Connect with us

Our Journey through the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals

Published

on

The last time we went to court back in June of 2014, I took you on a journey inside the Federal Courthouse with us. Today I’d like to take you with us on a historic journey inside the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals as we present our case to the three judge panel allotted to hear our arguments.

Our morning started really early – at 5:30 A.M. – with Courtney and Nadine Blanchard, the other plaintiffs in our case, (photo below right) picking us up from our home, which is located in a neighborhood roughly two miles from the courthouse. We were instructed by the court to meet the clerk at 7:00 A.M. outside a side door entrance of the John Minor Wisdom Building that houses the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, to be escorted inside.  

It was a very cold morning, one that we are not accustomed to here in the south, and as we passed in front of the public entrance, people were bundled up already in line, since seats were limited for the “show” that was about to ensue.  The line had already formed. A few hours later it would be down the block.

The people gathered there were not just from Louisiana, but had traveled from all over. Like Brandiilyne Dear and Susan Mangum who run The Dandelion Project out of Laurel, Mississippi, and Diana Farrar and Charlotte Moellering from Texas. They stood in line in unfavorable weather, to partake in this historic day. 

plaintiffs.jpgWe were ushered in to our reserved front seats. Our Louisiana case was the first scheduled on the calendar. We sat patiently for two hours, waiting for our case to start, holding small talk with all our co-plaintiffs and our legal team that was in place for the first case.

Finally the judges filed in to their seats, Judge Jerry Smith in the center, with Judge James Graves Jr. to his left and Judge Patrick Higginbotham to his right.  Having taken an off the wall beating in Judge Martin Feldman’s ruling in District Court, I was eager to hear what these judges had to say.  

Our side went first. The judges were quiet for the most part and let our attorney, Camilla Taylor, present our case almost uninterruptedly. Judge Smith broke in a few times and followed an expected line of questioning. But for the most part we were able to go unrestricted in our allotted 30 minutes.

Next up was attorney Kyle Duncan, who represents the state of Louisiana and is funded by Louisiana taxpayer money, earning over $200,000 last year to defend the state, but I’ll talk about that in a another article. The state presented their defense of the Louisiana marriage ban, using the same argument that they presented at the lower court level, which Judge Martin Feldman had found sympathetic.  What they weren’t prepared for was the criticism that would come from Judge Higginbotham and Judge Graves.

Just minutes into the states arguments Judge Higginbotham presented this question, “Sexual orientation is an immutable characteristic … but it does not come with any disability, there is no suggestion that sexual orientation has any relevance to the ability to perform. … so now you have a classifier of that order. What is the justification for using that as a classifier by state? … what do you point to as the rational support for the state to differentiate on that classifier?” and when the state got around to the procreation argument he went on – “Back to procreation where we started, and the counter argument to that, of course, is yes, if that really is the basis, why is marriage quickly extended to people who are sterile?”

Judge Higginbotham wasn’t alone in poking holes in the states argument, he was joined by Judge Graves, who at one point asked, in reference to states idea that marriage is for procreation between a man and a woman, “Council, help me understand how those purposes are frustrated if same-sex couples are allowed to marry.” When state resorted back to United States vs Winsor, relying heavily on just a small portion of the ruling and ignoring the majority of it arguing that Windsor was solely about states’ rights, Judge Graves reminded them,“There’s other language in Windsor that you have to deal with; for example, the statement that the differentiation demeans the couple whose moral and sexual choices the constitution protects….that’s pretty broad language regarding the specific choice that’s involved here.”

After our portion was over some reporters were quick to assume that we may have a favorable ruling based on the Louisiana arguments alone.  But it didn’t stop there, the bombardment kept coming with consistency case after case. 

We were shuffled out of the courtroom and into an overflow room where next we heard arguments from the Mississippi case lead by Robbie Kaplan on behalf of The Campaign for Southern Equality and their plaintiffs Joce Pritchett, Carla Webb, Becky Bickett, and Andrea Sanders.  We sat in anticipation, I wanted to see if the line of questioning that I had just heard would continue, to make sure I didn’t have to pinch myself to see if I was dreaming. And so it did – The state of Mississippi started off with their defense and the questions ensued. In reference to the states argument that the ban was put in place by democratic process and as people change it could be replaced by the people and not changed by the courts. Higginbotham wasn’t buying it – “Those words, ‘Will Mississippi change its mind?’ have resonated in these halls before.”

Ms. Kaplan was up next, presenting the plaintiffs side with poise and strength that left me in awe, much like she did at the United State Supreme Court in Windsor. The judges even jokingly at one point made a reference to Windsor and said “You may be familiar with this case.” To which Kaplan replied, “I’ve heard of it.”

Next up was Texas with plaintiffs Cleopatra DeLeon, Nicole Dimetman, Vic Holmes, and Marc Phariss, but they fared no better. The state again took brutal criticism for their procreation and “benefit” argument. Judge Graves asked, “So there are benefits that flow from the right to marry, and the state can choose whether to confer or withhold the benefits. But that doesn’t justify the altogether denial of the right, does it?” and when state used a “free lunch for the poor, but not the middle class and the wealthy” argument Graves continued, “I’m not denying you the right to eat lunch, I’m just telling you I’m not going to pay for it. But in this instance, you’re saying, not only am I not going to confer any of the benefits of marriage, I’m going to deny you the right to marry.” to which the state was shaken. 

Judge Graves wasn’t the only one critical of the state’s position, Judge Higginbotham joined in, asking:

“Marriage between same-sex couples has no consequences, then, other than the use of the state’s resources. … Your reason is that they just do not want to support this particular process here. Not because it would harm anyone, but because it just does not want to spend its money on this. … Is that it?  

So you can see why we are  – and I’ve said this before – “Cautiously Optimistic” about this line of questioning today and why we believe that we may have a favorable ruling at the Fifth Circuit, the most conservative appeals court in this nation.  While you can never know how a judge will rule based on his questioning alone, we are very hopeful they will rule in consistency with their skepticism of the arguments that were presented by each of the states.  

We left the courthouse very positive, we gathered just mere feet from the courthouse that afternoon where we socialized with our colleagues letting our hair down after this long day.  The atmosphere was electrifying and positive, and we enjoyed it!

crowd.jpgWhile we may not know the court’s decision for some weeks or even months, today, as I sit here still in shock over what potentially could happen for my family and countless families across these three great states; I know also know this: the decision of the Fifth Circuit is just one piece of a larger puzzle that’s completed at the Supreme Court. But for today, I’m going feel good about this, after being humiliated and demeaned in District Court by Judge Feldman’s archaic thought process in his ruling, I am going to put my faith and money in the WIN column, even if it is cautiously.

Keep up with what we are doing here in Louisiana by liking our Facebook and visiting our website. You can also find the Forum For Equality website here, they are a great local organization who is fighting hard on behalf of same-sex couples all across the state.

Together with Lambda Legal at the helm, we will WIN the freedom to marry, it’s what is right and just.

 

bio_-_derek.jpgDerek Penton-Robicheaux, 37, is a native of Mississippi and a longtime resident of New Orleans.  He holds degrees in computer information systems and paramedicine.  After more than five years together, Derek and his husband, Jonathan Penton-Robicheaux, were legally married in Iowa on Sept. 23, 2012. The two are the first plaintiffs involved in the Federal Same-Sex Marriage Lawsuit in Louisiana, Robicheaux et al. v Caldwell.

 

 

 

 

 

Feature Photo from nola.com

 

 

Continue Reading
Click to comment
 
 

Enjoy this piece?

… then let us make a small request. The New Civil Rights Movement depends on readers like you to meet our ongoing expenses and continue producing quality progressive journalism. Three Silicon Valley giants consume 70 percent of all online advertising dollars, so we need your help to continue doing what we do.

NCRM is independent. You won’t find mainstream media bias here. From unflinching coverage of religious extremism, to spotlighting efforts to roll back our rights, NCRM continues to speak truth to power. America needs independent voices like NCRM to be sure no one is forgotten.

Every reader contribution, whatever the amount, makes a tremendous difference. Help ensure NCRM remains independent long into the future. Support progressive journalism with a one-time contribution to NCRM, or click here to become a subscriber. Thank you. Click here to donate by check.

News

‘To Do God Knows What’: Local Elections Official Reads Lara Trump the Riot Act

Published

on

The county clerk for Ingham County, Michigan blasted Republican National Committee co-chair Lara Trump after the ex-president’s daughter-in-law bragged the RNC will have people to “physically handle” voters’ ballots in polling locations across the country this November.

“We now have the ability at the RNC not just to have poll watchers, people standing in polling locations, but people who can physically handle the ballots,” Trump told Newsmax host Eric Bolling this week, as NCRM reported.

“Will these people, will they be allowed to physically handle the ballots as well, Lara?” Bolling asked.

“Yup,” Trump replied.

Marc Elias, the top Democratic elections attorney who won 63 of the 64 lawsuits filed by the Donald Trump campaign in the 2020 election cycle (the one he did not win was later overturned), corrected Lara Trump.

READ MORE: ‘I Hope You Find Happiness’: Moskowitz Trolls Comer Over Impeachment Fail

“Poll observers are NEVER permitted to touch ballots. She is suggesting the RNC will infiltrate election offices,” Elias warned on Wednesday.

Barb Byrum, a former Michigan Democratic state representative with a law degree and a local hardware store, is the Ingham County Clerk, and thus the chief elections official for her county. She slammed Lara Trump and warned her the RNC had better not try to touch any ballots in her jurisdiction.

“I watched your video, and it’s riveting stuff. But if you think you’ll be touching ballots in my state, you’ve got another thing coming,” Byrum told Trump in response to the Newsmax interview.

“First and foremost, precinct workers, clerks, and voters are the only people authorized to touch ballots. For example, I am the County Clerk, and I interact with exactly one voted ballot: My own,” Byrum wrote, launching a lengthy series of social media posts educating Trump.

“Election inspectors are hired by local clerks in Michigan and we hire Democrats and Republicans to work in our polling places. We’re required by law to do so,” she continued. “In large cities and townships, the local clerks train those workers. In smaller cities and townships, that responsibility falls to County Clerks, like me.”

READ MORE: ‘Doesn’t Care if Pregnant Women Live or Die’: Alito Slammed Over Emergency Abortion Remarks

She explained, “precinct workers swear an oath to uphold the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of Michigan.”

“Among the provisions in the Michigan Constitution is the right to a secret ballot for our voters,” she added.

Byrum also educated Trump on her inaccurate representation of the consent decree, which was lifted by a court, not a judge’s death, as Lara Trump had claimed.

“It’s important for folks to understand what you’re talking about: The end of a consent decree that was keeping the RNC from intimidating and suppressing voters (especially in minority-majority areas).”

“With that now gone, you’re hoping for the RNC to step up their game and get people that you train to do god-knows what into the polling places.”

Byrum also warned Trump: “If election inspectors are found to be disrupting the process of an orderly election OR going outside their duties, local clerks are within their rights to dismiss them immediately.”

“So if you intend to train these 100,000 workers to do anything but their sacred constitutional obligation, they’ll find themselves on the curb faster than you can say ‘election interference.'”

READ MORE: ‘Blood on Your Hands’: Tennessee Republicans OK Arming Teachers After Deadly School Shooting

 

 

Continue Reading

OPINION

‘I Hope You Find Happiness’: Moskowitz Trolls Comer Over Impeachment Fail

Published

on

U.S. Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL) is mocking House Oversight Committee Chairman Jim Comer over a CNN report revealing the embattled Kentucky Republican who has been alleging without proof President Joe Biden is the head of a vast multi-million dollar criminal bribery and influence-peddling conspiracy, has given up trying to impeach the leader of the free world.

CNN on Wednesday had reported, “after 15 months of coming up short in proving some of his biggest claims against the president, Comer recently approached one of his Republican colleagues and made a blunt admission: He was ready to be ‘done with’ the impeachment inquiry into Biden.” The news network described Chairman Comer as “frustrated” and his investigation as “at a dead end.”

One GOP lawmaker told CNN, “Comer is hoping Jesus comes so he can get out.”

“He is fed up,” the Republican added.

Despite the Chairman’s alleged remarks, “a House Oversight Committee spokesperson maintains that ‘the impeachment inquiry is ongoing and impeachment is 100% still on the table.'”

RELATED: ‘Used by the Russians’: Moskowitz Mocks Comer’s Biden Impeachment Failure

Last week, Oversight Committee Ranking Member Jamie Raskin (D-MD) got into a shouting match with Chairman Comer, with the Maryland Democrat saying, “You have not identified a single crime – what is the crime that you want to impeach Joe Biden for and keep this nonsense going?” and Comer replying, “You’re about to find out.”

Before those heated remarks, Congressman Raskin chided Comer, humorously threatening to invite Rep. Moskowitz to return to the hearing.

Congressman Moskowitz appears to be the only member of the House Oversight Committee who has ever made a motion to call for a vote on impeaching President Biden, which he did last month, although he did it to ridicule Chairman Comer.

It appears the Moskowitz-Comer “bromance” may be over.

Wednesday afternoon Congressman Moskowitz, whose sarcasm is becoming well-known, used it to ridicule Chairman Comer.

“I was hoping our breakup would never become public,” he declared. “We had such a great thing while it lasted James. I will miss the time we spent together. I will miss our conversations. I will miss the pet names you gave me. I only wish you the best and hope you find happiness.”

Watch the video above or at this link.

READ MORE: ‘Doesn’t Care if Pregnant Women Live or Die’: Alito Slammed Over Emergency Abortion Remarks

Continue Reading

OPINION

‘Doesn’t Care if Pregnant Women Live or Die’: Alito Slammed Over Emergency Abortion Remarks

Published

on

The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case centered on the question, can the federal government require states with strict abortion bans to allow physicians to perform abortions in emergency situations, specifically when the woman’s health, but not her life, is in danger?

The 1986 federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA), signed into law by Republican President Ronald Reagan, says it can. The State of Idaho on Wednesday argued it cannot.

U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, The Washington Post’s Kim Bellware reported, “made a clear delineation between Idaho law and what EMTALA provides.”

“In Idaho, doctors have to shut their eyes to everything except death,” Prelogar said, according to Bellware. “Whereas under EMTALA, you’re supposed to be thinking about things like, ‘Is she about to lose her fertility? Is her uterus going to become incredibly scarred because of the bleeding? Is she about to undergo the possibility of kidney failure?’ ”

READ MORE: Gag Order Breach? Trump Targeted Cohen in Taped Interview Hours Before Contempt Hearing

Attorney Imani Gandy, an award-winning journalist and Editor-at-Large for Rewire News Group, highlighted an issue central to the case.

“The issue of medical judgment vs. good faith judgment is a huge one because different states have different standards of judgment,” she writes. “If a doctor exercises their judgment, another doctor expert witness at trial could question that. That’s a BIG problem here. That’s why doctors are afraid to provide abortions. They may have an overzealous prosecutor come behind them and disagree.”

Right-wing Justice Samuel Alito appeared to draw the most fire from legal experts, as his questioning suggested “fetal personhood” should be the law, which it is not.

“Justice Alito is trying to import fetal personhood into federal statutory law by suggesting federal law might well prohibit hospitals from providing abortions as emergency stabilizing care,” observed Constitutional law professor Anthony Michael Kreis.

Paraphrasing Justice Alito, Kreis writes: “Alito: How can the federal government restrict what Idaho criminalizes simply because hospitals in Idaho have accepted federal funds?”

Appearing to answer that question, Georgia State University College of Law professor of law and Constitutional scholar Eric Segall wrote: “Our Constitution unequivocally allows the federal gov’t to offer the states money with conditions attached no matter how invasive b/c states can always say no. The conservative justices’ hostility to the spending power is based only on politics and values not text or history.”

Professor Segall also served up some of the strongest criticism of the right-wing justice.

READ MORE: ‘They Will Have Thugs?’: Lara Trump’s Claim RNC Will ‘Physically Handle the Ballots’ Stuns

He wrote that Justice Alito “is basically making it clear he doesn’t care if pregnant women live or die as long as the fetus lives.”

Earlier Wednesday morning Segall had issued a warning: “Trigger alert: In about 20 minutes several of the conservative justices are going to show very clearly that that they care much more about fetuses than women suffering major pregnancy complications which is their way of owning the libs which is grotesque.”

Later, predicting “Alito is going to dissent,” Segall wrote: “Alito is dripping arrogance and condescension…in a case involving life, death, and medical emergencies. He has no bottom.”

Taking a broader view of the case, NYU professor of law Melissa Murray issued a strong warning: “The EMTALA case, Moyle v. US, hasn’t received as much attention as the mifepristone case, but it is huge. Not only implicates access to emergency medical procedures (like abortion in cases of miscarriage), but the broader question of federal law supremacy.”

READ MORE: ‘Blood on Your Hands’: Tennessee Republicans OK Arming Teachers After Deadly School Shooting

 

 

 

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2020 AlterNet Media.