Here is more information on the erosion of "equal protection"
law, courtesy of Phil Agre.  The link expires on December 30.
What this article does not mention is the role of the Center
for Individual Rights (www.cir-usa.org), large corporations
backing CIR, and Bush attorney Ted Olson in waging this legal
war against claims of race and gender bias.
-rich cowan

P.S. see also: www.agitate.net/unequalprotection.pdf, which is a
draft spreadsheet documenting the hypocritical use of the 14th
amendment.  Try the same link with ".xls" for the source.



http://www.latimes.com/print/20001216/t000119953.html


High Court in Awkward Spot Over Equal Protection Ruling

By DAVID G. SAVAGE, HENRY WEINSTEIN, Times Staff Writers
Saturday, December 16, 2000

      WASHINGTON--Over the last 15 years, the Supreme Court
under Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist has made it
nearly impossible to win constitutional claims of unequal treatment.
      To succeed, the court has ruled, claimants must prove
that government officials were biased and engaged in blatant
discrimination. This high threshold is rarely crossed.
      That is why many legal experts were taken aback this
week when the high court relied on the equal protection clause
to stop the manual recount of presidential ballots in Florida.
      No one had alleged that the judges who would supervise
the recounts were motivated by discriminatory bias.
      Nonetheless, the claim proved to be a winner for lawyers
representing Texas Gov. George W. Bush.
      "We find a violation of the equal protection clause,"
the conservative majority said in Bush vs. Gore, because the
recount process lacked the "procedural safeguards" to assure
that counties would not treat unread ballots differently.
      Until this week the court had consistently turned away
equal protection claims, even when confronted with strong
allegations of racial bias.
      When defense lawyers challenged Georgia's death-penalty
system as racially biased, they cited studies showing that
murders involving whites were 11 times more likely to result
in a death sentence than murders of blacks.
      But on a 5-4 vote, the court in 1987 rejected that claim,
ruling that the statistics did not prove that the Georgia
officials were biased.

Rehnquist Rejects Drug Case Study
      Four years ago, public defenders in Los Angeles alleged
a pattern of bias in federal drug prosecutions. They said that
during one year every person charged with a federal crack
cocaine offense was black. A federal judge then ordered a
study of drug cases in the U.S. attorney's office and cleared
the way for the defense lawyers to question prosecutors.
      But Rehnquist, speaking for the high court, overturned
that order and quashed the study based on what he called
"ordinary equal protection standards. . . . The claimant must
demonstrate that the federal prosecutorial policy had a
discriminatory effect and was motivated by a discriminatory purpose."
      Since the public defenders had no proof in advance that
U.S. attorneys in Los Angeles were biased, they were not
entitled to the study, he said.
      The gap between the court's usual approach and this week's
ruling has caused both debate and some despair among
legal scholars.
      University of Chicago law professor Cass Sunstein, who
considers himself an admirer of the Rehnquist court, said that
his faith in the justices has been shaken.
      "The good thing you can say about this case is that it
settled things in the least messy way. But as a matter of law it is a
real embarrassment. It's the worst moment for the court, at
least since Roe," Sunstein said, referring to the 1973 ruling in
Roe vs. Wade that upheld the right to abortion.
      "The equal protection holding is a bolt out of the blue.
There is no precedent for it and there's no support in history for
this type of ruling," Sunstein said. "And for it to come now in
a 5-4 decision, it's just very hard to explain."
      University of Virginia law professor A. E. Dick Howard
also said that he finds the ruling difficult to explain on legal
grounds.
      "This is a remarkable use of the equal protection clause.
It is not consistent with anything they have done in the past 25
years," Howard said. "No one even claimed there was intentional
discrimination here."

Clause Dates Back to the Civil War
      The guarantee of equal protection of the laws was added
to the Constitution after the Civil War to protect black
Americans from discrimination in the South.
      During the late 19th century, the Supreme Court nearly
erased this clause from the Constitution with the "separate but
equal" doctrine that permitted rigidly racist practices.
      The court revived the equal protection guarantee in 1954
with the Brown vs. Board of Education ruling that struck
down official segregation.
      The closest precedents for Tuesday's ruling came in
reapportionment cases of the early 1960s. Then, the court
confronted a situation in which rural counties had far more
power in many state legislatures than their populations would
justify. For example, a rural county with 50,000 residents might
have the same one vote in the state Senate as a city of
500,000.
      Citing the right to vote and the equal protection clause,
the court of Chief Justice Earl Warren said that voters were
entitled to roughly equal representation. One such ruling,
Reynolds vs. Sims in 1964, was cited in Tuesday's opinion.
      UC Berkeley law professor John Yoo applauded the court's
Bush vs. Gore ruling and said that the equal protection
analysis "followed the logic of one person, one vote. This case
took that logic and extended it to what the states do after
the vote," said Yoo, a former law clerk for Justice Clarence Thomas.
      In their dissenting opinions, two of the liberal
justices--David H. Souter and Stephen G. Breyer--said they agreed that
the Florida recount required "uniform standards" for deciding
what is a legal ballot. It would not do to have "dimpled"
ballots counted in one place but not in another, they said.
      But the two justices acknowledged that an even wider
disparity results from different voting systems. The older
punch-card tabulators used in South Florida are far more likely
to miss legal votes than the optical scanners used
elsewhere in the state.
      These "voters already arrive at the polls with an unequal
chance that their votes will be counted," Breyer said in his
dissent.
      Until now, this difference in vote counting has not been
seen as an equal protection violation. And academics who
closely study the court and voting rights said they were uncertain
whether Tuesday's decision says something important
about equal protection or merely this year's election.
      The conservative majority said that its constitutional ruling
was "limited to the present circumstances, for the problem of
equal protection in election processes generally presents many
complexities."
      J. Clark Kelso, a professor at the McGeorge Law School in
Sacramento, said that the ruling may have little effect on
the law, despite its enormous effect this week.
      The equal protection analysis was "extremely underdeveloped"
in the opinion, said Kelso, who clerked for Justice
Anthony M. Kennedy when he was a federal judge. "Scholars are
scratching their heads [because] the court was trying to
say as little as it could to justify the opinion. It probably
won't have much effect on the law other than in a case involving a
manual recount of punch-card ballots in a presidential election."
      But because the unsigned majority opinion speaks of the
"fundamental rights of each voter," some say it might prove
significant in the future.
      It "certainly opens up a new avenue of litigation about
voting--or at least it potentially does," said Harvard University
law professor Randall Kennedy, who clerked for the late Justice
Thurgood Marshall. "That is very ironic in that the
razor-thin-margin majority is mainly constituted by people who
in other areas have shown a quite remarkable indifference
to equal protection claims."
      In the past, claims of unequal treatment have been
routinely rejected by the Rehnquist court.
      For example, the justices have refused to hear
constitutional challenges to federal drug laws, even though the
punishment for those caught with crack cocaine is 100 times
greater than for those caught with the same amount of
powder cocaine.
      In 1992, a new homeowner in Los Angeles brought an equal
protection challenge to California's system of unequal
property taxes.
      Thanks to Proposition 13, which froze property values
for existing homeowners, new buyers often found themselves
paying taxes five or 10 times higher than their neighbors,
even when their homes were identical. But the high court rejected
the claim and said that states "have a large leeway" in setting
tax rules.

Gay Bias Upheld in Boy Scout Case
      The Rehnquist court also has turned away equal protection
claims from gays and lesbians who have been discharged
from the military because of their sexual orientation.
      Earlier this year, the court intervened when state judges
in New Jersey ruled that the Boy Scouts had violated state
antidiscrimination law by kicking out a Scout leader who said
he was gay. The court, on a 5-4 vote, said that the Scouts
have a 1st Amendment right to exclude gays. The majority was the
same as in Tuesday's ruling in Bush vs. Gore, with
Rehnquist joined by Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, Antonin Scalia,
Kennedy and Thomas.
      Before this year, Scalia has insisted that the court not
use the equal protection clause to second-guess the states.
      In 1996, the court struck down a Colorado anti-gay rights
law on a 6-3 vote. In a thunderous dissent, Scalia accused
his colleagues of an "act not of judicial judgment but of
political will." The Constitution's equal protection clause does not
warrant "the holding that homosexuality cannot be singled out
for disfavorable treatment," Scalia said in a dissent joined by
Rehnquist and Thomas.
      There is one major exception to the trend of not invoking
the equal protection clause. In a series of cases brought by
whites challenging affirmative action, the Rehnquist court has
intervened to strike down state laws that benefit minorities.
      When North Carolina lawmakers redrew their congressional
districts in the early 1990s, they created two of 12 with
black majorities. They noted that while nearly 1 in 4 North
Carolinians is black, the state had not sent an African
American to Congress in the 20th century.
      But on a 5-4 vote, the court struck down these districts
as "racial gerrymandering" that violated the equal protection
clause of the Constitution.
      The court also struck down federal contracting laws that
set aside some work for minority-owned firms. The majority
consisted of Rehnquist, O'Connor, Scalia, Kennedy and Thomas.
      Law professor Richard Lazarus, who runs Georgetown
University's Supreme Court Institute, called Tuesday's Bush
vs. Gore ruling "unsettling." The majority's legal position
"seemed antithetical to most of their jurisprudence in the equal
protection area," he said.
      Added USC law professor Erwin Chemerinsky: "The Rehnquist
court almost never uses equal protection
jurisprudence except in striking down affirmative action programs.
I can't think of a single instance where Scalia or
Thomas has found discrimination against a racial minority or
women or the aged or the disabled to be unconstitutional."

Copyright 2000 Los Angeles Times

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