Legal Affairs – Medical Marijuana and the Folly of the Drug War

National Journal

The Supreme Court delivered a timely reminder of the social costs of our "war on drugs" with its May 14 decision rejecting a medical-necessity exception to the federal law criminalizing marijuana. Meanwhile, President Bush has moved toward abandoning his own best instincts and repeating his predecessors’ mistakes by endlessly escalating a $20 billion-a-year "war" that-as most Americans now understand-we have lost.

Legal Affairs – Judicial Selections: Compromise On Ideology, Not Quality

National Journal

President Bush made a strategically smart move in the 15-year-old war of the judges by announcing on May 9 a slate of 11 nominees carefully balanced both to please conservative activists and to disarm mainstream Democrats whose help he will need to avoid partisan gridlock.

Legal Affairs – The Case for Curbing Civil Rights Lawsuits

National Journal

A 5-4 Supreme Court decision on April 24 left standing a silly Alabama policy that makes life unnecessarily difficult for some foreign-born Americans by requiring that they take their driver’s license exam in English. More important, the Court’s decision made it harder for many other potential plaintiffs to sue for possible violations of a key provision of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which bars public and private programs that receive federal financial assistance (as most do) from discriminating on the basis of race or national origin. The four more-liberal Justices, in a dissent by John Paul Stevens, called the decision "unfounded in our precedent and hostile to decades of settled expectations." The New York Times said that it "substantially limited the effectiveness" of the act’s ban against discrimination." The Washington Post called it "retrograde."

Legal Affairs – Enact a Civilized Crime Bill, for a Change

National Journal

Congress and the President have a chance this year to show that they care as much about avoiding the execution (and imprisonment) of innocent defendants as they do about punishing the guilty ones. They can adopt the Innocence Protection Act, a bipartisan proposal co-sponsored by death penalty supporters and opponents who agree that you can be tough on crime without punishing innocent people. The bill would give prisoners expanded access to possibly exculpatory DNA evidence. It would also deliver-if only in capital cases-on the Supreme Court’s long-broken 1963 promise to provide indigent criminal defendants with competent trial lawyers.

Legal Affairs – Ban Racial Preferences, but Keep Affirmative Action

National Journal

One of the toughest issues ever to face the Supreme Court is back on its doorstep, propelled by a deepening split among lower federal courts, and seemingly destined to produce a climactic ruling by 2003: Does the Constitution, which bars virtually all governmental discrimination against African-Americans and some other minorities, nonetheless permit universities to discriminate in their favor (and against whites and Asians) in order to choose student bodies that look more like America than they did in 1950 or 1960?

Legal Affairs – Paying Reparations for Ancient Wrongs Is Not Right

National Journal

Most Americans have an instinctive (if self-serving) feel for why it would not be a good idea to pay reparations to the descendants of slaves. As victims of one of history’s great crimes, the slaves themselves surely deserved reparations. So, in principle, do the many living victims of the century of legal apartheid that followed slavery. But while the legacy of slavery still plagues us, the passage of 138 years since the Emancipation Proclamation and 37 years since the 1964 Civil Rights Act has changed the landscape utterly, making it impossible to decide with any pretense of fairness which of today’s African-Americans should receive compensation and who should pay.

Is It Sexual Exploitation If Victims Are ‘Virtual’

Newsweek

In 1982, when the Supreme Court first upheld a state law banning child pornography, nobody was thinking about the possibility of making child porn without a kid. But since then wonders of modern technology have brought us virtual child porn: images that look exactly like children engaging in sexual conduct but are created by computers, without using real children. This has teed up a new issue for the court: does the First Amendment right to free speech protect the creation, distribution and possession of computer-created child porn?

Five years ago Congress expanded the federal child-porn law to cover the virtual variety. The Child Pornography Prevention Act of 1996 bans any image that "appears to be" sexually explicit conduct by an actual child. Congress found not only that pedophiles use such images to whet their own appetites and lure children into sexual activities, but also that virtual child porn can "desensitize the viewer to the pathology of sexual abuse or exploitation of children."

Rejecting these justifications as constitutionally insufficient, a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, sitting in San Francisco, voted 2-1 in December 1999 to strike down the 1996 statute. The decision came in a lawsuit brought by the Free Speech Coalition, an adult-entertainment trade association, along with a painter of nudes, the publisher of a book on nudism and a photographer. Only "the protection of the actual children used in the production of child pornography" can justify a ban on child porn, the Ninth Circuit panel held. In seeking Supreme Court review, the Justice Department countered that the ban on virtual child porn was necessary to protect "children who may be abused as a result of the dissemination of visual depictions of child pornography." The Supreme Court agreed in January to hear the case.

Legal Affairs – How McCain-Feingold Would Constrict Speech

National Journal

It all sounds so clean, so wholesome, so righteous: Close the loopholes in our campaign finance laws. End what Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., calls the "corrupting chase for `soft money.’ " Curb the influence of corporations and labor unions. Stop special interests from polluting our politics with "sham issue ads." Mandate greater public disclosure of political spending.