The six MAGA justices on the Supreme Court have
obliterated the notion that they are impartial jurists bound by precedent. This
week, Justice Sonia Sotomayor did a magnificent job stripping away the veneer
of legitimacy they have tried to sustain. In dissenting from a widely criticized emergency
docket decision running roughshod over the 4th Amendment and
effectively greenlight racial profiling, Sotomayor let it rip.
She explained: A Federal District Court found that these raids were part of a pattern of conduct by the Government that likely violated the Fourth Amendment. Based on the evidence before it, the court held that the Government was stopping individuals based solely on four factors: (1) their apparent race or ethnicity; (2) whether they spoke Spanish or English with an accent; (3) the type of location at which they were found (such as a car wash or bus stop); and (4) the type of job they appeared to work.
Concluding that stops based on these
four factors alone, even when taken together, could not satisfy the Fourth
Amendment’s requirement of reasonable suspicion, the District Court temporarily
enjoined the Government from continuing its pattern of unlawful mass arrests
while it considered whether longer-term relief was appropriate.
Instead of allowing the litigation to proceed, the
Supreme Court leapt into the fray and—without briefing, argument, or
explanation—summarily stayed the order. “That decision is yet another grave
misuse of our emergency docket,” Sotomayor wrote.
“We should not have to live in a country where the
Government can seize anyone who looks Latino, speaks Spanish, and appears to
work a low wage job.”
She had no majority “opinion” to critique since the
majority could not be bothered to write one. She did, however, shred Justice
Brett M. Kavanaugh’s lame concurrence. Citing 45-yr. old precedent, she
reminded us, “Critically, a set of facts cannot constitute reasonable suspicion
if it ‘describe[s] a very large category of presumably innocent’ people.”
Even by the government’s reckoning (albeit without
factual support) the order would allow stops and detention of millions of
people simply because they “look” Hispanic, speak Spanish, or, for example,
work in construction. Sotomayor also excoriated a ruling blessing ICE abduction: “the Government has provided no evidence showing that its seizures
were based on credible intelligence about a particular employer at a particular
location.”
In debunking the government’s complaint that it would be
hampered in enforcing immigration law, Sotomayor cited its own actions and
rhetoric, thereby illustrating its brazen contempt for courts and determination
to resort to ever-increasing levels of violence.
Since the issuance of the TRO, Secretary of Homeland
Security Kristi Noem has called the District Judge an “‘idiot’” and vowed that
“‘none of [the Government’s] operations are going to change.’” The CBP Chief
Patrol Agent in the Central District has stated that his division will “turn
and burn” and “go even harder now,” and has posted videos on social media
touting his agents’ continued efforts “[c]hasing, cuffing, [and] deporting”
people at car washes assertion that it will suffer irreparable harm.
Sotomayor blasted Kavanaugh’s ridiculous assertion that
these raids involve only brief stops or questioning. (Does he follow any non-Fox
News?) She pointed to voluminous evidence that ICE is violently “seizing people using firearms” and then warehousing
them. Moreover, “United States citizens are also being seized, taken from their
jobs, and prevented from working to support themselves and their families.” In
other words, she exposed Kavanaugh for inventing facts to support his untenable
conclusion.
Finally, Sotomayor took a righteous swing at the justices
who misuse the emergency docket. “In the last eight months, this Court’s
appetite to circumvent the ordinary appellate process and weigh in on important
issues has grown exponentially,” she wrote. “Yet, some situations simply cry
out for an explanation, such as when the Government’s conduct flagrantly
violates the law, or when lower courts and litigants need guidance about the
issues on which they should focus.” It is no wonder district courts are baffled.
“For each of those complex issues,” she wrote, “it will be
anyone’s guess whether the majority thought there were evidentiary
deficiencies, legal errors, or a combination of both.”
We owe a debt of gratitude to Sotomayor for this and many
other stinging dissents as well as her expert questioning at oral arguments.
Her candor from the bench is not just refreshing; it is essential in educating
the public that the six MAGA justices are not engaged in judging; their
opinions are not the product of intellectually honest legal reasoning. (Indeed,
they frequently provide no reasoning.) As such, their rulings
have lost legitimacy, which depends on intellectual and ethical integrity.
That conclusion, so aptly bolstered by Sotomayor’s
dissent, can fuel a robust movement to reform the Supreme Court in significant
ways. Americans must demand that it once again resembles an impartial court
reflecting the highest ethical standards. Our democracy will depend on it.
Throughout, we will honor her commitment to remain
undaunted, unbowed, and unwilling (in her words) to “sit idly by while our constitutional
freedoms are lost.” She remains an essential voice in debunking the MAGA
justices’ blatant hackery dressed up as jurisprudence.
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