Will Ninth Circuit Care That DOJ Lied Its Face Off In Oregon Invasion Case? – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Stephen
Lam/San
Francisco
Chronicle
via
Getty
Images)

If
there’s
one
lesson
of
the
Trump
era,
it’s
that
the
president
can
lie
with
reckless
abandon
and
face
zero
consequences.
The
jury’s
still
out
on
whether
his
underlings
enjoy
the
same
immunity.
And
by
jury,
we
mean
the
Ninth
Circuit
Court
of
Appeals,
which
must
now
decide
whether
it
matters
that
the
Department
of
Justice
told
a
lie
in
defense
of
the
president’s
raging
whopper
about
hordes
of
ANTIFA
laying
waste
to
an
immigration
detention
center
in
Portland,
Oregon.

The
genesis
of
this
conflict
is
fittingly
ridiculous.
In
September,
Homeland
Security
spokesliar
Tricia
McLaughlin
went
on

Fox
News

to
spew
nonsense
about
poor,
beleaguered
ICE
agents
being
attacked
as
they
went
about
their
noble
task
of
kidnapping
every
brown
person
they
can
get
their
hands
on.
Fox
backed
up
McLaughlin’s
pitch
with
B-roll
from
protests
in
Portland

five
years
ago
,
which
President
Couch
Potato
decided
was
an
accurate
representation
of
the
situation
on
the
ground
today.
And
despite
the
fact
that
the
ICE
facility
in
Portland
drew
only

sporadic
protests

this
year,
Trump
decreed
that
the
city
would
be
next
on
the
list
of
Democratic
strongholds
to
involuntarily
host
hundreds
of
federalized
National
Guard
troops.


The
DOJ
scrambled
to
back-formulate
a
legal
justification
for
this
military
onslaught,
and,
as
in
so
many
cases
lately,
it
wasn’t
too
concerned
about
the
veracity
of
its
evidence.
So
now
the
Ninth
Circuit
Court
of
Appeals
has
to
decide
whether
a
comparatively
little
lie
matters
when
they’ve
already
credited
the
big
lie
it
supports.

Off
to
a
Bad
Start

In
a
very
real
sense,
the
Ninth
Circuit
laid
this
trap
for
itself
in
earlier
litigation
over
National
Guard
troops
in
California.
In
June,
trial
Judge
Charles
Breyer

issued
a
temporary
restraining
order

declaring
that
none
of
the
preconditions
for
federalizing
the
state
militia
under

10
U.S.C.
§
12406

had
been
met:
There
was
no
invasion
or
rebellion
in
Los
Angeles,
and
the
president
was
not
“unable
with
the
regular
forces
to
execute
the
laws
of
the
United
States.”

But
a
conservative
panel
of
the
Ninth
Circuit,
including
two
Trump
appointees,

disagreed
.
Citing
the
brief
spasm
of
rioting

which
was
quickly
put
down
by
the
Los
Angeles
Police
Department

they
determined
that
the
president
made
a
“colorable”
claim
that
he
was
unable
to
execute
the
laws.
The
slim
silver
lining
was
that
the
panel
in

Newsom
v.
Trump

was
unwilling
to
cede
the
field
entirely
to
the
executive
branch.

The
Department
of
Justice
takes
the
position
that,
whenever
Trump
declares
an
emergency
under
§
12406,
his
determination
is
absolutely
unreviewable
by
any
court.
If
the
president
says
that
there
is
rebellion,
then
there

is
rebellion,

and
no
judge
can
decide
whether
he’s
lying
or
not.
The
original
Ninth
Circuit
panel
rejected
that
maximalist
argument,
holding
that,
while
they
were
obliged
to
“give
a
great
level
of
deference
to
the
President’s
determination
that
a
predicate
condition
exists,”
the
president’s
determination

is

subject
to
judicial
review.

But
deference
to
the
president’s
claims,
no
matter
how
patently
false,
incentivizes
the
Justice
Department
to
play
fast
and
loose
when
called
upon
to
invent
post
facto
justifications

particularly

this

Justice
Department.
And
because
the
Ninth
Circuit
got
the
first
crack,
their
highly
deferential
standard
was
accepted
by
subsequent
courts,
including
a
second
panel
of
Ninth
Circuit
judges
that
reviewed
the
Oregon
National
Guard
deployment,
as
well
as
the
Seventh
Circuit’s
review
of
the
parallel
case
in
Illinois.

Antifa
Fantasies

Contrary
to
what
the
President
says
on
social
media,
there
is
no
“War”
in
Portland
and
no
“ICE
facilities
under
siege
from
attack
by
Antifa
and
other
domestic
terrorists.”
There
are,
however,
a
lot
of
protesters
dressed
up
as
frogs
and
rainbow
unicorns.

Nevertheless,
the
second
Ninth
Circuit
panel
considering
Trump’s
federalization
order
in
Oregon
found
that
the
president’s
emergency
determination
“reflects
a
colorable
assessment
of
the
facts
and
law
within
a
range
of
honest
judgment.”

That
panel
also
had
two
Trump
appointees,
including
Judge
Ryan
Nelson
who
penned
a
concurrence
endorsing
the
DOJ’s
previously-rejected
assertion
that
the
president’s
emergency
determination
is
“unreviewable
by
the
federal
courts.”
To
Nelson,
“the
President’s
decision
in
this
area
is
absolute,”
so
it
doesn’t
matter
that
Trump
openly
lies
about
imaginary
Antifas
conducting
make-believe
sieges.

As
it
turns
out,
Trump’s
lackeys
in
the
DOJ
have
also
lied.

A
lot
.
In
fact,
while
the
Ninth
Circuit
was
considering
the
Oregon
federalization
appeal,
the
DOJ
admitted
that
one
of
its
central
claims
in
support
of
the
emergency
declaration
was
grossly
inaccurate.

That
lie
came
in
a
supporting

affidavit

by
Robert
Cantu,
the
Deputy
Director
of
the
Federal
Protective
Services,
who
attested
that
115
of
the
776
members
of
his
agency
had
been
forced
to
surge
into
Portland
to
protect
its
immigration
facility:

The
sustained
violence
associated
with
the
protests
in
Portland
has
required
FPS
Region
10
to
deploy
officers
from
the
other
FPS
Regions.
To
date,
115
FPS
officers
have
had
to
deploy
to
Portland
to
maintain
a
24/7
operational
tempo.
Removing
these
officers
from
their
normal
duty
stations
means
that
the
buildings
they
are
assigned
to
must
rely
on
other
FPS
officers
or
the
local
police
force
to
respond
to
law
enforcement
incidents.
Moreover,
the
security
related
functions
that
the
assigned
officers
normally
perform
end
up
being
delayed.

Judge
Nelson
and
Judge
Bridget
Bade,
the
two
Trump
appointees
considering
the
appeal,
cited
Cantu’s
declaration
18
times
in
the
majority
opinion,
which
bemoaned
the
“lack
of
support”
from
local
law
enforcement
and
the
drain
on
operational
capacity
of
federal
law
enforcement
nationwide.

“The
record
reflects
that
115
FPS
officers—nearly
25%
of
FPS
officers
nationwide—were
diverted
to
Portland”
they
tut-tutted.
“The
President
may
reasonably
rely
on
this
evidence
in
determining
whether
he
is
unable
to
execute
the
law.”

In
dissent,
Judge
Susan
Graber,
a
Clinton
appointee,
noted
that
something
seemed
fishy
about
Cantu’s
“vague,
carefully
worded
assertion.”

Crediting
his
assertion,
we
know
that
a
total
of
115
officers
from
elsewhere
were
deployed
in
Portland
during
the
preceding
four
months.
The
record
contains
no
information
about
how
many
officers
were
in
Portland
at
any
given
time.
For
all
we
know,
FPS
sent
a
different
8
officers
to
Portland
every
week
for
14
or
15
weeks,
meaning
that
Portland’s
drain
on
FPS’s
staff
from
elsewhere
on
any
particular
day
was
8
people,
not
115.
Indeed,
the
only
description
in
the
record
of
a
“[s]urge”
in
officers
was
the
deployment
of
8
officers.
The
fact
that
there
were
26
FPS
officers
on
duty
on
September
6,
as
the
majority’s
order
emphasizes,
says
nothing
about
whether
any
or
all
of
those
individuals
were
from
somewhere
other
than
Portland.
The
record
does
not
reveal
the
number
of
local
FPS
officers.

The
majority
all
but
mocked
Judge
Graber,
scoffing
the
she
“only
reaches
a
different
conclusion
by
characterizing
this
evidence
as
‘staffing
difficulties’
and
committing
the
same
error
as
the
district
court
in
discounting,
minimizing,
and
discrediting
[the
government’s]
undisputed
evidence
on
this
point.”

Except
that
Judge
Graber
was
absolutely
right
to
discount,
minimize,
and
discredit
the
government’s
evidence.
In
discovery,
FPS

admitted

that
it
did

exactly

what
Graber
suspected,
rotating
different
officers
through
Portland
each
month
and
aggregating
the
total
to
make
it
appear
as
if
the
agency
was
dedicating
a
quarter
of
its
resources
to
maintaining
order
in
Portland.
In
reality,
there
are
four
agents
permanently
stationed
in
Portland,
and
FPS
deployed
waves
of
27,
31,
and
29
agents
from
other
regions.
In
the
month
leading
up
to
Trump’s
emergency
declaration,
a
mere
20
agents
were
pulled
in.
That
does
not
support
an
honest
judgment
that
Portland
was
under
siege.

And
the
government
repeated
this
lie
in
its

brief
opposing

en
banc

reconsideration
:

FPS,
which
is
charged
with
protecting
the
Lindquist
Building,
is
stretched
to
the
point
of
collapse.
The
sustained
violence
and
security
risks
have
required
FPS
to
provide
24/7
protection
for
the
building,
a
task
it
is
simply
not
resourced
to
accomplish.
To
date,
115
FPS
officers
have
deployed
to
Portland
in
order
to
maintain
this
operational
tempo.
DHS
has
been
forced
to
reassign
members
of
Homeland
Security
Investigations
(HSI)
Portland’s
Special
Response
Team
(SRT)
to
support
FPS,
significantly
impeding
HSI’s
ability
to
accomplish
the
missions
with
which
SRT
is
tasked.

Lies,
Lies,
Lies

Lawyers
for
the
state
of
Oregon
flagged
this
“material
factual
error”
in
a

supplement

to
its
request
for

en
banc

review
of
the
Nelson/Bade
order.
They
noted
the
centrality
of
the
Cantu
affidavit
to
the
ruling,
and
pointed
out
that
the
DOJ
repeated
the
lie
at
oral
argument:

The
dissent
noted
that
defendants’
declaration
on
the
actual
extent
of
the
deployment
was
“carefully
worded”
to
the
point
of
“vague.”
(Dissent
16-21).
But
defendants’
counsel
emphasized
at
oral
argument
the
“magnitude”
and
“unsustainab[ility]”
of
having
115
FPS
offices
redeployed;
then,
when
asked
directly
whether
all
115
officers
remained
in
Portland,
counsel
stated
only
that
“some”
had
gone
home
but
“many”
remained.

That
looks
like
a
deliberate
attempt
to
mislead
the
court
about
the
true
state
of
the
FPS
deployment

yet
another
comparatively
little
lie
in
service
of
the
much
bigger
one
about
“war
ravaged”
Portland.
And
it
illustrates
the
folly
of
treating
the
president’s
fact-free
rantings
as
presumptively
correct.
Even
with
the
court’s
deferential
thumb
on
the
scale
in
favor
of
the
president,
the
DOJ
was
still
forced
to
backfill
the
tiny
crack
left
for
judicial
review
with
slurry
of
falsehood
and
deception.

This
episode
highlights
the
disaster
of
the
first
Ninth
Circuit
panel’s
ruling,
which
works
from
the
premise
that
the
president

probably

gets
to
declare
reality
by
executive
fiat,
and
then
invites
the
DOJ
to
concoct
a
rationale
to
back
it
up.
Because
like
ChatGPT,
the
Trump
DOJ

will

come
up
with
“facts”
to
support
Trump’s
claims

they
just
might
not
be
true.

Whether
this
will
wind
up
mattering
remains
to
be
seen.
Senior
Judge
Sidney
R.
Thomas,
the
En
Banc
Coordinator
for
the
Ninth
Circuit,
administratively

stayed

the
Nelson/Bade
order
pending
a
vote
by
the
full
Ninth
Circuit.
In
practical
terms,
that
means
that
the
Trump
administration
remains
unable
to
deploy
federalized
national
guard
units
to
the
streets
of
Portland
until
at
least
October
28

and
possibly
longer
if
the
court
grants
the
motion
for
reconsideration.
Will
Trump
then
be
allowed
to
flood
the
streets
with
soldiers
based
on
an
obvious
lie,
backed
up
by
even
more
untruths?

As
the
state
urged,
“This
Court
must
act
swiftly
to
prevent
defendants
from
attempting
to
benefit
from
their
own
material
mistake
to
deploy
military
forces
to
peaceful
civilian
streets,
contravening
the
rule
of
law
and
our
nation’s
history
and
traditions.”



Subscribe
to
read
more
at
Law
and
Chaos….





Liz
Dye
 and Andrew
Torrez
 produce
the
Law
and
Chaos Substack and podcast.
 You
can
subscribe
to
their
Substack
by
clicking
the
logo:


Trump Floods The Zone, Swamping This Story – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Mark
Wilson/Getty
Images)

Donald
Trump
and
his
critics
were
busy
this
week.

In
response
to
the
“No
Kings”
rallies,
Trump
posted
a
video,
created
by
artificial
intelligence,
that
showed
him
wearing
a
crown,
flying
a
plane,
and
dumping
excrement
on
protestors
in
America
cities. But
that’s
not
all. Trump
literally
took
a
sledgehammer
to
the
White
House,
destroying
the
historic
East
Wing
to
make
room
for
his
new
“President
Donald
J.
Trump
Ballroom.” But
that’s
not
all.
Trump
filed
a
claim
demanding
that
the
government
pay
him
$230
million
to
offset
supposed
damages
Trump
had
suffered
as
a
result
of
government
investigations
of
him. Trump
will
decide
whether
his
Department
of
Justice
should
pay
him
$230
million
of
taxpayer
money.

Maybe
the
press
had
a
right
to
be
distracted.

But
not
me,
your
worthy
opinion
commentator.

In
the
avalanche
of
last
week’s
news,
one
story
has
not
received
the
attention
it
deserves.

Earlier
this
year,
the
United
States
wanted
to
be
able
to
deport
people
who
were
described
as
Venezuelan
gang
members
to
the
CECOT
prison
in
El
Salvador. The
U.S.
agreed
to
pay
El
Salvador
a
fee
of
$6
million
to
hold
300
American
prisoners
for
one
year
pending
the
U.S.
government’s final
decision
 on
where
to
place
the
prisoners.

The
deal
apparently
included
one
extraordinarily
unseemly
aspect.

MS-13
is
an
El
Salvadoran
gang.
According
to
articles
in The
Washington
Post
CNN,
and ProPublica,
the
administration
of
El
Salvadoran
President
Nayib
Bukele
refused
to
accept
the
300
Venezuelan
prisoners
unless
the
U.S.
agreed
to
return
at
least
nine
MS-13
gang
leaders

some
of
whom
were
protected
federal
informants

to
El
Salvador. Secretary
of
State
Marco
Rubio
spoke
to
Attorney
General
Pam
Bondi
about
the
proposal,
and
Rubio
ultimately
agreed
to
the
deal.

The
El
Salvadoran
government had
apparently
made
deals
for
the
MS-13
gang
to
use
its
political
influence
to
turn
out
votes for
candidates
belonging
to
Bukele’s
Nuevas
Ideas
party
in
legislative
elections
in
2021. The
gang
bosses
had
also
agreed
to
reduce
 the
number
of
public
murders
in
El
Salvador,
which
politically
benefited
the
government
of
El
Salvador,
by
creating
the
perception
that
the
government
was
reducing
the
murder
rate,”
according
to
a
federal
indictment. 

For
years,
Bukele
has
sought
to
block
witnesses
from testifying
about
alleged
ties
 between
his
government
and
the
gang.
At
least
three
of
the
MS-13
leaders
involved
in
Rubio’s
deal
had
previously
given
testimony
that
some
members
of
Bukele’s
government
had
ties
to
the
gang.

If
the
United
States
really
released
to
El
Salvador
gang
members
who
were
“protected
federal
informants”
to
obtain
use
of
the
CECOT
prison,
then
the
press

liberal
or
otherwise

should
be
screaming
louder.

Is
Trump
really
sending
protected
federal
informants,
who
gave
testimony
about
how
the
El
Salvadoran
government
had
agreements
with
gang
members
for
the
gangs
to
serve
the
government’s
purposes,
back
to
El
Salvador?

If
so,
then
the
Trump
administration
has
hit
the
immoral
trifecta. First,
the
federal
government
is
violating
its
word. The
government
agreed
to
“protect”
informants,
not
to
condemn
those
informants
by
sending
them
back
to
the
country
whose
government
they
incriminated.

Second,
to
all
appearances,
the
U.S.
government
is
sending
its
informants
back
to
near-certain
death. High-level
gang
members
who
gave
testimony
ratting
out
both
the
MS-13
gang
and
the
El
Salvadoran
government
are
not
going
to
survive
for
long
in
El
Salvador. Damn
near
everyone
in
the
country
wants
those
turncoats
dead.

Lastly,
if
the
U.S.
government
releases
protected
informants
to
achieve
political
ends,
who
will
ever
agree
in
the
future
to
give
evidence
to
the
U.S.
government
in
return
(in
part)
for
the
government’s
protection? Everyone
will
know
that,
when
the
government
sees
a
political
advantage
from
no
longer
protecting
you,
the
government
will
break
its
promise
to
give
protection.
If
you
want
to
entice
informants
to
speak,
you
must
provide
iron-clad
permanent
protection,
not
meaningless
protection
that
can
later
be
undone
at
the
whim
of
government
officials.

The
press
should
pursue
this
story
relentlessly,
investigating
who
was
sent
back
to
El
Salvador,
what
protection
the
U.S.
government
had
previously
promised
them,
and
how
long
those
folks
survived
after
being
shipped
back
home.

A
sophomoric
AI
video,
the
destruction
of
a
historic
building,
and
a
demand
for
$230
million
are
news. But
sending
protected
informants
back
to
the
country
(and
gang)
they
incriminated
may
well
top
last
week’s
heap.




Mark Herrmann spent
17
years
as
a
partner
at
a
leading
international
law
firm
and
later
oversaw
litigation,
compliance
and
employment
matters
at
a
large
international
company.
He
is
the
author
of 
The
Curmudgeon’s
Guide
to
Practicing
Law
 and Drug
and
Device
Product
Liability
Litigation
Strategy
 (affiliate
links).
You
can
reach
him
by
email
at 
[email protected].

7 HLTH Announcements You Don’t Want to Miss – MedCity News

Each
year,
the

HLTH
conference

gives
healthcare
leaders
a
chance
to
gather
and
share
ideas.
The
event
also
gives
companies
the
chance
to
announce
news

oftentimes
about
new
products,
partnerships
and
business
plans.

Below
are
seven
noteworthy
announcements
made
during
this
year’s
HLTH
conference
in
Las
Vegas.


Mark
Cuban’s
Cost
Plus
Drugs
company
will
partner
with
TrumpRx

During
an
onstage
session
at
HLTH,
Mark
Cuban
revealed
a

forthcoming
partnership

between
his

Cost
Plus
Drugs

company
and
TrumpRx,
a
federal
program
designed
to
bring
discounted
prescription
drugs
directly
to
consumers.

TrumpRx,
which
is
set
to
launch
early
next
year,
will
function
as
a
referral
platform,
directing
people
to
websites
like
Cost
Plus
Drugs.
Through
this
partnership,
Cost
Plus
Drugs
will
provide
its
pricing
data
to
TrumpRx.

Cuban
said
he
hopes
this
collaboration
will
disrupt
the
traditional
PBM
model,
which
he
has
long
criticized
for
contributing
to
the
nation’s
exorbitant
drug
prices. 


Optum
launches
claims
management
platform


UnitedHealth
Group

subsidiary

Optum

unveiled
an
AI-powered
real-time
claims
management
platform
called

Optum
Real
.
The
system
is
designed
to
reduce
friction
between
providers
and
payers
during
claims
submission
and
reimbursement
processes.

The
platform’s
goal
is
to
allow
providers
to
instantly
verify
details
about
patients’
benefits
and
coverage,
therefore
reducing
the
guesswork
and
delays
that
providers
typically
face
when
trying
to
get
paid.


Cedar
rolls
out
new
tools
to
help
people
afford
care

Healthcare
payments
startup

Cedar

introduced

Cedar
Cover
,
a
digital
platform
aimed
at
helping
patients
access
Medicaid
coverage
and
financial
assistance.
The
platform

which
integrates
with
hospital
billing
workflows

helps
identify
patients’
potential
Medicaid
eligibility,
assists
with
their
enrollment,
manages
their
renewals
and
connects
them
to
co-pay
support
for
medications.

Given
the
recent

Medicaid
cuts

under
the
One
Big
Beautiful
Bill
Act,
Cedar’s
new
system
is
meant
to
mitigate
the
harm
on
patients
and
providers
by
decreasing
uncompensated
care
costs.
Early
adopters
of
Cedar
Cover
include
Novant
Health,
Baystate
Health
and
The
Iowa
Clinic.


Oscar
Health
creates
menopause-focused
ACA
plan


Oscar
Health

debuted
a
new
Affordable
Care
Act
plan
called

HelloMeno
.
The
New
York-based
payer
developed
the
plan
in
collaboration
with

Elektra
Health
,
a
virtual
provider
of
menopause
care.

Tailored
for
women
navigating
menopause,
HelloMeno
offers
zero-copay
primary
care,
gynecological
and
behavioral
health
visits,
as
well
as
no-cost
labs,
hormone
therapy,
insomnia
medications
and
bone
density
scans.


AMA
unveils
new
center
for
digital
health
and
AI

The

American
Medical
Association

launched
a

new
center

aimed
at
giving
physicians
a
stronger
voice
in
shaping
how
digital
health
tools
and
AI
technologies
are
deployed
in
clinical
care.

The
center
seeks
to
help
shape
policies
and
regulations
around
digital
health
technology,
as
well
as
find
better
ways
to
integrate
these
tools
into
clinical
workflows.
Other
goals
include
providing
education
and
training
to
clinicians
about
how
to
use
AI
tools
and
fostering
collaboration
across 
industries

including
with
tech
companies,
payers,
government
and
researchers.


Knownwell
snags
$25
million


Knownwell

closed
a

$25
million
funding
round

led
by
CVS
Health
Ventures.
The
startup
offers
metabolic
health
services,
primary
care,
nutrition
counseling
and
behavioral
health
care

and
also
prescribes
GLP-1s
when
considered
appropriate.
It
provides
virtual
care
nationwide,
as
well
as
in
person
care
at
its
clinics
in
the
Atlanta,
Boston,
Chicago
and
Dallas
areas. 

With
its
new
capital,
the
startup
will
focus
on
expanding
care,
both
by
adding
additional
clinics
and
growing
its
virtual
care
team.


Highmark
Health
teams
up
with
Noom


Highmark
Health
,
the
Pittsburgh-based
parent
company
of
payer

Highmark

and
health
system

Allegheny
Health
Network
,
partnered
with
digital
weight
loss
company

Noom
.
They
will
offer
Noom’s
weight
management
and
behavioral
health
programs
to
nearly
2
million
eligible
Highmark
members
starting
next
year.


The
program

is
designed
to
leverage
AI
tools
and
behavior‑science
techniques,
such
as
food
logging,
body
scan
technologies
and
peer
support
communities,
to
help
members
develop
healthy
habits
rather
than
just
treat
disease.
The
benefit
will
be
available
at
no
additional
cost
for
Highmark’s
eligible
members.


Photo:
HLTH

Morning Docket: 10.27.25 – Above the Law

*
More
confirmation
that
Biglaw
cowardice
goes
beyond
the
firms
that
made
deals.
[Washington
Post
]

*
Biglaw
lawyer
discusses
exit
strategy
with
Dave
Ramsey
bringing
meme
to
life.
[Yahoo
Finance
]

*
First
Circuit
raises
prospect
of
running
water
as
a
constitutional
right.
[Courthouse
News
Service
]

*
Seyfarth
immigration
folks
join
PwC
immigration
consultancy.
[Bloomberg
Law
News
]

*
Gordon
Rees
apologies
for
AI
hallucinations
in
filing.
[Reuters]

*
McDermott
Will
&
Schulte
promotes
new
partners.
[Law360]

*
Charleston
School
of
Law
student
sues
the
law
school
and
Baker
Donelson
alleging
retaliation
after
he
reported
sexual
harassment.
[Law.com]

Racking Up The Ls – See Generally – Above the Law

Jeanine
Pirro
Secures
Lifetime
Achievement
In
Losing:
After
departing
the
Fox
bubble,
Jeanine
learns
the
real
world
has
less
tolerance
for
her
nonsense.
Cadwalader
Getting
The
Urge
To
Merge?:
After
a
series
of
departures,
Cadwalader
may
have
reached
an
existential
crossroads.
Rule
Of
Law
Republicans
Convene
To
Sound
Alarm
About
Trump:
Elected
Democrats
may
be
[…]

Who Needs Reality TV When You Have Baker McKenzie? – See Also – Above the Law

That’s
A
Lot
Of
Workplace
Drama:
Baker
McKenzie’s
defamation
lawsuit
against
a
former
employee
is
messy.
District
Judges
Are
Holding
Ground:
Someone
has
to
draw
lines
in
the
sand
for
the
rule
of
law.
Inching
Closer
To
A
Merger?:
Cadwalader
may
be
joining
forces
with
another
firm
soon.
That’s
Not
How
Off-The-Record
Conversations
Work!:
Lindsey
Halligan’s
Signal
messages
unexpectedly
ended
up
in
court.
You’re
A
Song
Away
From
Handcuffs:
Protestor
gets
arrested
for
playing
“Imperial
March”
behind
imperial
marchers.

Even Supreme Court Justices Need A Caffeine Hit – Above the Law



Ed.
note:
 Welcome
to
our
daily Trivia
Question
of
the
Day
 feature.


Which
justice
was
responsible
for
the
addition
of
Starbucks
coffee
in
the
Supreme
Court
cafeteria?


Hint:
The
most
recently
appointed
justice
serves
on
the
Court’s
cafeteria
committee,
so
they’ve
all
had
a
go
at
the
job.

Justice
Kagan
is
famous
for
bringing
in
a
frozen
yogurt
machine
to
the
cafeteria
,
but
the
addition
of
Starbs?
That’s
legendary.



See the
answer
on
the
next
page.


1


2
Next
»

Nothing Says ‘We’re The Good Guys Here!’ Like Arresting A Protestor For Playing Music – Above the Law

It
is
easy
to
laud
the
importance
of
our
Constitution
when
there
is
no
crisis.
Constitutional
advocacy
really
matters
when
our
foundational
values
are
in
tension
with
state
interest
and
polarizing
effect.
While
I
had
to
try
my
damnedest
to
stay
awake
during
the
dormant
commerce
clause
lectures
1L
year,
I
didn’t
have
that
problem
with
the
protest
modules
because
it
centered
on
what
we
could
and
couldn’t
take
for
granted
during
times
of
unrest.
Given
our
country’s
history,

that’s
about
92%
of
the
time
.
And
while
Supreme
Court
cases
can
make
for
a
go-to
litmus
test
of
what
flies
at
a
given
point
in
our
history,
most
of
what
is
actually
happening
on
the
ground
never
makes
it
that
far.
That
said,
this
small
case
coming
out
of
D.C.
could
be
some
history
in
the
making.

Axios

has
coverage:

The
American
Civil
Liberties
Union

filed

the
suit
on
behalf
of
Sam
O’Hara
against
four
Metropolitan
Police
Department
officers
and
a
member
of
the
Ohio
National
Guard
seeking
damages
for
alleged
First
and
Fourth
Amendment
violations,
false
arrest/imprisonment;
battery.

[An]
Ohio
guardsman
“was
not
amused
by
this
satire”
and
“threatened
to
call
D.C.
police
officers
to
‘handle’
the
protester
if
he
persisted”
when
the
incident
took
place
on
Sept.
11,
the
ACLU
attorneys
allege
in
their
complaint,
filed
in
the
U.S.
District
Court
of
Colombia.

You
can
see
some
of
the
arrest-worthy
footage
below:

Soon
after
the
camouflaged,
uniformed
man
whined
to
a
blue-uniformed
man
about
the
unwanted
soundtrack,
O’Hara
was
tightly
handcuffed
for
15-20
minutes.

The
degree
and
arbitrariness
of
the
punishment
makes
for
quite
a
small
tyranny,
but
it
is
tyrannical
nonetheless.
Liberty
is
in
danger
the
easier
it
is
to
arrest
citizens
for
what
amounts
to

at
worst

a
constitutionally
protected
annoyance.
O’Hara
was
obviously
caught
on
camera,
but
is
it
too
far
off
to
imagine
the
police
arresting
someone
without
cause
and
justifying
it
by
saying
they
were
caught
playing
the
“Imperial
March”
or
“F*ck
The
Police”?
What’s
the
point
of
the
First
and
the
Fourth
if
song
selection
is
all
that
stands
between
freedom
and
being
hauled
off
in
handcuffs?

This
could
be
a
great
test
case
to
see
what,
if
anything,
is
left
of
the
First
Amendment.
Let’s
see
how
far
it
goes.


Lawsuit:
D.C.
Man
Detained
For
Playing
“Star
Wars”
Song
At
National
Guard

[Axios]



Chris
Williams
became
a
social
media
manager
and
assistant
editor
for
Above
the
Law
in
June
2021.
Prior
to
joining
the
staff,
he
moonlighted
as
a
minor
Memelord™
in
the
Facebook
group Law
School
Memes
for
Edgy
T14s
.
 He
endured
Missouri
long
enough
to
graduate
from
Washington
University
in
St.
Louis
School
of
Law.
He
is
a
former
boatbuilder
who
is
learning
to
swim, is
interested
in
critical
race
theory,
philosophy,
and
humor,
and
has
a
love
for
cycling
that
occasionally
annoys
his
peers.
You
can
reach
him
by
email
at [email protected]
and
by
tweet
at @WritesForRent.

My Experience With Fake Jury Duty Fine Scammers – Above the Law

As
detailed
in
a
previous
article,

lawyers
are
often
the
target
of
scams

since
attorneys
sometimes
hold
significant
sums
of
money
on
behalf
of
clients. However,
sometimes
having
a
legal
background
can
make
it
easier
to
debunk
a
scam
in
progress
and
make
it
less
likely
for
someone
to
be
a
victim
because
lawyers
have
an
increased
understanding
of
how
the
legal
system
works.

Several
months
ago,
I
received
a
phone
call
from
a
number
local
to
my
area
of
New
Jersey. The
individual
on
the
phone
spoke
with
an
authoritative
voice
and
said
he
was
with
the
Bergen
County
Sheriff’s
Office. The
caller
then
gave
me
a
long
case
number
and
told
me
to
write
this
number
down.
As
he
said
the
case
number,
I
did
not
even
bother
writing
it
down
since
I
already
suspected
this
might
be
a
scam
call. (I
once
read
an
article
about
how
scammers
operate
and
know
they
sometimes
try
to
increase
their
legitimacy
with
such
numbers.)

The
caller
said
he
was
pursuing
a
case
against
me
for
allegedly
not
appearing
for
jury
duty
even
though
I
had
been
lawfully
summoned
for
jury
service.
I
politely
told
the
caller
that
I
had
not
lived
in
Bergen
County
for
13
years
so
I
was
not
lawfully
required
to
serve
jury
duty
there.
As
a
result,
I
did
not
know
why
this
individual
was
harassing
me. This
threw
the
scammer
off,
and
he
fumbled
for
what
to
say
next.

The
scammer
then
conveyed
that
he
was
actually
calling
about
a
federal
summons,
so
even
though
I
lived
in
a
different
county,
I
was
still
on
the
hook
for
an
unanswered
federal
jury
summons. I
then
asked
why
the
Bergen
County
Sheriff’s
Office
would
be
calling
me
about
an
alleged
federal
jury
summons. The
person
on
the
other
line
said
that
the
Bergen
County
Sheriff’s
Office
did
indeed
have
authority
over
this
issue.
I
then
asked
wouldn’t
the
U.S.
Marshals
Service
or
some
other
federal
court
agency
have
jurisdiction
over
this
issue? 

The
scammer
insisted
that
his
supposed
agency
had
authority,
and
I
asked
whether
having
a
county
sheriff’s
office
enforce
federal
jury
summonses
violate
the
commandeering
doctrine
or
federalism? Again,
I
have
not
really
thought
through
these
issues,
but
I
wanted
to
see
if
I
could
shake
the
scammer’s
confidence,
and
it
seemed
to
work. I
also
remembered
from
reading
an
Above
the
Law
article
that
federal
courts
will
frequently
issue
orders
to
show
cause
by
mail
to
people
who
do
not
respond
to
jury
summonses.
Again,
I
have
no
idea
if
this
is
done
in
my
state,
but
getting
something
in
the
mail
seemed
more
appropriate,
and
the
scammer
had
no
response
to
this
line
of
questioning.

I
ended
the
call
with
the
scammer
telling
me
that
I
could
be
arrested
for
not
responding,
to
which
I
replied
“I
look
forward
to
it”
or
something
similar. I
looked
through
all
kinds
of
court
records
and
could
find
no
evidence
that
any
case
had
been
opened
against
me
for
allegedly
failing
to
appear
for
a
jury
summons. After
some
brief
internet
searching,
I
discovered
that
the
fake
jury
service
fine
scam
is
a
common
one,
and
many
people
just
pay
the
supposed
fine
since
it
is
not
too
large
and
they
want
to
play
it
safe
in
case
the
scam
is
true.

In
any
event,
everyone
needs
to
be
careful
of
scammers
who
deploy
a
variety
of
tactics
to
pilfer
money
from
victims. But
sometimes,
being
a
lawyer
can
make
someone
less
susceptible
to
falling
prey
to
scams.




Jordan
Rothman
is
a
partner
of 
The
Rothman
Law
Firm
,
a
full-service
New
York
and
New
Jersey
law
firm.
He
is
also
the
founder
of 
Student
Debt
Diaries
,
a
website
discussing
how
he
paid
off
his
student
loans.
You
can
reach
Jordan
through
email
at 
jordan@rothman.law.

The Legal Marketing Tactics That Work In 2025 – Above the Law

Getty
Images

In
a
market
flooded
with
digital
noise
and
half-baked
strategies,

legal
marketing
expert
Chris
Dreyer

stands
out
by
offering
something
rare:
clarity.

As
the
CEO
of
Rankings.io
and
the
mind
behind
the
PIMCon
conference,
Chris
is
reshaping
how
law
firms
think
about
scaling,
branding,
and
attracting
clients.

In
our
“Be
That
Lawyer”
conversation,
we
explored
what
actually
works
in
2025,
and
how
lawyers
can
stop
overthinking
and
start
executing.


Key
Strategies
for
Professional
Growth

Chris
shares
actionable
insights
on
advancing
your
career
and
business
in
a
competitive
environment.

He
discusses
proven
methods
for
building
a
strong
professional
network,
leveraging
digital
tools,
and
adapting
to
industry
changes.

Chris
also
highlights
the
importance
of
continuous
learning
and
strategic
planning
to
achieve
long-term
success.

If
you’re
looking
for
practical
advice
to
elevate
your
professional
journey,
Chris’s
expertise
provides
a
valuable
guide.


Ready,
Fire,
Aim:
Overcoming
Analysis
Paralysis

Here,
I
note
that
many
lawyers
spend
so
much
time
preparing
and
aiming
that
they
get
stuck
in
analysis
paralysis
and
never
actually
execute.

While
careful
planning
is
important,
nothing
happens
without
action.
Sometimes,
you
need
to
take
the
shot
and
adjust
as
you
go.
Otherwise,
perfectionism
can
hold
you
back
from
real
progress.


What’s
the
Best
Content
for
Building
Your
Brand?

In
this
segment,
Chris
provides
a
data-driven
analysis
of
the
most
effective
content
types
for
professional
brand
growth.

He
discusses
which
formats
such
as
educational
posts,
video
insights,
and
thought
leadership
articles
consistently
generate
the
highest
engagement
and
credibility.

Chris
also
explains
how
to
align
your
content
strategy
with
your
target
audience’s
needs,
ensuring
your
efforts
lead
to
measurable
results.


“In
the
search
engine
marketing
side,
one
of
the
most
challenging
things
is
link
building,”
Chris
says.
“And
link
building,
by
and
large,
is
relationships.
It’s
the
hardest
thing
to
do.”

Whether
you’re
new
to
legal
marketing
or
ready
to
scale
your
law
firm
to
the
next
level,
Chris’s
playbook
is
clear:
invest
in
relationships,
focus
your
niche,
and
execute
like
your
reputation
depends
on
it
because
it
does.

Listen
to
the latest
episode
of
“Be
That
Lawyer”
here,
 and
if
you’re
serious
about
leveling
up
your
business
development,
grab
a
copy
of
my
new
book, now
available
on
Amazon.




Steve
Fretzin
is
a
bestselling
author,
host
of
the
“Be
That
Lawyer”
podcast,
and
business
development
coach
exclusively
for
attorneys.
Steve
has
committed
his
career
to
helping
lawyers
learn
key
growth
skills
not
currently
taught
in
law
school.
His
clients
soon
become
top
rainmakers
and
credit
Steve’s
program
and
coaching
for
their
success.
He
can
be
reached
directly
by
email
at 
[email protected].
Or
you
can
easily
find
him
on
his
website
at 
www.fretzin.com or
LinkedIn
at 
https://www.linkedin.com/in/stevefretzin.