Plano ISD wins Candy Cane Case

Candy Cane photo by Trevor Bradley

Robert Wilonsky at Unfair Park reports that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has ruled in favor of Plano ISD in the candy cane case I first reported back in 2003.

It should be noted that Plano ISD changed it policy in 2005 after this case began. The court found no issues with the new policy. According to Wilonsky…

In 2005, after the suit was filed, the district adopted a new policy concerning the distribution of materials: 30 minutes before and after school; during any of the three annual parties; during recess; and, yes, during school hours, “but only passively at designated tables,” as the court put it. The district said, Look, passing out anything during school hours is disruptive, K? To which the court responded this week by declaring the 2005 policy good and constitutional.

I wish the current policy was less restrictive, but it does give students the ability to distribute materials which the previous policy did not.

The courts full opinion (PDF) is available as is Plano’s Student/Parent Policy Guide (PDF).

Flickr image: Trevor Bradley

Hold Patrick Fitzgerald Accountable

So says the editorial Fitzgerald’s Cover-Up: Its time to hold the special prosecutor accountable at OpinionJournal today.

For a prosecutor who claims to be a truth-seeker, Patrick Fitzgerald sure can be secretive. Even now that the Scooter Libby trial is over and his “leak” investigation is all but closed, the unaccountable special counsel wants to keep his arguments for creating a Constitutional showdown over reporters and their sources under lock and key.

Mr. Fitzgerald is fighting release of the affidavits he filed with the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals to justify compelling two reporters to testify about their conversations with Mr. Libby, and to throw one of them in jail for 85 days until she did so. Also under court seal are eight pages of a redacted 2005 D.C. Circuit opinion by Judge David Tatel that explained the courts decision to support Mr. Fitzgeralds pursuit of the reporters.

In January, Dow Jones–which publishes this newspaper–and the Associated Press requested that the D.C. Circuit release this material now that the case is wrapped up. By demanding that the reporters betray their sources, Mr. Fitzgerald caused a legal collision that went all the way to the Supreme Court. The public, the press and other prosecutors all have what the Dow Jones-AP motion calls “an undeniable and overwhelming public interest” in knowing the arguments and information that Mr. Fitzgerald made to the court.

His demand and the D.C. Circuit ruling set a precedent that may well encourage other prosecutors to force journalists to betray their sources too. His effort also appeared, at least to us, to violate long-standing Justice Department guidelines concerning such pursuit of journalists. His pursuit is all the more puzzling in retrospect because we now know that Mr. Fitzgerald already knew–at the time he was demanding that the reporters betray their sources–that the real leaker was Richard Armitage, not Mr. Libby.

The two reporters he subpoenaed and their lawyers did not know this at the time, however, and if they had it might have changed their arguments or decisions. At a minimum, prosecutors and reporters deserve to know what evidence the D.C. Circuit found so compelling so we can all avoid such future collisions. Congress also has an interest now that it is contemplating a “shield law” to protect media sources.

In his reply to the DJ-AP motion, Mr. Fitzgerald tries to hide behind rule 6e of grand jury secrecy. He claims the integrity of grand juries will be compromised by the release. But much of the material was already disclosed during the Libby trial, if not leaked earlier. And the far larger risk to grand jury integrity would be if Mr. Fitzgerald misled the courts about what he knew and when he knew it in order to coerce the two reporters to testify.

As a “special counsel” appointed by his good friend and former Deputy Attorney General James Comey, Mr. Fitzgerald operated essentially without Justice Department supervision. He once said himself that he “serve[d] as the functional equivalent of the Attorney General.” Now he wants the D.C. Circuit to give him a free pass as well.

The Dow Jones-AP request is about holding Mr. Fitzgerald accountable for what he told the courts. If it is the same as what he told the public, then the prosecutor should have nothing to fear from the release of the affidavits or Judge Tatels redacted opinion.

Amen. Amen. While we hold his feet to the fire regarding Scooter Libby, we must really start looking to his failures as they relate to September 11. Peter Lance‘s Triple Cross details Fitzgerald’s ineptitude in great detail.

100 juiced baseball players hide in fear

Drudge linked-to and ESPN posted an AP wire article entitled Court: Feds may use drug testing data from 2003

The names and urine samples of about 100 Major League Baseball players who tested positive for performance enhancing drugs three years ago can be used by government investigators in their probe of steroids in sports, a federal appeals court ruled Wednesday.

The Feds hope that Bonds name is on the list, but the real question is about the other 99 players. Who are they? Clemens and Pettitte? Palmeiro? Sosa? The legacy of those 100 will be tarnished forever when the names come out.

I really want Clemens to be steroid free, but who knows in this day and age. Our heroes often don’t look so heroic when you get to the end of the story anymore.