Cops Asked For Cell Phone Data More Than 1 Million Times Last Year

“Where you’ve been, whom you’ve talked to and even what you’ve been saying — police can get it all from your cell phone company, and frequently without a warrant. The big wireless carriers received more than 1.1 million requests from law enforcement for customer data in 2012, according to letters to Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) that his office released Monday.”

It’s not a problem unless you have something to hide.

via Cops Asked For Cell Phone Data More Than 1 Million Times Last Year.

Photographer cannot decline to shoot lesbian wedding

“A New Mexico law forbids businesses open to the public to discriminate against gay people. Elaine Huguenin, a photographer, says she has no problem with that — so long as it does not force her to say something she does not believe.”

Your Bitemaster has no problem with blogging — or not blogging — about gay people. But he sure wouldn’t want the government to tell him which to do.

via Weighing Free Speech in Refusal to Photograph Lesbian Couple’s Ceremony – NYTimes.com.

Can a corporation have a religion?

“The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Tuesday to consider religious objections made by corporations to a provision of the 2010 federal healthcare law requiring employers to provide health insurance that covers birth control. . . .

“The key question before the court in the two cases it agreed to hear is whether corporations should be treated the same as individuals when making free exercise of religion claims under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and a 1993 federal law called the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.”

via U.S. Supreme Court agrees to hear Obamacare contraception cases – NY Daily News.

Rush Limbaugh on Judicial Filibusters

December 24, 2004

  1. If the Senate Republicans aren’t prepared to end the unprecedented use by Senate Democrats of the filibuster rule against the president’s judicial nominees, the president will have a very tough time getting these re-nominated judicial candidates — and for that matter, Supreme Court nominees — confirmed.
  2. The so-called “nuclear option” — which should be called the Constitutional option — would end the use of the filibuster for judicial nominations. The Democrats are warning that if the Republicans change the filibuster rule, then all hell will break loose. I cannot think of anything worse than what they’ve done, and will continue to do — which is prevent the president from appointing judges to the federal court.
  3. The Senate rules have never been used to block presidential judicial appointments. By threatening to use the filibuster, or actually invoking it, the Senate Democrats are requiring that a super-majority of 60 senators must, in essence, confirm a judge. There are 7 instances in which the Constitution provides for super-majority votes — convictions related to impeachment, adoption of treaties, expelling members, overriding vetoes, amending the Constitution, 14th Amendment, and 25th Amendment.
  4. The Senate has, under the Constitution, an “advice and consent” role. But it cannot use that role to impose a super-majority requirement on the president’s nomination function or on the rest of the Senate. After all, all senators have a right, under the Constitution, to provide their advice and consent, which means the right to a simple majority vote on the Senate floor.
  5. At no time in over 200 years, until the prior Senate, did senators contend that the filibuster could be used against judicial nominees. The point is that is was understood that the Constitution did not grant 41 senators the power to thwart the president’s judicial appointment power. The way we conservatives read the Constitution is to try to determine what the words mean, what the framers intended — we don’t assign broad meanings to words or look for loopholes.
  6. One last point – if the Senate, which has the constitutional right to make its own rules, decides that it wants to require a super-majority vote to pass certain bills, such as tax bills, that’s perfectly fine. Such a rule would NOT infringe on a presidential power. But to do so when it affects a presidential power, such as the appointment of judges, that would be unconstitutional.

via Rush’s Bullet Points on Judicial Filibusters – The Rush Limbaugh Show.

Bush appointees block & boot judge on NYPD stop-and-frisk case

In a stunning act of judicial activism, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit halted a sweeping set of changes to the New York Police Department’s practice of stopping and frisking people on the street, and, in strikingly personal terms, criticized the trial judge’s conduct and removed her from the case.

Having found violations of the Fourth Amendment (search and seizure) and Fourteenth Amendment (equal protection), Shira A. Scheindlin, Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, had ordered the ­appointment of a federal panel to monitor the NYPD, among other reforms.

The three activist judges are:

John M. Walker Jr, — appointed by G.H.W. Bush
José A. Cabranes  — appointed by Bill Clinton
Barrington D. Parker — appointed by G.W. Bush

The case is Floyd, et al. v. City of New York, et al.

Court blocks & boots judge on NYPD stop-and-frisk | New York Post.

Scalia speaks out of both sides of his mouth

The other day, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia questioned whether the 98 senators and 390 representatives who voted to renew the Voting Rights Act in 2006 were maybe influenced by crass political considerations (“This is not the kind of question you can leave to Congress.”).

But when it came to the Defense of Marriage Act, Scalia thinks that it’s not within the purview of the Supreme Court and they should defer to Congress (“[W]e have no power under the Constitution to invalidate this democratically adopted legislation.”).

Scalia is a puddle of pus. And he can BITE ME.

Scalia Slams ‘Legalistic Argle-Bargle,’ Re-Argues ‘Homosexual Sodomy’ In Dissenting DOMA Rant.

cf: Forbes

Stupid teens and the Constitution

Jared Marcum, an eighth-grader in Logan County WV, wore his NRA t-shirt to school and refused to remove it. He was eventually arrested and suspended. His step-father, Allen Lardieri, said “I will go to the ends of the earth, I will call people, I will write letters, I will do everything in the legal realm to make sure this does not happen again.”

Marcum is a jerk, but I think it’s protected speech. Also see this list of Supreme Court cases about students.

West Virginia teen suspended, arrested after wearing NRA shirt returns to school in the same shirt – NY Daily News.

Readington Middle School in Whitehouse Station NJ has banned strapless gowns for eight-grade girls at an upcoming dance and the parents are all up in arms about the rule. Mother Charlotte Nijenhuis says the principal “ought to not unilaterally dictate what our children may or may not wear.”

Sure Tinker was an important case, but this is a fucking gown not political speech.

Screwed in the Senate but not in the Electoral College

According to Ronald Brownstein in the National Journal, background checks for gun purchasers may never pass in the Senate because of the number of Senators from small, conservative states.

But look at those same states within the Electoral College (which is basically one-man-one-vote), and the pro-gun side is decisively outnumbered.

The upshot is that we’re not getting federal gun control any time soon, but the Dems may have a lock on the Presidency.

Why the Senate Vote May Signal 2016 Problems for the Gun Lobby – NationalJournal.com.

IRS Doesn’t Need A Warrant To Read Your Email in the Cloud

‘The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 allows government agencies to in many cases obtain emails older than 180 days without a warrant.

‘That’s why an internal 2009 IRS document claimed that “the government may obtain the contents of electronic communication that has been in storage for more than 180 days” without a warrant.

‘The IRS Criminal Tax Division’s “Search Warrant Handbook,” shows that the division’s general counsel believed “the Fourth Amendment does not protect communications held in electronic storage, such as email messages stored on a server, because internet users do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy.”

Probably applies to your online backups, too.

via IRS Thinks It Doesn’t Need A Warrant To Read Your Email.