Scalia Recusal Required

As someone who purports to care greatly about the precise meaning of the law, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia has placed himself in a position in which he must recuse himself in an important case that will decide the scope of executive power. Michael Isikoff, who has continually showed his mettle as a diligent reporter, does some digging and pens the following story in the April 3 issue of Newsweek.

The Supreme Court this week will hear arguments in a big case: whether to allow the Bush administration to try Guantánamo detainees in special military tribunals with limited rights for the accused. But Justice Antonin Scalia has already spoken his mind about some of the issues in the matter. During an unpublicized March 8 talk at the University of Freiburg in Switzerland, Scalia dismissed the idea that the detainees have rights under the U.S. Constitution or international conventions, adding he was "astounded" at the "hypocritical" reaction in Europe to Gitmo. "War is war, and it has never been the case that when you captured a combatant you have to give them a jury trial in your civil courts," he says on a tape of the talk reviewed by NEWSWEEK. "Give me a break." Challenged by one audience member about whether the Gitmo detainees don't have protections under the Geneva or human-rights conventions, Scalia shot back: "If he was captured by my army on a battlefield, that is where he belongs. I had a son on that battlefield and they were shooting at my son and I'm not about to give this man who was captured in a war a full jury trial. I mean it's crazy."

[...]

This isn't the first time Scalia has commented on matters before the court: two years ago he recused himself from a Pledge of Allegiance case after making public comments about the matter. "This is clearly grounds for recusal," said Michael Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights, a human-rights group that has filed a brief in behalf of the Gitmo detainees. "I can't recall an instance where I've heard a judge speak so openly about a case that's in front of him--without hearing the arguments."Other experts said it was a closer call. Scalia didn't refer directly to this week's case, Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, though issues at stake hinge in part on whether the detainees deserve legal protections that make the military tribunals unfair. "As these things mount, a legitimate question could be asked about whether he is compromising the credibility of the court," said Stephen Gillers, a legal-ethics expert. A Scalia recusal (it's entirely up to him) would create problems; Chief Justice John Roberts has already done so in Hamdan because he ruled on it as an appellate judge. A Supreme Court spokeswoman said Scalia has no comment. [emphasis added]

Scalia, who really should have recused himself in the case involving Dick Cheney's secret energy task force given his close relationship and hunting trip with the Vice President, has clearly put himself in a pickle with this speech, which as Isikoff noted was unpublicized. Perhaps the Associate Justice believed that it was all right to prejudge a case during a speech if that speech were not televised or reported on in the U.S. media.

The question of recusal, however, is not one of publicity. It does not matter whether or not Americans know Scalia's position going into the case, only that Scalia has already developed an opinion before hearing arguments before the Court. Simply put, a Justice cannot prejudge cases -- Chief Justice Roberts and Associate Justice Alito said as much during their confirmation hearings as a defense of their unwillingness to admit their true feelings on Roe v. Wade.

Isikoff writes that the recusal of Scalia "would create problems" in light of the fact that Roberts has already done so as well, but the problem would be much greater if Scalia did not do so. Certainly, a ruling from a Court devoid of both Roberts and Scalia might turn out differently than one in which both Justices were included, but this is not grounds enough for overriding each Justice's requirement of impartiality. Regardless of how this might affect the Court's ruling in the Hamdan case, Antonin Scalia must recuse himself for prejudging the case.

Tags: Antonin Scalia, Supreme Court (all tags)

Comments

13 Comments

He won't

Scalia is an sanctimonius ass who is too assured of his own moral rectitude.

by molly bloom 2006-03-26 01:57PM | 0 recs
But if Scalia recuses himself ...

... the terrorists would have won!

In our system of government, what is supposed to stop a Justice from becoming corrupt? I see Scalia hunting with the VP, skipping out on the coronation of the new chief justice to give ideological talks in Florida. Pre-judging cases in the public on very emotional grounds (his child in the war, etc.). If he does not do the right thing in this case, it will seem like he believes he can do whatever he want.

My question is why can't he do whatever he wants, and if it does get extreme what method is there to stop it?

by Paranoid Humanoid 2006-03-26 02:04PM | 0 recs
Impeachment

is the only way.  Same procedure as for the president.  

by Valatan 2006-03-26 08:42PM | 0 recs
yep

Right now, we have a fair number of people pushing for impeachment of the President.  A good idea, IMHO, but more important is to start clearing out the judiciary.

We really need to give some thought to an organized impeachment movement as regards Antonin Scalia, to start.

by jonweasel 2006-03-27 04:30AM | 0 recs
Re: yep

Scalia is more important that GWB.  Bush'll be gone in 3 years.  Scalia probably has a shelf life of 20 years.

by Valatan 2006-03-27 06:14AM | 0 recs
Re: Scalia Recusal Required

It seems to me that Scalia has gotten angrier as time has gone on.  He's one of those conservatives who, the more his side wins, the angrier he gets.  

One thing that really infuriated me about that speech was that, in defending the decision to take Bush v. Gore, he said that the Florida Supreme Court's decision was "politically motivated."  That's the kind of statement that the wingnuts were making during the Schiavo case, the kind of thing O'Connor warned about: attacking the courts and making people think that they are just liberal political bodies that can't judge cases fairly.  A Supreme Court Justice attacking the judiciary is stomach-turning.

However, he does have a son serving, and he did seem worried rather than happy that "this war may never end."  That puts him two up on the garden-variety wingnut.  Still it's sad to see a good legal mind reduced to the level of a Regnery contributor.

by maestroanonymo 2006-03-26 02:23PM | 0 recs
For the love of pete

If anything, this current power structure was built around the premise of controlling the court to vote on issues such as this. There will no sitting out on this or any other issue deemed important by the right. They want every branch of American government under direct GOP control, and the Supreme Court is project Alpha.

by Citizen80203 2006-03-26 02:46PM | 0 recs
Re: Scalia Recusal Required

If Scalia does recuse himself, then only 7 Justices will be issuing a ruling; Roberts is definitely sitting this one out since he was on the circuit court that already ruled on the Hamdan case. If both Scalia and Roberts recuse themselves, could the Administration really win over a 4-3 majority?

by Bromius 2006-03-26 04:52PM | 0 recs
he won't recuse

But if Scalia did recuse,  I don't think the administration would win it 4-3. At best It would line up

Souter, Stevens, Ginsburg, and Breyer voting against the Administration,

Alito, Thomas and Kennedy for the Administration and I don't think Kennedy is a guaranteed vote.

With Scalia it would be a 4-4 tie and the lower court ruling (favoring the administration would stand). It would be a very ugly precedent and without much value. However, the next case would make it to the court and Roberts would not recuse himself and then you would have a 5-4 decision in favor or the administration, if Kennedy stays with the conservatives.  

All of this presupposes Kennedy would vote to uphold the previous ruling. I don't think that is guaranteed.

So you know what Scalia will do.  He will not recuse himself. If he has a 4-4 tie, he won't recuse himself to keep the issue from being settled until Roberts can weigh in. If Kennedy votes with the liberal block, then Scalia won't recuse himself, because his vote is not outcome determinative and he can write one of ranting egomanical dissents.

by molly bloom 2006-03-27 03:04AM | 0 recs
Re: Scalia Recusal Required

Scalia has done this before: prejudged cases.  It's blatant judicial misconduct, and it's grounds for impeachment.

by jonweasel 2006-03-26 05:13PM | 0 recs
Isikoff isn't that dilligent.

His character assasination of Farenheit 911 was a pretty blatant shill for the administration. He could barely contain his enthusiasm for the Hunting of the Bill Clinton as well.

The enemy of the enemy may be a friend, but not that good of a friend.

-C.

by neutron 2006-03-26 07:18PM | 0 recs
Re: Scalia Recusal Required
"As these things mount, a legitimate question could be asked about whether he is compromising the credibility of the court," said Stephen Gillers, a legal-ethics expert.
Sorry, Mr. Gillers - Fat Tony's credibility ship sailed on Dec. 12, 2000.
by Michael Sheridan 2006-03-27 04:06AM | 0 recs
Re: Scalia Recusal Required

By the way, Freiburg's in Germany.

by umcpgreg 2006-03-27 09:03AM | 0 recs

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