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Why the Govt Can't Use Social Media to Do Its Dirty Work

September 29, 2022

Focus Area:

Due Process Violations

The due process of law guarantees a right to be held to account only through the processes of an impartial court—something administrative tribunals violate every day.

Due Process Violations

Scope of Authority / Nondelegation

The structure of the Constitution allows only Congress to legislate, only the Executive to enforce laws, and only the Judiciary to decide cases. But the Administrative State evades the Constitution’s avenues of governance when executive agencies issue regulations without statutory authorization from Congress.

Scope of Authority / Nondelegation

Administrative Speech Controls

The Administrative State tries to squelch speech, especially through licensing, speech bans, and speech mandates. Licensing requires one to get the government’s permission prior to speaking. Nothing was more clearly forbidden by the First Amendment than prior restraints on speech, but such controls are now commonplace.

Administrative Speech Controls

NCLA joined the Missouri and Louisiana attorneys general in suing President Biden, Anthony Fauci, and HHS for their role in government-sponsored censorship. Discovery in State of Missouri ex rel. Schmitt, et al. v. Biden, et al. revealed just how much of Big Tech censorship is compelled or coerced by government actors behind the scenes—from the FBI to the White House, including public health autocrats like Fauci. This collusion between private companies and the government rises to the level of state action and poses a danger to free speech and the future of scientific inquiry.

NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel John Vecchione moderates a panel discussion with Jenin Younes, Litigation Counsel, who has led NCLA’s high-impact cases against government abuse during the pandemic; Mark Changizi, cognitive theoretical scientist and NCLA client, whose Twitter account was censored at the behest of bureaucrats at HHS; and Jill Hines, Co-Director of Health Freedom Louisiana, whose two social media accounts have experienced extensive censorship due to her Covid-19 viewpoints.

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Why the Govt Can't Use Social Media to Do Its Dirty Work

NCLA joined the Missouri and Louisiana attorneys general in suing President Biden, Anthony Fauci, and HHS for their role in government-sponsored censorship. Discovery in State of Missouri ex rel. Schmitt, et al. v. Biden, et al. revealed just how much of Big Tech censorship is compelled or coerced by government actors behind the scenes—from the FBI to the White House, including public health autocrats like Fauci. This collusion between private companies and the government rises to the level of state action and poses a danger to free speech and the future of scientific inquiry.

NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel John Vecchione moderates a panel discussion with Jenin Younes, Litigation Counsel, who has led NCLA’s high-impact cases against government abuse during the pandemic; Mark Changizi, cognitive theoretical scientist and NCLA client, whose Twitter account was censored at the behest of bureaucrats at HHS; and Jill Hines, Co-Director of Health Freedom Louisiana, whose two social media accounts have experienced extensive censorship due to her Covid-19 viewpoints.

SCOTUS Has 'Major Questions' About 'Pen & Phone' Lawmaking

August 10, 2022

Focus Area:

Unreasonable Searches

The Fourth Amendment forbids warrantless searches and seizures of information, yet the Administrative State violates this right to privacy through administrative subpoenas and warrants, automated information collection devices, civil investigative demands, and “voluntary” requests for information.

Unreasonable Searches

In a blockbuster 6-3 decision on June 30, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected the Environmental Protection Agency’s claim of sweeping regulatory authority under the Clean Air Act in the case West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency. Invoking the “major questions doctrine,” the high court stated that EPA could not “point to ‘clear congressional authorization’” to devise carbon emissions limits that would shut down many power plants and reconfigure the entire industry.

NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth moderates the discussion with NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Rich Samp, who co-authored NCLA’s amicus brief, and Jonathan Brightbill, of Winston & Strawn, who helped draft the repeal of the Obama-era rule at issue and then argued that portion of the case in the DC Circuit.

Learn what we can do to stop the greatest threat to civil liberties—the Administrative State.

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SCOTUS Has 'Major Questions' About 'Pen & Phone' Lawmaking

In a blockbuster 6-3 decision on June 30, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected the Environmental Protection Agency’s claim of sweeping regulatory authority under the Clean Air Act in the case West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency. Invoking the “major questions doctrine,” the high court stated that EPA could not “point to ‘clear congressional authorization’” to devise carbon emissions limits that would shut down many power plants and reconfigure the entire industry.

NCLA President and General Counsel Mark Chenoweth moderates the discussion with NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Rich Samp, who co-authored NCLA’s amicus brief, and Jonathan Brightbill, of Winston & Strawn, who helped draft the repeal of the Obama-era rule at issue and then argued that portion of the case in the DC Circuit.

Learn what we can do to stop the greatest threat to civil liberties—the Administrative State.

Why Is SCOTUS Putting Off Chevron Deference Cases?

July 27, 2022

Focus Area:

Scope of Authority / Nondelegation

The structure of the Constitution allows only Congress to legislate, only the Executive to enforce laws, and only the Judiciary to decide cases. But the Administrative State evades the Constitution’s avenues of governance when executive agencies issue regulations without statutory authorization from Congress.

Scope of Authority / Nondelegation

Despite making SCOTUSblog’s “Petitions We’re Watching” on multiple occasions this term, the U.S. Supreme Court failed to act on three different cert petitions in which NCLA asks to reconsider Chevron deference.

Our expert panelists, NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Rich Samp and renowned appellate litigators Roman Martinez from Latham & Watkins and John Tienken from Cooper & Kirk, discuss the curious fate of Chevron deference pending these three cert petitions.

Learn what we can do to stop the greatest threat to civil liberties—the Administrative State.

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Why Is SCOTUS Putting Off Chevron Deference Cases?

Despite making SCOTUSblog’s “Petitions We’re Watching” on multiple occasions this term, the U.S. Supreme Court failed to act on three different cert petitions in which NCLA asks to reconsider Chevron deference.

Our expert panelists, NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Rich Samp and renowned appellate litigators Roman Martinez from Latham & Watkins and John Tienken from Cooper & Kirk, discuss the curious fate of Chevron deference pending these three cert petitions.

Learn what we can do to stop the greatest threat to civil liberties—the Administrative State.

An Insider Tells All About the Administrative State

March 30, 2022

NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Harriet Hageman sits down with former Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt to discuss the many ways that powerful federal and state agencies ignore the Constitution and violate our civil liberties.

He reveals how runaway regulators routinely end-run the Administrative Procedure Act using their favorite tools—judicial deference, guidance, and intentional ambiguity—to perpetuate a one-way ratchet leading to more and more abusive regulation.

Learn what we can do to stop the greatest threat to civil liberties—the Administrative State.

View Description

An Insider Tells All About the Administrative State

NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Harriet Hageman sits down with former Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt to discuss the many ways that powerful federal and state agencies ignore the Constitution and violate our civil liberties.

He reveals how runaway regulators routinely end-run the Administrative Procedure Act using their favorite tools—judicial deference, guidance, and intentional ambiguity—to perpetuate a one-way ratchet leading to more and more abusive regulation.

Learn what we can do to stop the greatest threat to civil liberties—the Administrative State.

When Bureaucrats Won't Let Doctors Practice Medicine

March 2, 2022

Focus Area:

Due Process Violations

The due process of law guarantees a right to be held to account only through the processes of an impartial court—something administrative tribunals violate every day.

Due Process Violations

Arbitrary government mandates in response to the COVID-19 pandemic have deprived millions of patients across the country of medical care.

Watch our recent virtual Lunch & Law with NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Brian Rosner, NCLA Litigation Counsel Jenin Younes, and our client, Dr. Stephen Skoly, a top maxillofacial surgeon in Rhode Island, discussing his case against the state for arbitrarily shutting down his practice.

NCLA has filed a lawsuit on behalf of Dr. Skoly challenging Rhode Island’s irrational policies that violate the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. Dr. Skoly made the decision not to receive a COVID-19 vaccination due to the uncertainty regarding the risks involved because of a medical condition. He retains antibodies after recovering from a previous COVID-19 infection.

Because of his naturally acquired immunity, any risk his presence poses to a vulnerable patient is, at worst, identical to the risk posed by a vaccinated physician. Dr. Skoly is simply asking the State to treat him the same as other health care workers being granted medical or religious exemptions.

Why won’t the Rhode Island Health Department grant an exemption to a doctor with demonstrated natural immunity and an elevated risk of complications from vaccination? Can such a mandate pass constitutional scrutiny? (Spoiler alert: It can’t!)

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When Bureaucrats Won't Let Doctors Practice Medicine

Arbitrary government mandates in response to the COVID-19 pandemic have deprived millions of patients across the country of medical care.

Watch our recent virtual Lunch & Law with NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel Brian Rosner, NCLA Litigation Counsel Jenin Younes, and our client, Dr. Stephen Skoly, a top maxillofacial surgeon in Rhode Island, discussing his case against the state for arbitrarily shutting down his practice.

NCLA has filed a lawsuit on behalf of Dr. Skoly challenging Rhode Island’s irrational policies that violate the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. Dr. Skoly made the decision not to receive a COVID-19 vaccination due to the uncertainty regarding the risks involved because of a medical condition. He retains antibodies after recovering from a previous COVID-19 infection.

Because of his naturally acquired immunity, any risk his presence poses to a vulnerable patient is, at worst, identical to the risk posed by a vaccinated physician. Dr. Skoly is simply asking the State to treat him the same as other health care workers being granted medical or religious exemptions.

Why won’t the Rhode Island Health Department grant an exemption to a doctor with demonstrated natural immunity and an elevated risk of complications from vaccination? Can such a mandate pass constitutional scrutiny? (Spoiler alert: It can’t!)

Fighting Back Against Runaway Regulators: A Story of Relentless Persistence

January 26, 2022

Focus Area:

Judicial Deference

Deference doctrines require judges to defer to an administrative agency’s fact finding, or its interpretation of statutes and regulations. Thus, judges surrender their independent judgment and, where the government is a party, must exhibit systematic bias in the government’s favor, which denies due process of law to the other litigant.

Judicial Deference

Due Process Violations

The due process of law guarantees a right to be held to account only through the processes of an impartial court—something administrative tribunals violate every day.

Due Process Violations

Industry regulating agencies could be impacting your next seafood feast!

The Department of Commerce and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are forcing Atlantic herring fishermen to fund government-mandated monitors at sea.

NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel John Vecchione moderates the discussion about the rule being challenged by NCLA in Relentless Inc., et al. v. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, et al., with Meghan Lapp, Fisheries Liaison & General Manager for our client, Seafreeze, Ltd.

NCLA represents small businesses of high-capacity freezer trawlers incorporated in Rhode Island and Massachusetts that have commercially fished Atlantic herring as well as Loligo and Illex squids, butterfish, and Atlantic Mackerel for more than thirty years.

The rule penalizes NCLA’s clients unfairly by making them pay for herring monitors even when fishing for other catches. It can cost anywhere from $750 to $850 a day to have onboard monitoring people. If this program is implemented, the fishermen won’t be making any money.

They’ll be fishing for nothing. The at-sea monitor mandate is unlawfully “industry-funded.” These agencies do not have statutory authority from Congress to order additional industry funding for a program that the agencies think is underfunded, but they have issued a rule that threatens the livelihoods of fishermen regardless.

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Fighting Back Against Runaway Regulators: A Story of Relentless Persistence

Industry regulating agencies could be impacting your next seafood feast!

The Department of Commerce and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are forcing Atlantic herring fishermen to fund government-mandated monitors at sea.

NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel John Vecchione moderates the discussion about the rule being challenged by NCLA in Relentless Inc., et al. v. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, et al., with Meghan Lapp, Fisheries Liaison & General Manager for our client, Seafreeze, Ltd.

NCLA represents small businesses of high-capacity freezer trawlers incorporated in Rhode Island and Massachusetts that have commercially fished Atlantic herring as well as Loligo and Illex squids, butterfish, and Atlantic Mackerel for more than thirty years.

The rule penalizes NCLA’s clients unfairly by making them pay for herring monitors even when fishing for other catches. It can cost anywhere from $750 to $850 a day to have onboard monitoring people. If this program is implemented, the fishermen won’t be making any money.

They’ll be fishing for nothing. The at-sea monitor mandate is unlawfully “industry-funded.” These agencies do not have statutory authority from Congress to order additional industry funding for a program that the agencies think is underfunded, but they have issued a rule that threatens the livelihoods of fishermen regardless.