NY SG Tells SCOTUS To Deny DOJ’s ‘Extraordinary’ Request In Census Case

FILE - In this Oct. 5, 2018, file photo, the U. S. Supreme Court building stands quietly before dawn in Washington. The Constitution says you can’t be tried twice for the same offense. And yet Terance Gamble is sit... FILE - In this Oct. 5, 2018, file photo, the U. S. Supreme Court building stands quietly before dawn in Washington. The Constitution says you can’t be tried twice for the same offense. And yet Terance Gamble is sitting in prison today because he was prosecuted separately by Alabama and the federal government for having a gun after an earlier robbery conviction. he Supreme Court is considering Gamble’s case Thursday, Dec. 6, and the outcome could have a spillover effect on the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election. (AP Photo/J. David Ake, File) MORE LESS
Start your day with TPM.
Sign up for the Morning Memo newsletter

Less than 17 hours before the Supreme Court is expected to decide the legality of the census citizenship question, the justices were still getting bombarded by filings related to the discovery of new evidence linked to the case.

New York Solicitor General Barbara Underwood asked the court on Wednesday evening not to resolve the issue of whether the question was added for discriminatory reasons. The Justice Department on Tuesday had requested that the court resolve to claim, so to head off additional litigation that could occur around it.

The claim that the administration had violated the equal protection clause was not in front of the Supreme Court as it considered the case this spring.

However, the discovery of the new evidence — files of a dead GOP consultant who played a role in adding the question — has made it a live issue in the census citizenship case in Maryland, which had not yet made it up to the Supreme Court. The trial judge in the Maryland lawsuit has re-opened the case to decide whether the new evidence shows a discriminatory intent — a claim for which, he previously found, there was not sufficient evidence.

Altogether it has created a procedural nightmare for the Supreme Court. Earlier this month, the ACLU — one of the challengers in the New York case — asked that the Supreme Court decision be delayed and the case be sent back to the trial judge in Manhattan to consider the new evidence in the consultant’s files.

Underwood said at the time she supported such a move, which the Justice Department, not surprisingly, opposed.

When it appeared possible that that judge in Maryland would re-open the case there to consider the evidence, the Justice Department suggested the justices preemptively resolve the equal protection claim. The Department made that request more explicit after the Maryland case was formally re-opened Tuesday. The Maryland challengers wrote to the Supreme Court late Tuesday night to say they opposed the Justice Department request. However, it is Underwood’s — and not the Maryland challengers’ — case in front of the justices, which could explain why she also felt the need to express opposition to any move to address the discriminatory motive issue.

“This Court should deny this extraordinary request,” Underwood wrote. “In this Court, the parties here did not present briefing or oral argument about the equal-protection claim, aside from a single conclusory paragraph in petitioners’ opening brief.”

“It makes even less sense for this Court to reach beyond the parties’ arguments here based on petitioners’ speculative concerns about a potentially adverse decision in a separate case not before this Court-particularly when any such decision will issue only after additional proceedings that have not yet taken place,” she later added.

Here is Underwood’s letter.

Latest Muckraker
49
Show Comments

Notable Replies

  1. This whole farrago has really put SCOTUS in a bind.

  2. Avatar for outis outis says:

    There is no good reason that the question raised needs to be on the 2020 Census. Once again, the “emergency” is an invention of the Trump administration to get its way, when the merits weight against what it wants. The consequences of rushing and putting the question on the census will remain for a decade. Take a little time and make a decent decision.

  3. Modern day Republicans NEVER make a decent decision. That is a pigment (sic) of the medias’ collective imaginations.

  4. Avatar for tsp tsp says:

    This entire episode is stretching the credibility of this SCOTUS.

Continue the discussion at forums.talkingpointsmemo.com

43 more replies

Participants

Avatar for system1 Avatar for oscarhomolka Avatar for dark_hawk_98 Avatar for slagathor Avatar for go2goal Avatar for dangoodbar Avatar for pshah Avatar for sherrybb Avatar for gajake Avatar for tsp Avatar for edgarant Avatar for 1american Avatar for gusfabriani Avatar for rickjones Avatar for castor_troy Avatar for john819 Avatar for tpr Avatar for nycabj Avatar for maximus Avatar for heretofore Avatar for enn Avatar for carolson Avatar for zillacop Avatar for outis

Continue Discussion
Masthead Masthead
Founder & Editor-in-Chief:
Executive Editor:
Managing Editor:
Deputy Editor:
Editor at Large:
General Counsel:
Publisher:
Head of Product:
Director of Technology:
Associate Publisher:
Front End Developer:
Senior Designer: