would say that this type of medication works by blunting the cravings that are induced by cues in the environment even after the withdrawal has gone away -- like seeing someone else smoke or smelling a cigarette," Di Franza said. "And there is some non-definitive research that indicates that for women, smoking is driven more by those kinds of cues. So, if men are immune to those cues, that might explain why this drug has no added benefit for them. But we certainly would want to see these findings replicated in future studies."

More information

For more information on quitting smoking, visit smokefreee.gov.

October 9 2006
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That damn marijuana!

OTTAWA, Canada (Reuters) -- Canadian troops fighting Taliban militants in Afghanistan have stumbled across an unexpected and potent enemy -- almost impenetrable forests of marijuana plants 10 feet tall.

General Rick Hillier, chief of the Canadian defense staff, said Thursday that Taliban fighters were using the forests as cover. In response, the crew of at least one armored car had camouflaged their vehicle with marijuana.

"The challenge is that marijuana plants absorb energy, heat very readily. It's very difficult to penetrate with thermal devices. ... And as a result you really have to be careful that the Taliban don't dodge in and out of those marijuana forests," he said in a speech in Ottawa, Canada.

"We tried burning them with white phosphorous -- it didn't work. We tried burning them with diesel -- it didn't work. The plants are so full of water right now ... that we simply couldn't burn them," he said.

Even successful incineration had its drawbacks.

"A couple of brown plants on the edges of some of those [forests] did catch on fire. But a section of soldiers that was downwind from that had some ill effects and decided that was probably not the right course of action," Hiller said dryly.

One soldier told him later: "Sir, three years ago before I joined the army, I never thought I'd say 'That damn marijuana'."

Gimme an 'S': The High Court's Grammatical Divide

Jonathan Starble
Legal Times
10-17-2006

As one of its final acts last term, the U.S. Supreme Court issued Kansas v. Marsh, a case involving the constitutionality of a state death-penalty statute. The 5-4 decision exposed the deep divide that exists among the nation's intellectual elite regarding one of society's most troubling issues -- namely, whether the possessive form of a singular noun ending with the letter "s" requires an additional s after the apostrophe.

The issue reached a crescendo in Marsh primarily because of two circumstances. First, the statute in question originated from a state with a name ending in "s." Second, the majority opinion was written by a justice whose last name ends in "s." Given the confluence of these factors, it was inevitable that the justices' philosophical differences on matters of American usage would be thrust into the spotlight.

A BITTER DIVIDE

Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the Court (and joined by Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. and Justices Samuel Alito Jr., Anthony Kennedy, and Antonin Scalia), concluded that the Kansas statute was not unconstitutional. In reaching this conclusion, Thomas repeatedly referred to the relevant law as Kansas' statute.

In response, Justice David Souter wrote a dissent that was joined by Justices Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and John Paul Stevens. The dissent revealed Souter's bitter disagreement with both the substantive conclusion of the majority and the grammatical philosophy of the opinion's author. Whereas Thomas apparently believes that whenever a singular noun ends in "s," an additional "s" should never be placed after the apostrophe, Souter has made equally clear his conviction that an s should always be added after the apostrophe when forming a singular possessive, regardless of whether the nonpossessive form already ends in "s." With this acrimonious undercurrent simmering in the background, Souter boldly began his Marsh dissent as follows: "Kansas's capital sentencing statute provides ... " This dramatic and gratuitous use of the possessive was an obvious attack on Thomas, who, as one of three s-ending members of the Court, is viewed as a role model for the millions of children who grow up with the stigma of grammatical ambiguity attached to their names.

Is it fair to deprive a small minority of the population of the right to assert possession in the same manner as everyone else? Whereas Souter would answer an unequivocal no, Thomas would likely point out that he has gone his whole life with only one "s." Because it worked for him, no one else in a similar situation should receive any preferential treatment. People who happen to be born with names ending in s should pull themselves up by their own bootstraps and learn to go without the additional letter. After all, it builds character.

Scalia, on the other hand, would probably take exception to the stance taken by Thomas. In Marsh, Scalia wrote a separate opinion that concurred with the substance of the majority opinion but nonetheless revealed a clear ideological discord with Thomas. Unlike his colleague, Scalia appears to believe that most singular nouns ending in "s" still demand an additional "s" after the apostrophe. Thus, in his Marsh concurrence, Scalia repeatedly referred to the relevant law as Kansas's statute. He similarly added an "s" to form the words Ramos's and witness's.

Yet in other parts of the opinion, Scalia added only an apostrophe to form the words Stevens', Adams', and Tibbs'. Based on this, it would seem that he believes the extra "s" should be omitted if the existing "s" is preceded by a hard consonant sound. So, whereas Thomas makes his "s" determination based strictly on spelling, Scalia appears to look beyond the spelling and examine pronunciation as well.

In addition to the opinions by Thomas, Souter, and Scalia, the Marsh case generated an additional dissent by Stevens, who disagreed with the substance of the majority but declined to address the "s" issue. A review of recent opinions, however, reveals that Stevens and the remaining five justices side squarely with Thomas.

WHAT ABOUT ARKANSAS?

Whenever the Court issues a landmark constitutional decision, commentators immediately debate how the holding will apply to other states that have similar statutory schemes. Such questions are particularly interesting in the wake of Marsh, as there are four other states with names ending in "s." Texas, like Kansas, has a vowel as both its penultimate letter and its penultimate sound. Thus, for purposes of determining whether an additional "s" should be used, Texas is both visually and aurally identical to Kansas. If the current Court were to consider the Texas death-penalty statute, one would expect the grammatical opinions of the justices to be identical to those expressed in Marsh.

If, however, the statute at issue were from Massachusetts, then Scalia would likely side with the Group of Seven, making Souter the sole justice who would add an "s" at the end. (Last year, in Shepard v. United States, Souter did indeed pen the word Massachusetts's, thereby bravely opining that even a four-syllable proper noun ending in a double consonant before the final "s" is entitled to an additional "s," regardless of the awkwardness of the resulting pronunciation.)

But what about Arkansas? From a spelling perspective, the state bears an uncanny resemblance to Kansas. Yet from a pronunciation perspective, the two states diverge. Whereas the final sound in Kansas is a vowel-consonant combination, the second "s" in Arkansas is silent, thus making the final sound a short vowel. If faced with this situation -- or with a statute from Illinois -- Souter would add an "s" and the Group of Seven probably would not, based on previous opinions.

As for Scalia, one would assume that a noun with a vowel as its penultimate letter and its final sound would present the most compelling possible case for adding an "s" after an apostrophe. Yet in a 2003 opinion, Kentucky Association of Health Plans v. Miller, Scalia repeatedly referred to the possessive of Illinois as Illinois' rather than Illinois's. He has also shown other inconsistencies, such as his repeated use of the word Congress', which is inexplicable in light of his acknowledgment of the word witness's in his Marsh concurrence and his use of the word Congress's in his 2004 majority opinion in Vieth v. Jubelirer.

In reviewing Scalia's lack of a pattern, the most logical conclusion is that he simply doesn't care very much for the "s" debate. In fairness, the issue does not easily lend itself to an "originalist" examination, because the Constitution contains no possessive forms of s-ending singular nouns. (In Article I, Sections 8 and 9, the Framers diplomatically avoided the thorny issue by using the phrase "consent of the Congress," instead of "Congress's consent" or "Congress' consent.")

MASS ILLOGIC

By a margin of 7-2, the strict anti-s view appears to be the clear preference of the land's highest court. Yet experts on American usage overwhelmingly agree that Souter's approach is the only one that is proper. As explained by Bryan Garner, author of "A Dictionary of Modern American Usage," most authorities on the subject recognize only two types of singular nouns for which it is acceptable to omit the additional "s": biblical or classical names, such as Jesus, Moses, or Aristophanes, and nouns formed from plurals, such as General Motors or Legal Times. (Journalists are often more liberal in excluding the
additional "s," but that is typically based on the pragmatic goal of conserving print space rather than on any ideological grounds.)

The surprisingly popular practice of omitting the final "s" in all s-ending words is both technically improper and completely illogical. Indeed, the use of an additional "s" accurately reflects proper pronunciation. Whereas an 's produces a clear sound, a mere apostrophe produces no sound at all. Accordingly, if one were to pronounce the sentence, "Kansas' statute is constitutional," it would sound exactly the same as the sentence, "Kansas statute is constitutional." That wouldn't make any sense. Furthermore, it is hard to imagine that law clerks for Justice Thomas go around saying to people, "Hello, I'm Justice Thomas clerk." (Of course, the same analysis applies to people like Jesus and Moses, but they are apparently entitled to some type of "grandfather" exception.)

Don't get me wrong. I realize that the written opinions of the Supreme Court consistently exhibit a high level of adherence to accepted rules of proper American usage. I also recognize that there is a limit to how much influence the Court can have on the written and spoken word. I have lost all hope, for instance, that the Court can do anything to reverse the epidemic currently gripping the nation -- that is, the widespread misunderstanding of the objective case for pronouns, which has resulted in millions of highly educated people who repeatedly write and say things such as "This is just between you and I," and "If you have any questions, please feel free to call Mary Jones or myself." (In each of these examples, the correct pronoun choice is me.)

Nevertheless, the time is now for leadership and unity. If the highly visible writers on the Supreme Court cannot be good role models on the relatively noncontroversial question of whether an "s" should be used to form a possessive, then what chance is there that the nation will receive unified guidance on some of the more legitimate debates of our time, such as split infinitives, the use of a comma before the final element of a series, which vs. that, and the use of a plural pronoun in place of a singular pronoun for the purpose of achieving gender neutrality?

Perhaps the justices can convene next summer to take a closer look at all these important issues. Grammarians anxiously await.

Jonathan M. Starble is an attorney in West Hartford, Conn.

Editor's note: Legal Times and Law.com admit to following Associated Press style, which omits the "s" after the apostrophe in creating possessives of all singular proper names ending in "s," not just biblical and classical names.

Stephanie McCoy
Paralegal

Cohen Kennedy Dowd & Quigley, P.C.
The Camelback Esplanade I
2425 East Camelback Road, Suite 1100
Phoenix, AZ 85016
Ph. 602.252.8400
www.ckdqlaw.com

Fear of lawsuits taking the fun out of childhood....

Mass. School Bans Playing Tag Over Fears of Injuries and Lawsuits

The Associated Press
10-19-2006

Tag, you're out!

Officials at an elementary school south of Boston have banned kids from playing tag, touch football and any other unsupervised chase game during recess for fear they'll get hurt and hold the school liable. Recess is "a time when accidents can happen," said Willett Elementary School Principal Gaylene Heppe, who approved the ban.

While there is no districtwide ban on contact sports during recess, local rules have been cropping up. Several school administrators around Attleboro, Mass., a city of about 45,000 residents, took aim at dodgeball a few years ago, saying it was exclusionary and dangerous.

Elementary schools in Cheyenne, Wyo., and Spokane, Wash., also recently banned tag during recess. A suburban Charleston, S.C., school outlawed all unsupervised contact sports.

"I think that it's unfortunate that kids' lives are micromanaged and there are social skills they'll never develop on their own," said Debbie Laferriere, who has two children at Willett, about 40 miles south of Boston. "Playing tag is just part of being a kid."

Another Willett parent, Celeste D'Elia, said her son feels safer because of the rule. "I've witnessed enough near collisions," she said.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Stephanie McCoy
Paralegal

Cohen Kennedy Dowd & Quigley, P.C.
The Camelback Esplanade I
2425 East Camelback Road, Suite 1100
Phoenix, AZ 85016
Ph. 602.252.8400
www.ckdqlaw.com

Friday, October 13, 2006

Is Your Printer Spying On You?

Imagine that every time you printed a document, it automatically included a secret code that could be used to identify the printer - and potentially, the person who used it. Sounds like something from an episode of "Alias," right?

Unfortunately, the scenario isn't fictional. In a purported effort to identify counterfeiters, the US government has succeeded in persuading some color laser printer manufacturers to encode each page with identifying information. That means that without your knowledge or consent, an act you assume is private could become public. A communication tool you're using in everyday life could become a tool for government surveillance. And what's worse, there are no laws to prevent abuse.

The ACLU recently issued a report revealing that the FBI has amassed more than 1,100 pages of documents on the organization since 2001, as well as documents concerning other non-violent groups, including Greenpeace and United for Peace and Justice. In the current political climate, it's not hard to imagine the government using the ability to determine who may have printed what document for purposes other than identifying counterfeiters.

Yet there are no laws to stop the Secret Service from using printer codes to secretly trace the origin of non-currency documents; only the privacy policy of your printer manufacturer currently protects you (if indeed such a policy exists). And no law regulates what sort of documents the Secret Service or any other domestic or foreign government agency is permitted to request for identification, not to mention how such a forensics tool could be developed and implemented in printers in the first place.

With no laws on the books, there's nothing to stop the privacy violations this technology enables. For this reason, EFF is gathering information about what printers are revealing and how - a necessary precursor to any legal challenge or new legislation to protect your privacy. And we could use your help.

In the preliminary research paper linked below, we explain what we've observed so far, briefly explore the privacy implications, and ask you to print and send us test sheets from your color laser printer and/or a color laser printer at your local print shop. That way, we can watch the watchers and ensure that your privacy isn't compromised in ways that harm your fundamental consitutional rights.

In addition to documenting what printers are revealing, EFF has filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, and we will keep you updated on what we discover. In the meantime, we urge you to participate and pass the word along about this research project. Thank you for your support!
More information

* White paper: "Investigating Machine Identification Code Technology in Color Laser Printers"
* Directions for printing test sheets
* FOIA request
* DocuColor Tracking Dot Decoding Guide
* List of printers that do or do not print tracking dots
* Andrew "bunnie" Huang's research on printer watermarking, including a modified scanner that scans only in blue

Articles
Government Uses Color Laser Printer Technology to Track Documents PCWorld, 2005
Dutch Track Counterfeits Via Printer Serial Numbers. PCWorld, 2004
FBI Is Keeping Documents on ACLU and Other Peaceful Groups ACLU, 2005
Mailing list
People who are interested in participating in our research are encouraged to join the printers list to discuss our progress with other volunteers.

Here is the link for this article.
http://www.eff.org/Privacy/printers/

Here is a link for the list of printers.
http://www.eff.org/Privacy/printers/list.php

Keep it to yourself? The costly stigma of mental illness

Sixteen years after the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) passed, workers with mental illness still face a disheartening choice: keep their health problems a secret at work, or risk being shunned, passed over, paid up to one-third less, or even fired, according to a new study.

Telling the boss is seen as so risky that "the vast majority" of workers with mental illness still hide their condition, said Professor Marjorie Baldwin , an economist with the School of Health Management and Policy at the W.P. Carey School of Business and co-author of the study, "Perceived vs. Measured Stigma Against Workers with Mental Illness."

For the study, she and fellow researcher Steven Marcus (University of Pennsylvania) analyzed National Health Interview Survey-Disability Supplement data on employed people ages 18 to 65 diagnosed with mood disorders (severe depression, for example), anxiety disorders (obsessive-compulsive disorder, phobias, etc.) and psychotic disorders (such as schizophrenia).

In a separate study, Baldwin and co-author Rebecca White (a doctoral student in the School of Family and Social Dynamics) conducted in-depth interviews with workers in competitive jobs who were suffering from serious mental illness. They found that despite the ADA's job discrimination protection, most workers with mental illness say the real-life cost of going public is too high. Why?


Social stigma: the price of accommodation

Let's say someone struggling with severe depression needs to leave early every Tuesday and Thursday for medical appointments. A person with a social phobia might ask to wear an iPod while working to shut out the buzz of co-worker interaction. An employee with obsessive-compulsive disorder may need a private cubicle, because sharing with a messy co-worker impedes his productivity.

But telling even one person -- such as the appropriate supervisor -- can start a chain reaction. Even if employee privacy rules are followed, reports are filed, work schedules altered, co-workers shuffled, job duties redistributed, special arrangements made. These are visible events, that may trigger rumors or resentment among co-workers.

Baldwin's study indicates that resentful or spooked co-workers may begin to avoid the mentally ill person; the shunning can also involve higher-level management, affecting training opportunities, promotions, transfers, raises and more.

Numerous studies of attitudes toward persons with different types of health conditions show that societal stigma and discrimination against those with mental illness is widespread. For instance, Australian researchers asked respondents to rank how acceptable they find people diagnosed with health problems including diabetes, blindness, epilepsy, paraplegia, alcoholism, cerebral palsy and AIDS. Respondents ranked people with mental illness near the bottom, finding them more acceptable than only AIDS sufferers.


The dollar cost of going public

But Baldwin's study is the first to statistically link going public with sharply lower wages. Here's how she did it. First, she set up a "Control Group" of workers, all people without mental illness. Next, she divided mentally ill workers into two groups: those who reported no job-related "stigma or discrimination" (possibly because they had not disclosed their health problems to the employer), and those who did report job-related, post-disclosure stigma or discrimination. We'll call them "Group A" and "Group B."

Here's what she found. The Control Group earned an average $12.70 per hour. Group A earned an average of $10.82 an hour. Group B earned an average of $9.15 an hour.

After crunching the numbers, she found that persons with mental illness earn 85 percent of their non-disabled peers' wages, even when they don't report suffering stigma or discrimination.

And persons with mental illness who complain of stigma or discrimination earn even less -- 72 percent of their non-disabled peers' wages.

But Baldwin worried that other factors such as the impact of medically related leaves of absence, geographic wage differences, or union contracts were distorting the wage comparisons. So she crunched the numbers again, "controlling for all the contributing factors, to isolate actual discrimination."

This time around, the wage gap between the Control Group and Group A showed "no significant difference," according to Baldwin. But the wage gap between the Control Group and Group B worsened. Mentally ill people who complain of job-related stigma or discrimination after disclosing their health problems earn just 69 percent of their non-disabled peers. As Baldwin noted, "this is evidence that stigma against workers with mental illness translates to poorer outcomes in the labor market."


Staying quiet has its price, too

While it's not surprising that so many mentally ill workers stay mum, keeping a disabling medical condition secret is dangerous, too. That's because the ADA's anti-discrimination protection is triggered when a worker tells an employer about his or her disability -- in this case, severe mental illness -- and asks to have that disability accommodated.

"This becomes a problem if the worker's symptoms worsen, or he or she can no longer function as the same level," Baldwin explained. "The mental illness is no longer hidden; it becomes visible through the behavioral symptoms. The worker may lose his or her job without the protections of the ADA."

There's another twist to this scenario. Say a worker wants to stay mum about his or her health problems, even if doing so means surrendering ADA protection down the line. But coping with symptoms secretively may hurt the worker's perceived job performance.

For example, a bus driver who's often late to work due to OCD-related rituals -- checking that all appliances are unplugged and the door is locked over and over again -- may make up a series of excuses when a supervisor notices repeated tardiness. Instead of being accommodated, the bus driver is branded "unreliable" in her next performance review, because the employer is in the dark. Once the performance review nixes the bus driver's promotion to a preferred route, it's too late to say "I'm late because I have OCD" and demand ADA protection.

Among the workers interviewed by Baldwin and White was a police officer with bi-polar disorder who began adding his own opinions as he typed up crime reports, personalizing what should have been straight-forward descriptions of what occurred. He also fell behind on his paperwork, talked incessantly and began keeping an increasingly messy office.

First, co-workers reacted with sneering comments and jokes at his expense, then began avoiding him. They also complained to the supervisor. Managers in other departments told his supervisor to fire him.

Like many co-workers inconvenienced by a fellow employee's mental illness, other police officers didn't want him to return to their unit. "Mental illness can change workplace relationships, if co-workers have little understanding of the illness. This can bring down morale and foster resentment," Baldwin said.

Many of the 20 employees told Baldwin they had not asked for or received any accommodation for their mental disability, even though further questioning revealed they were being accommodated.

An example is a woman who needs scheduling flexibility so she can attend to frequent doctor appointments. The supervisor goes out of his way to accommodate these requests, which exceed company policy. But when asked about the appointments by researchers, the employee said she was one of the company's best workers and they were happy to do what they can for her.

Facilitating this employee's doctor appointments results in some indirect costs, from the supervisor's time to co-worker resentment over her ease in getting more time off, Baldwin said. But she found that accommodating a mentally ill employee's condition carries less direct financial cost than assisting a physically disabled worker, who may need a special headset or a wheelchair ramp built.

Some researchers have estimated that accommodating the majority of employees who disclose mental illness incurs direct costs less than $100 initially and on an ongoing, monthly basis. But Baldwin noted that the bulk of costs of accommodations for a worker with mental illness are likely to be indirect costs."

Many mentally ill employees devise their own accommodations without attracting attention, although their ability to do so is limited in some job settings. For instance, a sales manager with severe anxiety found he relaxed and could focus after taking a short walk around the building. When the office got too loud and rowdy, he'd duck out for a little fresh air, arousing no notice.

Another worker reported taking clients on impromptu field trips to parks, movie theatres and other places when she found herself unable to function in the office.

"Unfortunately, someone who works on an assembly line just can't do that," Baldwin points out. The key to making these employee-initiated job accommodations work is having enough job flexibility to make the adjustments without reducing productivity.


Bottom Line

* Numerous studies of attitudes toward persons with different types of health conditions show that societal stigma and discrimination against those with mental illness is widespread.
* Going public with a mental illness has been statistically linked to sharply lower wages.
* Keeping a disabling mental illness secret is also dangerous, as the ADA's anti-discrimination protection is only triggered when a worker reports the disability to the employer and asks to have that disability accommodated.
* The bulk of the costs of accommodations for a worker with mental illness are likely to be indirect costs.


Stephanie McCoy
Paralegal
Cohen Kennedy Dowd & Quigley, P.C.
The Camelback Esplanade I
2425 East Camelback Road, Suite 1100
Phoenix, AZ 85016
Ph. 602.252.8400
www.ckdqlaw.com


The information contained in this electronic mail is intended only for use of the entity or individual to whom it is addressed. This electronic mail and the information it contains is privileged, confidential and protected from disclosure. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution, retransmission or copying of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, please notify the sender immediately by return e-mail or contact tpatino@ckdqlaw.com

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Text This: Words Alone Can Violate Federal Obscenity Laws

Howard J. Bashman
Special to Law.com
10-09-2006

Related: Bashman Archive

With so much attention focused on the Congressman Mark Foley sex scandal involving inappropriate text messages to congressional interns, it's worth noting that recent news reports and a federal appellate court decision confirm that federal obscenity prosecutions can be brought based on words alone, even when those words are unaccompanied by obscene visual images.

When most of us think of obscenity prosecutions, we assume that the matter concerns obscene photographs or films or videos. And, by and large, most obscenity prosecutions do involve visual images. But late last month The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette published an article headlined "Woman charged over 'vile' Web stories," which reported that "A Donora woman who federal prosecutors say posted fictional stories online about the rape, torture and murder of children was indicted this week on six charges of distributing obscene materials over the Internet. Unlike typical obscenity cases, though, [the defendant] is charged with violating the law through simple writing, and not with pictures or movies."

Moreover, within the past week, a unanimous three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a federal criminal conviction based on a jury's finding that various offensive voicemail messages consisted of words that constituted spoken obscenities. The 11th Circuit's opinion reproduces the offending language in exacting detail, proving that what is criminally obscene when spoken as a voicemail message may not be criminally obscene when expressed in the context of an appellate court's discussion of the sufficiency of the evidence.

But while technology has not yet progressed to the point where a person can be prosecuted merely for thinking bad thoughts, there are some exceptions to the general rule that the First Amendment automatically protects the expression of thoughts in language. One of the best-known exceptions is the "true threat" exception,
under which a person can be subject to criminal punishment for making a real threat to another's safety, notwithstanding the First Amendment.

As the recent appellate ruling and newspaper article discussed above demonstrate, obscene language can constitute another exception to the First Amendment right of expression. Under the U.S. Supreme Court's precedent in Miller v. California,
ml> setting forth the boundaries between obscene expression and First Amendment protections, the inquiry into whether a given expression is obscene involves determining "whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct." From that quotation, it's clear that "depicts" includes visual communication, such as photographs, film and video, while "describes" includes textual expression.

Accordingly, if a particular visual depiction of certain conduct would qualify as obscene under applicable law, then presumably the textual description of the very same conduct would likewise qualify as obscene, even in the absence of visual images. My conclusion: Merely thinking obscene thoughts may not subject you to punishment, and prosecutions for using obscene language will presumably never occur as frequently as prosecutions for using obscene images, but the expression of obscene thoughts in words is still subject to criminal liability, notwithstanding the First Amendment.

Howard J. Bashman operates his own appellate litigation boutique in Willow Grove, Pa., a suburb of Philadelphia. He can be reached via e-mail at hjb@hjbashman.com. You can access his appellate Web log at http://howappealing.law.com/.

Law.com's ongoing LEGAL MINDS article series highlights opinion and analysis from our site's contributors and writers across the ALM network of publications.

Stephanie McCoy
Paralegal

Cohen Kennedy Dowd & Quigley, P.C.
The Camelback Esplanade I
2425 East Camelback Road, Suite 1100
Phoenix, AZ 85016
Ph. 602.252.8400
www.ckdqlaw.com

The information contained in this electronic mail is intended only for use of the entity or individual to whom it is addressed. This electronic mail and the information it contains is privileged, confidential and protected from disclosure. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution, retransmission or copying of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, please notify the sender immediately by return e-mail or contact . tpatino@ckdqlaw.com

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

How the Supremes Mangled My Research! What the Supreme Court Doesn't Know

By PAULA J. CAPLAN


I should have been thrilled. And I was, for five minutes. "Your book about psychiatric diagnosis was cited in the latest United States Supreme Court decision," read a colleague's email message to me. For five minutes I felt gratified, thinking my report that many psychiatric diagnostic categories are unscientific had been helpful. Then I saw that what the Clark v. Arizona decision, the last in the Court's most recent term, included was a serious mischaracterization and misapplication of my work. I wondered how the Court had heard of my book and soon discovered that the writer of an amicus curiae brief had cited it in a way that, through implication and omission, was misleading.

When I discovered that the "Citizens Commission for Human Rights"(CCHR)had submitted that brief, it struck me that a Justice would be unlikely to know that the Church of Scientology founded and remains closely tied to the CCHR. I wondered: Does the Supreme Court have mechanisms to find out the nature of groups that submit amicus briefs, and does the Court have mechanisms to figure out whether scientific research and clinicians' opinions in briefs are of good quality and accurately presented?

The case at issue: Eric Michael Clark had been diagnosed as Paranoid Schizophrenic, and he believed that aliens had invaded Earth and were sometimes disguising themselves in government uniforms and trying to kill him. At trial, Clark's attorney argued that when Clark shot and killed a police officer, he believed himself to be in mortal danger from an alien.

I had served on two of the committees that wrote the current edition of the manual of psychiatric diagnosis the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) - but had resigned: I was appalled that they used an unscientific process to decide in which of a vast number of possible ways to assign individual symptoms to groups but then presented the chosen groups as though they were real entities. The APA markets the DSM as a scientifically-based document, but their choices about how to cluster symptoms were often no more scientific than astronomers' choices about how to group stars into constellations.

An issue in the Clark case was whether or not the accused had the mens rea, that he knowingly and intentionally committed the crime. If the accused did not intend to do what he did, the law says that the crime was not committed. Strangely, the CCHR used my work about diagnosis to argue that psychiatric testimony should not be used in determining mens rea. But a psychiatrist or psychologist can certainly tell whether a person suffers from delusions, and that - not whether psychiatric categories are unscientific - is what pertains to the judgment about whether or not Clark had the mens rea. The CCHR's argument makes about as much sense as to claim that, because stars can be grouped in different ways into a myriad of constellations, therefore no single star exists. Whether there were more scientific grounds for calling Clark schizophrenic than psychotic or bipolar, he clearly suffered from a delusion that took away his mens rea: He did not intend to kill an officer; he did not know that his victim was an officer.

In Clark, the Supreme Court was faced with the question of whether the state of Arizona had the right to disallow psychiatrists' and psychologists' testimony about mens rea. The CCHR brief was so compellingly written that the Court's majority apparently missed its failure to acknowledge that people suffer from delusions, no matter how you label them. It is surprising that the majority did not question the brief's relevance after reading its statement that "common activities can be[wrongly] deemed mental illness in DSM"; for that legitimate criticism of the DSM is totally irrelevant to the uncommon belief that aliens in police uniform are trying to take one's life. And it's a huge and unwarranted leap from the lack of science in diagnosis to the CCHR's claim that "The discipline of psychiatry is simply unable to[determine] whether the criminal defendant is responsible for criminal conduct." It is analogous to claiming that if a physical illness has not been accurately classified, one cannot die from it. In writing the majority opinion, Justice David Souter says that "evidence bearing on whether the defendant knew the nature and quality of his actions is both relevant and admissible"; how he got from that reasonable principle to disallowing expert testimony about delusions is a mystery. The majority Justices conflated psychiatric diagnosis with serious emotional problems, referring in one breath to both "mental disease" and "capacity"; but whether or not one believes that serious emotional problems are "diseases," and whatever various diagnostic labels conflicting therapists might choose for Clark, his delusion would have been evidence that he lacked the criminal intent to commit the crime. In fact, his particular delusion is precisely the kind of symptom that even we debunkers of diagnostic categories would consider prima facie evidence of serious emotional disturbance.

According to Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe, only "potentially compromising financial links" between an amicus author and a party to the case must be disclosed; otherwise, "the judiciary has no devices for exploring the affiliations, commitments, or ultimate credentials of the various amici." The CCHR had indicated that "No entity or person" aside from the CCHR "made any monetary contribution" to the brief, but, although the Supreme Court Rules do not require disclosure of nonfinancial sources of bias, the Justices might have considered the ties to Scientology relevant in deciding how much weight to give that brief.

Supreme Court expert Stephen Wermiel of American University's Washington College of Law believes that the Court probably assumes amicus writers will want the Court to know who they are and why they have an interest in the case. But that may not always be so, and there is no penalty for failing to disclose either that information or even financial conflicts. Perhaps, like editors of scientific journals, the courts could require that anyone or group submitting an amicus curiae brief disclose both definite and possible ideological conflicts. Admittedly, though, most with ideological biases regard their ideology as leading not to bias but to truth.

What about the question of the courts' competence to know what is good science? Trial courts - but not, strictly speaking, the Supreme Court or other appeals courts - are bound by the 1993 case of Daubert et al. v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., in which Justice Harry Blackmun wrote that trial judges should ensure that an expert's testimony "rests on a reliable foundation" and scientifically valid and "relevant to the task at hand." What a world of complications is bound up in just that brief phrase "rests on a reliable foundation." As a specialist in research methodology and co-author of a textbook on that subject, I have seen intelligent scientists acting in good faith disagree about whether a claim rests on a reliable foundation. And peer review, publication, and degree of acceptance of research in the scientific community often reflect more about the biases of the most powerful scientists and journal editors than about the quality of the science.

In order to take Daubert fully and fairly into account, judges would need to know as much about scientific debates in particular fields as do the scientists themselves. Even if judges had the time and believed it appropriate to carefully study the expert opinions presented to them, they will not always know what relevant research and interpretations of data have not been presented to them. What appeals or Supreme Court judges can do in light of Daubert is to send cases back to trial courts when they believe the trial judges failed to follow the Daubert guidelines. But higher-court judges often cannot know whether Daubert guidelines were met, if they are not familiar with the debates within that particular field.

These problems are aggravated in the social sciences and the mental health fields, where the difficulties of measuring and interpreting human behavior, feelings, and thoughts are legion. Social scientists and psychotherapists have increasingly urged the courts to use their expertise, and notably, in the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, research about Black children's self-esteem was considered crucial. The American Psychological Association's Monitor has included a column on psychology and the courts for two decades, and in 1995 that organization began publishing the journal Psychology, Public Policy, and Law. However, whereas few judges would consider themselves experts on chemical engineering, most judges, like most people, have implicit or explicit theories about human behavior, and judges, like everyone else, have biases. When it comes to research in psychology and mental health, then, Justices may unknowingly be predisposed to accepting unquestioningly those allegedly scientific claims in amicus briefs that accord with their own beliefs.

Although trial judges hear claims by and cross-examination of scientists who disagree with each other, in appeals courts and the Supreme Court, Professor Tribe is aware of no "actively investigatory" mechanism to assess what is presented as science in either the amici or the trial transcripts: "The judiciary, including most particularly the Supreme Court, relies on a process in which it plays a fairly passive role to ferret out groundless or dubious empirical claims. The Court essentially counts on the opposing advocate and the amici of the party that advocate represents to debunk bogus claims advanced on behalf of the other side." But amicus writers do not have the chance to respond to other amici, and in my case, had I seen the CCHR brief and been asked to write one or advise Clark's attorney, it would never have occurred to me that the Court would consider relevant to mens rea what the CCHR wrote about my work. Thus, I doubt I would have addressed the issue. As laypeople. we might be surprised that the Supreme Court and lower-level appeals judges do not consider it their role to determine the validity of relevant science. Their role, Professor Wermiel explains, is "to decide whether there is a right being violated," not whether or not the relevant science is valid. They do not reweigh the facts as they were determined by the trial judges." But what if someone's rights were infringed because a claim was accepted as scientifically proven and relevant, even though it is not? That is just what happened in the Clark case, and for Eric Michael Clark it could be literally a matter of life or death.

Had the Justices known that my work was presented by a Scientologists' group, perhaps they would have checked out whether it might have been taken out of context or otherwise wrongly used to draw a particular conclusion. Regardless of who writes a brief, all writers, including us scientists, have biases, and it is alarming that even the Justices of the Supreme Court have no consistent way to assess scientific merit. It's not as though the Justices have failed to think about the question of how to judge the quality of claims by scientists. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer is a longtime advocate of the importance of scientific experts in assisting the courts, and he is right that scientists can be of great help. Justice Breyer has been supportive of the American Association for the Advancement of Science's (AAAS) fine Court-Appointed Scientific Experts program. However, since that program began in 2001, according to its Project Director Mark Frankel, only trial judges have asked for their assistance and only in civil cases, and no experts from psychology or sociology have been used.

None of this means that we should ban science from the courts. But we must face the fact that these are some insurmountable problems and from that basis consider what to do. Having taught psychology majors at some of the most selective universities in North America, I have been stunned when students have told me that their professors have never asked them to do critical thinking about the research reports that they read; and critical thinking is essential to the attempt to overcome biases. Required courses about research methods in science span at least one semester or a full year, and much science requires far more training for those who wish to understand it.

As science becomes increasingly specialized, the number of people who can understand research outside their own field dramatically diminishes. And in the realms of psychology and psychiatry, court cases relating especially to child custody and child sexual abuse have become increasingly complex and flooded the courts. In light of these developments, it is no wonder that judges have increasingly turned to scientists and other experts, longing to believe that they know some objective truth that will make crystal clear how they should decide the case.

I once spoke to a major conference of legal professionals about a study that Canadian family law attorney Jeffery Wilson and I had conducted, in which we documented that substantial percentages of mental health experts who do child custody assessments had important biases. Many attendees, visibly shaken, asked me how, then, were judges supposed to make their decisions. These reactions highlighted how judges often shift from their shoulders to the shoulders of scientists and mental health experts the responsibility of making judgments. Although such testimony can certainly be helpful, at the very least, judges, lawyers, and the public need to be aware that judges' reliance on such experts often introduces not indisputable science but rather additional biases into judicial proceedings.

As a practical matter, it is hard to know what can be done. Should judges beyond the trial level in essence hold mini-trials or mini-debates between opposing experts in their chambers, or should they schedule classes for themselves with opposing experts in cases that come before them? Would those mechanisms pose problems of principle or practicality?

Washington College of Law Professor Paul Rice, an expert on evidence, believes that the standards set in Daubert "are probably impossible to meet," and Supreme Court Justices thus encounter the "exact" problems as the trial judges: "If the trial judges don't know how to separate the wheat from the chaff, the appellate judges aren't any better." In essence, he notes, judges at all levels try to function as scientists, evaluating the validity and relevance of material presented by the parties and in amicus briefs. They have to make choices about who the relevant scientists are and examine their conclusions and how they reached them. But, says Professor Rice, "When judges try to be scientists, they don't do it very well," and in essence, they often use scientists as law clerks, with the scientist chosen by the judge making statements that the judge incorporates in a decision and then "acts like he did it," like he was presenting as their own conclusions what the scientists told them. He further notes that they do this by "taking judicial notice," presenting claims which may or may not be based on solid science as though they were facts. One cannot expect judges to have comprehensive knowledge of every field of science that comes up in cases before them. But what is dangerous to us as a society is to assume that the process is less arbitrary and biases, and more balanced, scientific, and just than it actually is.


Paula J. Caplan, Ph. D. is a clinical and research psychologist on the psychology faculty and at the DuBois Institute at Harvard University. She is the author of _They Say You Are Crazy: How the World's Most Powerful Psychiatrists
Decide Who's "Normal." _
(http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201488329/counterpunchmaga)
She may be reached at: paulajcaplan@yahoo.com
(mailto:paulajcaplan@yahoo.com)

Friday, September 29, 2006

Inquiry on "Glass"

This question about a new method of making methamphetamine came across the methresource line. It involves using gun bluing, no external heat, and done in darkness. The result is methamphetamine

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


From: usbpscm727@gmail.com
Date: 09/29/06 08:43:09
To: DiscussMeth@methresources.gov
Subject: [discussmeth] Inquiry on "Glass"



A southwestern chief has inquired on this after one of his captains reported
it. Anyone know of it or the process?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Glass", where the ingredients involve gun bluing (unknown if this was hot or cold blue solution), Palmolive dish detergent (for phosphorous), household ammonia, and
pseudoephedrine. (Of course, there may be more ingredients; these are the ones listed.) The process is described as not needing external heat and requiring darkness for proper production; the process is described as photosynthesis", and the product is blue to purple in color (consistent with gun bluing). and the dark or purple product was toxic.



Al Ferguson

US Border Patrol (Ret)

Monday, September 25, 2006

Supreme Court to post transcripts online

By MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press Writer Thu Sep 14, 2:50 PM ET
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court will post transcripts of oral arguments on its Web site the same day they occur, beginning in October.

The change, long desired by court watchers, comes as Chief Justice John Roberts begins his second term at the head of the court. The court occasionally has made available audio tapes on the day of argument in major cases. Usually, however, arguments have been transcribed from audio recordings and made available roughly two weeks later. Now, a court reporter will sit in the elegant courtroom to speed the process and attempt to sort out which of the nine justices is interrupting a lawyer arguing the case. There is no indication that justices are prepared to relent on another matter of media interest. Television cameras still are barred from the court.

___

Sandra Cano, one of the women behind the legalization of abortion 33 years ago, is seeking to reverse her victory. On Oct. 6, the justices are scheduled to consider at one of their routine private conferences whether to take her case. Cano says she never wanted an abortion and that her difficult early life resulted in her becoming the anonymous plaintiff in Doe v. Bolton, the lesser-known abortion case that the justices ruled on the same day in 1973 as the landmark Roe v. Wade.

Cano says she was a 22-year-old victim of an abusive husband and that her children were in foster care when she sought legal assistance in getting a divorce and in getting her children back. She said an aggressive lawyer pushed her into the abortion case. "What I received was something I never requested — the legal right to abort my child," Cano said in an affidavit six years ago. Her current lawyers' legal brief says that despite advances in medicine, science and technology, the justices have "frozen abortion law based on obsolete 1973 assumptions and prevented the normal regulation of the practice of medicine."

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in January that neither it nor a U.S. District Court had the authority to reverse the Supreme Court's decisions in Doe v. Bolton or Roe v. Wade.

___

Who are you calling a judicial activist? The term often is used pejoratively and has been a favorite way for conservatives to criticize liberal judges. University of Kentucky law professor Lori Ringhand recently stirred the pot with a study of justices' voting records. She concludes that the court's conservatives can be just as activist as their liberal colleagues, but on different issues. Ringhand defined activism as voting to overturn a federal law, a state law or a Supreme Court decision. Examining votes from 1994 to 2005 — when the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist led a stable roster of justices — Ringhand found conservative justices were more likely to vote to overturn federal laws, while the liberals were more likely to want to strike down state laws. In the third category, conservatives were much more willing to strike down the court's own precedents.

The New York Times' editorial page said the study demonstrates that conservatives are wrong to pretend their judges are not activist. Wait a minute, said Matthew Franck, writing in the conservative National Review Online. Franck acknowledged that judges of all ideological stripes can be activist. But he objects to Ringhand's categories, particularly her count of votes to strike down court precedents. "If yesterday's activists (liberal or conservative) set the precedents inherited by today's advocates of restraint, can it be considered a proper part of their devotion to a reduced role for judicial power to preserve those precedents?"

The study is to be published in the spring 2007 edition of Constitutional Commentary. The debate about activism no doubt will continue.

___

Associated Press writer Pete Yost contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

Supreme Court: http://www.supremecourtus.gov/

copy and pastethis link in you address bar to see the article on the website with any picutes it may have.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060914/ap_on_go_su_co/scotus_transcripts;_ylt=AkbAPh0YNK

a good example of starie decisis

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Abortion rights supporters dropped a lawsuit challenging the state's sale of "Choose Life" license plates because the U.S. Supreme Court allowed Tennessee to continue selling similar plates. The American Civil Liberties Union had argued on behalf of the National Abortion Rights Action League in Ohio that the specialty plates, which bear the slogans "adoption builds a family" and "Choose Life," were unconstitutional because the state did not offer an opposing plate for abortion rights supporters to buy.

In June, the Supreme Court agreed with a decision to allow the Tennessee plates by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati, where the ACLU's Ohio case was pending. "I think it's unfortunate that the 6th Circuit didn't see it our way," NARAL Ohio Executive Director Kellie Copeland said Thursday. "We still believe that it's viewpoint discrimination because the state legislature refused to grant us an opposing viewpoint license plate." Tennessee's "Choose Life" plates are expected to be available in another two months, Revenue Commissioner Loren L. Chumley said Thursday. The launch was delayed after the plate's design needed to be changed slightly to pass visibility standards set by the Department of Safety.
Tennessee officials have said 1,265 car owners pre-ordered the specialty plate for a $35 surcharge and $70 is personalized. Half the proceeds for the "Choose Life" plates are slated for anti-abortion groups, while 40 percent is dedicated to the arts and 10 percent for the state highway fund. The Liberty Counsel, a nonprofit group that has defended such plates nationwide, lauded the ACLU's decision last week to drop the Ohio lawsuit because similar programs countrywide have contributed millions of dollars to groups that counsel pregnant women about adoption, using fees added to the cost of the
plates. "The ACLU realized it didn't have a prayer in its case against the Ohio Choose Life plate," Liberty Counsel founder and Chairman Matthew Staver said in a statement Wednesday. The plates in Ohio cost an extra $30 — $20 of which benefits the pregnancy counseling groups. The Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles has sold about 2,300 of the plates, making it the agency's third most-popular design introduced last year, behind a design featuring a cat and dog that benefits animal shelters and

Cincinnati Bengals specialty plates, spokesman Fred Stratmann said.

The JUSTICE part of Criminal Justice

Updated: 02:10 PM EDT
At U.N., Chavez Calls Bush 'The Devil'
By KIM GAMEL, AP
(http://ar.atwola.com/link/93179288/296631245/aoladp?target=_blank&border=0)
UNITED NATIONS (Sept. 20) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez took his verbal battle with the United States to the floor of the U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday, calling President Bush "the devil."


Don Emmert, AFP / Getty Images Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez holds up a book by Noam Chomsky "Hegemony or Survival: America's Quest For Global Dominance" during his address to the United Nations.

Watch Video:
_Chavez Calls Bush 'Devil'_ (javascript:mp.play('video-browse-light','guidecontext:65.72',[],['pmmsid:1722584']))


The impassioned speech by the leftist leader came a day after Bush and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sparred over Tehran's disputed nuclear program but managed to avoid a personal encounter. "The devil came here yesterday," Chavez said, referring to Bush's address on Tuesday and making the sign of the cross. "He came here talking as if he were the owner of the world." The leftist leader, who has joined Iran and Cuba in opposing U.S. influence, accused Washington of "domination, exploitation and pillage of peoples of the world."

"We appeal to the people of the United States and the world to halt this threat, which is like a sword hanging over our head," he said. The main U.S. seat in the assembly hall was empty as Chavez spoke. But there was a "junior note taker" there, as is customary "when governments like that speak," the U.S. ambassador to the U.N said. Ambassador John Bolton told The Associated Press that Chavez had the right to express his opinion, adding it was "too bad the people of Venezuela don't have free speech." "I'm just not going to comment on this because his remarks just don't warrant a response," Bolton said. "Serious people can listen to what he had to say and if they do they will reject it." Chavez drew tentative giggles at times from the audience, but also some applause when he called Bush the devil. Chavez spoke on the second day of the annual ministerial meetings, which were overshadowed by an ambitious agenda of sideline talks.

The Mideast peace process also was in the spotlight, with ministers from the Quartet that drafted the stalled road map -- the U.S., the U.N., the European Union and Russia -- planning to meet. The Security Council also was scheduled to hold a ministerial meeting Thursday that Arab leaders hope will help revive the Mideast peace process. Bush tried to advance his campaign for democracy in the Middle East during his address to the General Assembly on Tuesday, saying extremists were trying to justify their violence by falsely claiming the U.S. is waging war on Islam. He singled out Iran and Syria as sponsors of terrorism. Bush also pointed to Tehran's rejection of a Security Council demand to stop enriching uranium by Aug. 31 or face the possibility of sanctions. But he addressed his remarks to the Iranian people in a clear insult to the government. "The greatest obstacle to this future is that your rulers have chosen to deny you liberty and to use your nation's resources to fund terrorism and fuel extremism and pursue nuclear weapons," the U.S. leader said. "Iran must abandon its nuclear weapons ambitions," he said. "Despite what the regime tells you, we have no objection to Iran's pursuit of a truly
peaceful nuclear power program." He said he hoped to see "the day when you can live in freedom, and America and Iran can be good friends and close partners in the cause of peace." Ahmadinejad took the podium hours later, denouncing U.S. policies in Iraq and Lebanon and accusing Washington of abusing its power in the Security Council to punish others while protecting its own interests and allies. The hard-line leader insisted that his nation's nuclear activities are "transparent, peaceful and under the watchful eye" of inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog.

He also reiterated his nation's commitment to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. Earlier this month, Ahmadinejad proposed a debate with Bush at the General, Assembly's ministerial meeting after the White House dismissed a previous TV debate proposal as a "diversion" from serious concerns over Iran's nuclear program. But even though the two leaders spoke from the same podium, they skipped each other's addresses and managed to avoid direct contact during the ministerial meeting. Also on Wednesday, Afghan President Hamid Karzai warned that terrorism is rebounding in his country and said efforts to build democracy there had suffered setbacks over the past year as violence increased, especially in the volatile south where NATO forces have been battling Taliban militants in some of the fiercest battles since the hard-line government was toppled in 2001. "We have seen terrorism rebounding as terrorists have infiltrated our borders to step up their murderous campaign against our people," he told the General Assembly. He said the situation was so bad it had contributed to a rise in polio from our cases in 2005 to 27 this year because health workers were unable to reach the region.

But he said the problem had to be fought beyond Afghanistan's borders as well as within. "We must look beyond Afghanistan to the sources of terrorism," he said. "We must destroy terrorist sanctuaries beyond Afghanistan. "He also expressed concern about "the increased incidents of Islamophobia in the West," saying it does not "bode well for the cause of building understanding and cooperation across civilizations." The crisis in the ravaged Sudanese region of Darfur also was on the agenda Wednesday, with the African Union's Peace and Security Council meeting to discuss breaking the deadlock over a plan to replace an AU force with U.N. peacekeepers. The Sudanese president said his country won't allow the United Nations to take control of peacekeepers in Darfur under any circumstance, claiming that rights groups have exaggerated the crisis there in a bid for more cash. But Omar al-Bashir did say that the African Union, which now runs the peacekeeping mission in Darfur, should be allowed to augment its forces with more logistics, advisers and other support.

"We want the African Union to remain in Darfur until peace is re-established in Sudan," al-Bashir said at a news conference. Those comments suggest that the African Union will not face any resistance in renewing the peacekeeping
force's mandate, which expires Sept. 30.

Associated Press writers Ian James and Edith M. Lederer at the United
Nations contributed to this story.
9/20/2006 13:46:41

a violation of due process?

For Saudi, divorce means deportation

Popular on ASU campus, he's no longer welcome in U.S.

Sarah Muench
The Arizona Republic
Sept. 20, 2006 12:00 AM

Former Arizona State University student body president Yaser Alamoodi was closing in on his college diploma. But earlier this month, just days before Sept. 11, five U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents banged on his door and placed him in handcuffs. While he sits in a detention center in Eloy, waiting to be deported to acountry he has never even visited, his lawyer and national groups arefighting to ensure he stays in the U.S.

"Never in a million years did I think what I would joke about wouldactually happen," Alamoodi said in an interview Tuesday via phone.

The detention of the 29-year-old Tempe resident, originally from Saudi Arabia, is a product of beefed-up post-9/11 immigration enforcement. Alamoodi awoke Sept. 6 at 6 a.m. to ICE agents ready to take him to the deportation center, he said. They said his immigration papers were denied after his wife, anAmerican, revoked his immigration petition in August as part of the process of their divorce, according to Alamoodi and ICE. He had to leave the country, and the agents transported him to Eloy, where he has been ever since.

His swift apprehension resulted from a newly created Compliance Enforcement Unit in Phoenix, which deals with people who entered the country legally but violated their status, such as overstayed their visas, said Russell Ahr, an ICE spokesman. "There's a dedicated unit . . . that processed that he was ineligible for residency . . . that resulted in the location and apprehension that he was in violation of laws of the United States," Ahr said.

Alamoodi thinks he was picked up so quickly because he is from Saudi Arabia, and he stressed to ICE agents that he is not a threat: "I'm extremely secular. I was the president of my university. I have a commitment to everything America stands for, women's rights to civil rights."

The outspoken, active and well-known ASU student came to the United States in 1996. His citizenship and passport are from Yemen, where his father was born, but Alamoodi has never been there, he said. If he's deported, that's where he'll be forced to go. Since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in 2001, the same year he started at ASU, Alamoodi has had his share of encounters with the federal authorities.

In 2002, he returned to Saudi Arabia to visit family in the summer and was unable to return for eight months because of security checks, he said.

And in the summer of 2004, an agent from the Joint Task Force on Terrorism showed up at his Tempe home to question him, asking if he knew of any upcoming terrorist attacks, he said. Alamoodi was also a columnist for ASU's student newspaper, the State Press.

The last time he went to visit family, his name showed up on a no-fly list when he was supposed to come back, but officials changed it while he was at the airport, he said.

In August, he and his wife, Joy Hepp, whom he met at ASU, decided they would end their marriage. The marriage had guaranteed Alamoodi's stay in the United States and his pending green card. Hepp went to ICE and revoked Alamoodi's immigration papers as part of their divorce proceedings, she said, and a month later, agents arrested him.

Alamoodi and his lawyer think he has little chance to stay in the country unless his wife stops the divorce process.

"There are tons of people in a situation like his and Immigration will come into contact with them and say they don't have enough room for them and let them go," said Alamoodi's immigration attorney, Eric Bjotvedt. "To me, this is like they are singling him out."

Bjotvedt said that usually the government sends a letter saying people have a certain number of days to voluntarily leave the country before agents pick them up for deportation. Alamoodi said he never received such a letter.

Ahr said Alamoodi's quick arrest had nothing to with the fact that he is from a "country of interest," or a list of 25 predominantly Muslim countries the U.S. government created post-9/11 as part of the counter-terrorism Patriot Act.

"We are going to act on the person no matter where they come from," Ahr said. "I don't think statistically the number of people from countries of interest removed are any way skewed whatsoever. The vast majority are not from countries of interest."

Bjotvedt said Alamoodi could remain in Eloy for at least six months, possibly for years, to fight his deportation. Or he could go to Yemen and attempt to get a student visa to return to ASU to finish his studies, which could be difficult, considering his current status. Or he could regain his status if his wife stops the divorce.

An immigration attorney unrelated to the case said Alamoodi's deportation is part of the post-9/11 world.

"It's not surprising. His attorney might make a big fuss about why, why, why, but Congress and the executive branch concluded that certain people from certain countries needed to register," Randy Tunac said. "All this surprise and confusion aside, he's a clear person to be removed, and so the question now is if the laws in and of themselves are fair."

The American-Arab Anti-discrimination Committee, the Muslim American Society and friends are raising money to help pay Alamoodi's legal fees.

Mae Innabi, chair of the Phoenix chapter of the committee and a friend of Alamoodi, said she never thought it would happen to him.

"Not to Yaser. Yaser is probably one of the sweetest and kindest people you will ever meet," she said. "He stands firmly to his beliefs, and he believes in freedom and freedom of speech. He's always been a person that someone would look up to."

Stephanie McCoy

Paralegal

Cohen Kennedy Dowd & Quigley, P.C.
The Camelback Esplanade I
2425 East Camelback Road, Suite 1100
Phoenix, AZ 85016
Ph. 602.252.8400
www.ckdqlaw.com

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