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Ex parte blogging: the legal ethics of Supreme Court advocacy in the Internet era.

Yakima Herald-Republic

| April 01, 2009 | Lee, Rachel C. | COPYRIGHT 2009 Stanford Law School. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright
 
INTRODUCTION 
 
  I. THE PHENOMENON OF EX PARTE BLOGGING 
 
 II. EX PARTE BLOGGING UNDER THE CURRENT ETHICAL FRAMEWORK 
     A. Publicity 
     B. Ex Parte Communications by Attorneys to Judges 
     C. Receipt of Ex Parte Communications by Judges 
 
III. OPTIONS FOR REFORM 
     A. Do Nothing 
     B. Do Too Much 
     C. Regulate Parties and Amici 
     D. An Open Invitation to Blog 
     E. Regulate the Court 
 
CONCLUSION 

INTRODUCTION

Several intertwined issues appeared prominently in the Supreme Court's recent decision in Kennedy v. Louisiana: (1) whether a nonhomicide crime can be punished by the death penalty, how to evaluate the existence of a national consensus on the question, and whether the Supreme Court's supervision of the "evolving standards of decency" imposes a one-way ratchet on the death penalty. But the story of the Kennedy case--in which the Supreme Court held that it is unconstitutional to execute someone for raping a child (2)--also touches on a subtler problem. Kennedy offers a glimpse at the increasing potential for speech outside the walls of the nation's highest court to affect the decisions issuing from that court. With postings on legal blogs (3) now offering prompt, detailed, and readily accessible analysis of Supreme Court cases, is it time to reevaluate the ethical standards that govern the interplay between lawyers, the Internet, and the Court? Scholarship on the problems of improper publicity and ex parte communication has not yet begun to grapple with the power of blogs to rapidly reach large audiences--possibly including Justices or their clerks--with persuasive arguments on pending cases. This Note offers a first analysis of the contours of an emerging issue facing attorneys litigating before the Supreme Court.

One of the high-profile cases of the 2007 Term, Kennedy v. Louisiana had its genesis in the horrific rape of an eight-year-old girl in 1998. (4) Five years later, a Louisiana jury convicted the child's stepfather, Patrick Kennedy, of aggravated rape. (5) The jury sentenced him to death. (6) No one had been executed in the United States for the crime of rape--either the rape of an adult or a child--since 1964. (7) Indeed, the Supreme Court held in 1977 that imposing the death penalty for the rape of an adult woman was unconstitutional because capital punishment "is an excessive penalty for the rapist who, as such, does not take human life." (8) Nevertheless, the state of Louisiana, along with five other states, had subsequently authorized the death penalty for the rape of a child. (9) The Supreme Court agreed to hear Kennedy's case to resolve the question of whether the Eighth Amendment prohibits imposing the death penalty for child rape as it does for the rape of an adult.

Pointing to a growing number of state legislatures that had considered or enacted laws allowing child rapists to be punished by death, (10) the state of Louisiana argued that increasing public outrage over sexual crimes against young children had led contemporary society to see the death penalty as an appropriate punishment for these crimes. (11) The Supreme Court disagreed. On June 25, 2008, after surveying the "national consensus" (12) and consulting its own judgment about the suitability of the death penalty for child rape, (13) the Court announced in a five-to-four opinion that such a punishment violated the Eighth Amendment. This decision drew considerable attention, (14) and both presidential candidates took the opportunity to express their disapproval of it. (15)

With most Supreme Court cases, the release of a decision is the end of the road. Not so for Kennedy. Three days after the opinion was published, a military appellate attorney, Dwight Sullivan, noted on his blog that the decision contained a potentially significant error. (16) In evaluating the national consensus against the death penalty (or lack thereof), both the majority and the dissent believed that "Congress has not enacted a law permitting the death penalty for the rape of a child." (17) Yet Sullivan observed that in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006, Congress provided that the maximum permissible punishment under the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) for the rape of a child would be "death or other such punishment as a court-martial may direct" until the President otherwise prescribed. (18) None of the briefs by the parties or amici had brought this statute to the Court's notice. Now, however, the formerly obscure provision became the center of attention.

Eugene Fidell, an attorney specializing in military law, spotted Sullivan's blog post and mentioned it to his wife, New York Times writer Linda Greenhouse. (19) She broke the story of the Supreme Court's mistake as a frontpage article in the New York Times. (20) Legal blogs circulated the story and discussed its implications. (21) The Justice Department even telephoned the Clerk of the Court to accept responsibility for not notifying the Court of the statute, (22) although the United States had been neither a party nor an amicus in the case. Then, on July 21, the state of Louisiana formally petitioned the Court for a rehearing, followed a week later by a motion from the Solicitor General for leave to file an amicus brief supporting Louisiana's petition. (23)

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