Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Who cares about law? Why the arguments in the amicus curiae’s brief may win the day, by Linda Jellum

The Supreme Court is poised to hear arguments in Raymond J. Lucia v. SEC on Monday, April 23, 2018. The sole issue for which cert was granted is whether administrative law judges (ALJs) of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are officers of the United States within the meaning of the Federal Constitution’s appointments clause. […]

Notice & Comment

The Supreme Court’s Weird Definition of Tax Obstruction

In Marinello v. United States, 584 U.S. — (2018), the Supreme Court wrestled with whether the federal tax obstruction statute reaches conduct unrelated to an ongoing or contemplated IRS proceeding. Section 7212(a) states, in relevant part, that anyone who “corruptly or by force . . . obstructs or impedes, or endeavors to obstruct or impede […]

Notice & Comment

Searching Cell Phones at the Border, by Bernard W. Bell

On January 5, 2018, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”) reported that in fiscal year 2017, it conducted 30,200 searches of electronic devices at border entries. CBP Releases Updated Border Search of Electronic Device Directive and FY17 Statistics (January 5, 2018), accessible at https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/national-media-release/cbp-releases-updated-border-search-electronic-device-directive-and. The number of searches reported included devices carried by people entering and […]

Notice & Comment

Over at Law and Liberty: The Federalist Society’s Chevron Deference Dilemma

Over at the Law and Liberty blog today, I have a post with a provocative (click-baity?) title on Kent Barnett, Christina Boyd, and my new paper Administrative Law’s Political Dynamics (Vanderbilt Law Review forthcoming). Here’s a snippet from my post: The call to eliminate Chevron deference has largely come from those right of center. But it would […]

Notice & Comment

Appointments Clause Symposium on Lucia v. SEC: Are SEC ALJs “Officers of the United States”?

Starting today, for the next two weeks the Notice & Comment blog will run a symposium addressing the Supreme Court’s upcoming consideration of the constitutionality of hiring procedures for administrative law judges in the Securities and Exchange Commission. On Monday, April 23, the Supreme Court will hear oral argument in Lucia v. SEC, which raises […]

Notice & Comment

United States v. California: A Preliminary Assessment of the Challenge to California’s “Immigrant Worker Protection Act,” by Bernard W. Bell

Many jurisdictions seek to protect undocumented aliens by adopting “sanctuary” policies. Those policies generally constrain the conduct of a state or local government’s own employees. They (1) prohibit public employees from gathering information on the immigration status of those with whom they interact, (2) limit public employees from sharing any such information collected with ICE, […]

Notice & Comment

Census Smoke Signals

The decennial Census is a high-stakes feat. It informs government spending, business planning, and congressional apportionment. No wonder the Census Bureau takes such great pains with each question. After all, when you ask only ten questions or so, you’ve got to make them count (pun intended). You can almost hear the bureaucratic hand-wringing in the […]

Notice & Comment

Missing History in the Court-Appointed Amicus Brief in Lucia v. SEC

This week the amicus appointed to advocate for the lower-court judgment in Lucia v. SEC filed his brief. The case addresses whether administrative law judges in the SEC are Article II “Officers of the United States” subject to the Constitution’s Appointments Clause requirements. U.S. Const. art. II, § 2. Court-appointed amicus, Mr. Metlitsky, technically supports […]

Notice & Comment

New Meeting Dates and Materials for Spring 2018 Projects (ACUS Update)

The Administrative Conference’s work on its spring projects is well underway.  In recent days, additional meeting dates, and new draft reports, draft recommendations, and written member comments have been posted for several of the projects under consideration.  These include: (1) an additional meeting for the project on Administrative Judges; (2) a new meeting date and draft […]