What the Heck
USMC Vet
- Joined
- May 19, 2005
- Messages
- 3,322
Yes she does. And in the first page of those 4, she states the 3 ingrediants needed to establish standing. In the 2nd page, she establishes firmly that this case HAS no standing regarding the Patriot Act, although she doesn't see it that way. It is this that will ensure her ruling is overturned in a higher court if it goes forward, at least in my opinion. This is where I think she falls short:The judge spends 4 pages of her ruling on standing. See pages 21-24, the section titled "Standing". She explains much better than I do why the defendant has standing in the case. Which part of the judges explanation do you disagree with?
1. The injury in fact was not caused by the Patriot Act but by the misuse of the Patriot Act.
2. There is a casual connection between the governments conduct and the injury, so this one would apply.
3. It is not likely, it is not even speculative that the injury will be redressed by her declaring those points of the Patriot Act unconstitutional. Her action affects the case in no way whatsoever.
By her own definitions (points 1 and 3), she takes this case out of standing for the Patriot Act. That is the point where all of her logic fails. She can quote all the cases she wants, but if she can't meet the legal requirements (as presented by her) then how can she have standing? Even if her ruling was to convince a higher authority on point 3, point 1 is still staring them right in the face. Again, the way she rules on this, she could establish standing with ANY law.
By the way, thank you for arguing the facts of the case with me instead of our different political perspectives.
