The Ninth Circuit is BIG mad about Judge VanDyke's latest dissent from denial of en banc rehearing.
Yes, it certainly is provocative. I guess Judge VanDyke may have read "Plain English for Lawyers."
But their outrage is misplaced. What they should be outraged at is this absurd situation. Biological men trying to force their way into a Korean spa that serves women and girls? Have we gone mad?
I am not some hardcore anti-trans activist, and I criticized the rumors of a "trans gun ban" last year. But this is preposterous. Nobody should be able force their way into a place where women and girls are exposed and vulnerable, with the State of Washington assisting them no less!
If a eyebrow-raising dissent helps this get attention (I certainly hadn't heard of this case before now), then good.
The basic facts of the case.
Note that the spa doesn't even ban trans women, just pre-op trans women. Pretty progressive overall for a traditional Korean spa.
Yet it wasn't enough.
Sidenote - this kind of legal bullying does not do the trans community any favors in terms of public perception.
Judge Lee's dissent from the panel opinion explains the nature of Korean spas, and points out that girls as young as 13 are naked there.
"One would think that the Washington Human Rights Commission would be sympathetic to the Spa’s owners—members of a racial minority group who want to share their cultural heritage and provide a safe space for women and girls. Instead, it threatened prosecution for defying the state’s contorted reading of its anti-discrimination law."
Here is one of the pearl-clutching statements, raging at Judge VanDyke for saying they have all lost their minds for the sake of their woke ideology.
Well, they have. Truth hurts. Glad someone on the bench is finally willing to speak openly and honestly. It's refreshing. And I can only hope the current administration notices should their be a SCOTUS vacancy.
Says the Court that has reversed every single Second Amendment panel victory in its history, save for one.
There*
Not clear why Judge Owens and Judge Forrest didn't just join the other angry statement with all the other judges. But for whatever reason, they filed their own.
And again, they are shocked at the wrong thing.
Echoing criticisms he has made in Second Amendment and immigration cases, Judge VanDyke accuses (or more accurately, correctly identifies that) his colleagues are ignoring the Supreme Court's clear precedent in pursuit of their political aims.
Getting angrier as I read this.
Both at the situation, and that in reading this, what the other judges got upset about was that Judge VanDyke was mean to them.
VanDyke responds to his colleagues' anger: "That kind of selective outrage speaks for itself."
"The public deserves a court that is actually trustworthy...
...The fact that so many on our court want to pretend that this case is about anything other than swinging dicks is the very reason the shocking language is necessary. The panel majority uses slick legal arguments and deflection to studiously avoid eye contact with the actual and horrific consequences of its erroneous opinion...
...Sometimes coarse and ugly words bear the truth. I coarsely but respectfully dissent from our court’s willingness to leave this travesty in place."
Judge Tung also wrote a separate dissent, which Judges R. Nelson, Bumatay, and VanDyke joined.
Judge Tung makes similar points to conclude his dissent, but because he didn't use provocative language, there was no pearl-clutching for him.
What they are actually mad about is that Judge VanDyke's stylistic choices are going to get more attention on this case, and on the absurd result they are forcing on this Korean Spa.
I really only scratched the surface of the case and all the opinions here, as I don't like to go too in depth on subject matter outside of my 2A lane.
The Duncan petitioners have filed a short supplemental brief regarding the Benson ruling from the DC Court of Appeals. Let's take a look.
Strong summary, asserting there is an effective circuit split now and reminding the Court that denying the petition would mean thousands of Californians would be made criminals overnight.
The only thing I would have added was a line anticipating a possible en banc in DC. I'd say such a transparently corrupt move, given how rare en banc is, would only be further evidence that the Court must decide this issue as gun rights litigants otherwise have no hope in biased courts.
The Duncan Petitioners argue that the Benson ruling is an example of one that is faithful to Heller and Bruen, while the Ninth Circuit's ruling tried to undermine them.
As a bit of a sneak preview of an upcoming amicus brief, let's take a look at how much more it costs to buy a handgun in California compared to most of the rest of the country using a compact Walther PDP as an example.
As you can see above, a standard one with a 15 round magazine goes for $530 on Bass Pro's website.
But that website also lets you select the California-compliant model instead, which comes with the state-mandated loaded chamber indicator, magazine disconnect mechanism, and 10 round magazines. Those unwanted but required "features" turn a $530 gun into a $649 gun.
But we are only just getting started!
California also required a background check for every gun purchase. In most other states, that background check is free. But California charges a $31.19 Dealer Record of Sale fee, a $1 Firearms Safety Act Fee, and a $5 Safety and Enforcement fee. $37.19 in total for the background check.
The Supreme Court requested a response last week in a pro se petition filed by an extremely sympathetic petitioner caught up in an interstate carry mess.
I had not heard of this case before (pro se petitions are usually DOA), but given they called for a response, I will be considering an amicus brief in this case.
The questions presented, if granted, would obviously be narrowed.
This article is misleading and also a masterclass in how to lie by omission. Let's break it down.
Two bits of background information you should know beforehand:
1. "Stand Your Ground" does one thing, and one thing only: it gets rid of any duty to retreat before lawful self-defense. Every other element of self-defense must still be present before you resort to lethal force, or you are going to prison. It mainly serves to stop asshole prosecutors from second-guessing whether you "could have run away instead" in a life-or-death situation.
2. Stand Your Ground is the law in most of the country, including many Democrat states like California and Colorado. Varying levels of duty to retreat basically only exist in the Northeast at this point, plus Minnesota. Wisconsin and Nebraska have their own hybrids too. The rest of the country has Stand Your Ground either by statute or via common law.
The article begins with a double-lie:
"In 30 states, it often requires only a claim you killed while protecting yourself or others."
First of all, it's not 30 states, it's more like 40. But we can already see where they are going: trying to obfuscate about the blue states that also have SYG via common law, to make this about the "bad" progun red states.
Second, it's not true that it only requires a "claim", you must have all the elements of self-defense. Sure, sometimes the facts can be murky, especially if the only other witness is dead, but that's the case with any self-defense claim.
This bit right here is completely outrageous to me. It is absolutely preposterous for a judge to redirect federal spending against what congress appropriated it for.
Why even have a separation of powers? Hell, the judge may as well order Congress to end the shutdown on his precise terms. What would be the difference? He is already taking over the power of the purse with this order.
I don't even think it was right for the judge to order the spending of the very limited contingency funds, as judges should not get to decide how money designated for an emergency gets spent.
However, at least that point was arguable. The further step he took was baseless and constitution-torching.
I hope the Supreme Court intervenes on this. I wish @AGPamBondi and team the best of luck.
Shutdowns are a high-stakes political game. If you are going to keep the government shutdown, it can't be the case that you get to run to courts and have your priorities ordered to be funded.
Congress has not appropriated more money for SNAP. The program basically doesn't exist until they do. Federal judges should not get to order it back into existence.
California just filed its opposition to the cert petition in Duncan, let's see what they argue. A thread on the brief.
"May acquire as many approved firearms as they want" is a funny point, because it has only been true for a few months since California lost in Nguyen. California was trying to limit us to one gun per month.
As is always the case, antigunners want very expansive definitions of mass shootings EXCEPT when arguing to uphold AWBs and mag limits, then all of a sudden they want to limit it to the worst (and most rare) mass shootings. The GVA definition goes out the window immediately.