Crocker Comments on Ohio Supreme Court’s Formation of Committee to Study Ohio Death Penalty Law

Professor Phyllis Crocker, who served C|M|LAW as Interim Dean for the past 18 months, has become quickly reengaged in her discipline.  Crocker was recently quoted in an AP news article praising Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor’s announcement that she will be forming a committee to  review the state’s death penalty law.  O’Connor made clear in her announcement that the committee will not debate the law itself, which was enacted 30 years ago.  Instead, it will be charged with making sure the current system is administered fairly, efficiently and in the most “judicious manner possible.”   O’Connor pledged to convene a 20-member committee with broad experience on this subject to produce a fair, impartial, and balanced analysis. The committee will consist of judges, prosecuting attorneys, criminal defense lawyers, lawmakers and academic experts.  It will also be charged with reviewing a 2007 ABA-sponsored comprehensive study of Ohio’s death penalty statute.  Professor Crocker was well suited to comment on this announcement.  She served as Chair of the 10-person committee that produced the ABA study of Ohio’s death penalty law in 2007.  Crocker was pleased with O’Connor’s announcement, saying “[a] thorough examination of our state’s death penalty system was one of the goals of the 2007 ABA Death Penalty Report.”

To read the full story, click here: http://www.chron.com/news/article/Ohio-s-top-judge-calls-for-death-penalty-review-2161796.php

Green Invited to Join Cleveland Employment Inns of Court

Professor Matthew Green has been invited to join the Cleveland Employment Inns of Court.  The Cleveland Employment Inns of Court was formed in 2005 and is a Charter Member of the American Inns of Court and was organized to enhance the professional and ethical quality of legal practice.  The Inn holds educational programs and is a forum for discussion of its discipline.

Sterio Speaking at International Law in Crisis Conference

Professor Milena Sterio will be speaking today at the International Law in Crisis Conference at Case Law School.  The conference is designed to examine both the application of international law in times of crisis and whether these events are pushing international law itself to the brink of crisis, with panels examining developments in Northern Africa and the Middle East, climate change, international economic law, universal jurisdiction, piracy, and the war on terrorism.  Professor Sterio will be appearing from 11:15 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.  You can watch the proceedings live at:  http://law.case.edu/centers/cox/webcast.asp?dt=20110909

Witmer-Rich Publishes Interrogation and the Roberts Court in the Florida Law Review

Professor Jonathan Witmer-Rich

Professor Jonathan Witmer-Rich recently published “Interrogation and the Roberts Court” in the top-50 ranked Florida Law Review.  In this work, he argues that 5 cases decided under the Roberts court are reshaping and limiting the rules for the interrogation of suspects by the police.  In particular, the Court is limiting the rules that would have been protective of suspects rights.  In Kansas v. Ventris, Montejo v. Louisiana, Florida v. Powell, Maryland v. Shatzer, and Berghuis v. Thompkins, the Roberts Court has created, but not yet articulated, a new principle of ‘fair play’ in interrogations.  Witmer-Rich explains that the Warren Court was moved by the idea that suspects under interrogation are, by their circumstances, under compelling pressures from which the Court must protect them.  To do this, the Warren Court created the rules in Miranda and Massiah and others.  In contrast, although it mentions concern in its opinions for the relative strength of position between the interrogator and suspect, the Roberts Court does not seem similarly influenced it.  Instead, it presupposes that each suspect understands and is protective of his or her own rights.

Witmer-Rich approaches his analysis of this assertion, that the Roberts Court has moved away from the suspect protective Warren Court position, by evaluating, independently, the Roberts Court’s cases on the 5th amendment and the 6th amendment.  In his section on the 5th amendment, Witmer-Rich studies three opinions–Powell, Thompkins, and Shatzer–and describes how each decision illustrates the Roberts Court’s movement towards a ‘fair play’ principle.  In his section on the 6th amendment, he does the same with respect to two additional cases, Montejo and Ventris.

Ultimately, Witmer-Rich decides that the Roberts Court’s ‘fair play’ rubric is not a fair and adequate principle for organizing constitutional interrogation doctrine.  He explains that the Roberts Court, in moving away from the Warren Court’s assumption that suspects need and are entitled to protection of their rights, towards the assumption that suspects are fully capable, autonomous, informed agents who can protect their own interests, takes an important step backward in terms of real fairness.  The Roberts Court’s ‘fair play’ concept is not fair at all and fails to protect the constitutional rights of suspects against self-incrimination and the guarantee of assistance of counsel in criminal cases.

Kowalski Interviewed on WKYC Channel 3 Regarding Firefighters’ Anti-Issue 2 TV Ad

Professor Ken Kowalski

Clinical Professor Ken Kowalski was interviewed yesterday, Tuesday, September 6, by Dick Russ of WKYC Channel 3 News.  Russ asked Kowalski whether the firefighters’ assertion in their ad, that SB5, if not repealed through Issue 2, would make it illegal for them to negotiate the proper number of firefighters to ensure public safety, was accurate.  In particular, the ad states”Issue 2 makes it illegal for [firefighters] to negotiate for enough firefighters to do the job. . . ” and “[f]ewer firefighters means slower response time and that can make the difference between life and death.”  Kowalski responded by saying “[SB5] does say the number of employees required to be on duty would be an inappropriate subject for collective bargaining,” and that he believes “it means neither side is permitted to bargain about that.”  When asked about the firefighters’ assertion that SB5 will lead to there being fewer firefighters to protect us, Kowalski says that is the firefighters’ professional opinion and not a matter of fact.

You can watch Dick Russ’ interview of Professor Kowalski, which he conducted on E.18th Street in front of C|M|LAW, at http://www.wkyc.com/news/article/205510/45/Truth-Test-Firefighters-anti-Issue-2-TV-ad

Listen to Dean Boise’s Appearance on WCPN’s The Sound of Ideas

Dean Craig Boise appeared on WCPN’s radio show ‘The Sound of Ideas’ on Monday, August 29th.   Along with the Dean Lawrence Mitchell from Case, Dean Boise discussed the many strengths of C|M|LAW, our faculty, and our graduates, emphasizing our interconnection with the Cleveland legal community and our growing national reach.  You can listen to the program at  http://www.ideastream.org/soi/entry/42077.

Dean Craig Boise to Speak on WCPN’s Sound of Ideas on Monday, August 29, at 9 a.m.

Dean Craig M. Boise, along with the new Dean at CWRU law school, Lawrence Mitchell, will appear on the Sound of Ideas radio show on Monday, August 29, at 9 a.m.  They will discuss changes in the legal profession, how law interfaces with our everyday lives, how we prepare law students for legal profession, the teaching of ethics, and other topics of interest to our community as well as the broader community.  You can tune in to 90.3 FM, or listen to the show via live streaming by clicking on the Listen Live link at http://www.ideastream.org/programs/live

 

 

Kowalski Agrees with Warren Buffett: The Rich Should Pay More Taxes

Clinical Professor Ken Kowalski published a letter to the editor in the Cleveland Plain Dealer on Tuesday, August 23rd, supporting Warren Buffett’s assertion that the rich should pay more taxes.  To read the letter, click here: http://blog.cleveland.com/letters/2011/08/warren_buffet_is_right_the_ric.html

Sagers Signs US Supreme Court Amicus Brief on Antitrust Matter

Professor Chris Sagers has signed an amicus brief submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court by a group of antitrust professors and scholars in Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.  In this brief, the professors argue that the ministerial exception does not and should not be expanded to protect professional associations of clergy from antitrust scrutiny.  They argue that a broadly or loosely defined ‘ministerial exception’ could allow clergy to form agreements that would otherwise be condemned under the Sherman Act.  In particular, the group is concerned that certain professional organizations of clergy organize their labor markets through restraints that, absent First Amendment projections, would violate the Sherman Act, and that the ‘ministerial exception’ was not intended to facilitate or immunize such actions.  They argue that the ministerial exception was intended to apply to hierarchical religious organizations to avoid government intrusion into matters regarding employment of their clergy.  It was not intended to apply to all matters of employment, such as the employment rules imposed by professional associations and those imposed by independent congregations.

To read the brief, click here:
https://www2.law.csuohio.edu/newsevents/images/HosannaTaborAmicus.pdf

Inniss Named Fellow of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique-New York University Memory Project

Professor Lolita Buckner Inniss

Professor Lolita Buckner Inniss has been named a fellow of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS-France)-New York University (NYU- U.S.) Memory Project.  In 2011-2012, she will participate in a research project on the topic of “Memory and Memorialization: Representing Trauma and War.”  Professor Inniss was selected for this project based on a portion of her larger project titled “The Princeton Fugitive Slave Case:  Jimmy the College Apple Man and Memories of Slavery.”  Her larger project is a legal history of slavery in New Jersey.  That project is framed around the life and fugitive slave trial of an escaped slave employed by Princeton University in the 1800s. In her work with CNRS-NYU, she will address, among other things, memories of the trial and of the state and federal laws under which the trial was conducted.

The Memory Project brings together academic and legal experts and researchers on memory in its historical, socio-cultural and neurological manifestations. The program cuts across a variety of disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, biological, and cognitive sciences.  One of the program’s chief goals is to create a formal, ongoing platform for exchanges across national, professional and disciplinary boundaries.

Professor Inniss’ participation in this program will include travel to France for a 1 to 2 month period between October and May this academic year.  Fellows from France will travel to New York for a similar period.