Separation of Powers: Scope of Executive Authority - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 45
About This Presentation
Title:

Separation of Powers: Scope of Executive Authority

Description:

Held for 4 years as enemy combatant before indicted. Executive Authority Claim. Detentions ... Did not have adequate statutory authority to create military ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:172
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 46
Provided by: cwsl
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Separation of Powers: Scope of Executive Authority


1
Separation of PowersScope of Executive
Authority
  • Part 1

2
Problem for Case Studies
  • If the United States wants to remain a world
    leader in this global society, what ethical
    standards must we set for our political
    representatives?
  • Context Executive authority to act independent
    of other branches.

3
Bill of Rights-First 10 Amendments
4
Fourth Amendment
  • The right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
    unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
    violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
    probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation,
    and particularly describing the place to be
    searched, and the person or things to be seized.

5
Requirements for a Search
  • Probable cause and warrant from a neutral
    impartial magistrate judge.
  • Applies to places where a person has a
    reasonable expectation of privacy
  • N/A to email public places, Workplace where
    notice.
  • Exclude evidence of illegal searches.
  • Civil penalties

6
Fifth Amendment
  • Reads in part,
  • No person shall be held to answer for a
    capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on
    presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except
    in cases arising in the landor in the Militia,
    when in actual service in time of War or public
    danger nor shall any person be subject for the
    same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life
    or limb nor shall be compelled in any criminal
    case to be a witness against himself, nor be
    deprived of life, liberty, or property, without
    due process of law nor shall private property be
    taken for public use, without just compensation.

7
Due Process Requirements
  • Taken into custody Miranda Rights 1)remain
    silent 2) statements made can be used against
    you 3) right to counsel, 4) if cant afford,
    right to appointed.
  • Presented before a court for statement of
    charges, right to trial, right to counsel, right
    to confront witnesses.
  • Failure gives rise to Writ of Habeas Corpus or
    charges dismissed for unlawful detention.

8
Fourteenth Amendment
  • Extends Bill of Rights to state action
  • All persons born or naturalized are US
    citizens and citizens of the state where they
    reside. No state shall make or enforce any law
    which shall abridge the privileges or immunities
    of citizens', or deprive any person of life,
    liberty, or property, without due process of law
    nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction
    the equal protection of the laws.

9
Executive Power
  • Defined by Art II U.S. Constitution
  • Independent Powers Commander in Chief-Reporting
    by executive Departments Pardons
  • Concurrent Powers Subject to congressional
    authority to appoint public officials and
    inferior officers
  • Delegated Powers As authorized by Congress

10
Domestic vs Foreign Policy
  • Domestic Policy
  • Executive Authority more restricted subject to
    checks balances.
  • Limited by Constitution Congress.
  • Presumptive Judicial review
  • Foreign Policy
  • Executive Authority more broadly construed
    greater deference
  • Limited judicial review arguably more
    independent authority.

11
Broad Interpretation of Executive Power
12
Branch System-Check Balance

13
Abuse of Executive Authority?

14
Abuse of Executive Authority?

15
Abuse of Executive Authority?
16
Remedies for Abuse of Executive Authority
  • Legal Remedies
  • Judicial Review of decisions
  • Congressional action to restrict
  • Impeachment
  • Elect someone else
  • Change in party representation
  • Criminal actions where violation of law
  • Censure Sanctions
  • Practical Effect
  • Remedial vs. preventive
  • Burden on victims or special interests to
    challenge
  • Public opinion makes it clear lack of tolerance
    and
  • Protracted legal process for legal remedies gives
    Gov. time to achieve goal i.e., detention,
    intelligence, war.

17
Standards for Ethical Conduct
  • What requirements of a branch system of checks
    balances must be upheld?

18
Standards for Ethical Conduct
  • What requirements of a branch system of checks
    balances must be upheld?
  • Preserve an independent judicial branch.
  • Preserve two-party political system in
    government.
  • Ensure a persons vote is counted.

19
Hon. John Houston
  • U.S. Dist. Court for Southern District (Bush
    appointee 03)
  • Former U.S. Magistrate Judge, S.D.
  • Retired Lieutenant Colonel in Army
  • Federal Prosecutor
  • Chief, Asset Forfeiture Division
  • Legal Instructor, Dept. of Justice

20
Judicial Independence Discretion
  • 1/22/07 SCt. strikes down CA sentencing law that
    gave judges discretion to increase sentences. Ct.
    said judge has no discretion. Jury must find the
    facts beyond a reasonable doubt, to justify
    stiffer sentence.
  • CA law tell judges to sentence inmates to middle
    of 3 factors, unless factors exist that justify
    shorter or longer prison term.
  • State has to figure out how to effect by
    resentencing thousands of inmates.

21
Scope of Decision
  • During 2005, just under a 250K felony
    convictions in the state in 2005.
  • Roughly 15 percent of cases involving just one
    felony count result in sentences in which a
    judge, not a jury, finds an aggravating factor to
    justify the additional punishment.
  • Not affect most felony convictions.

22
Exercise of Constitutional Rights in Schools
  • Part 2

23
Executive State School
24
Case Study First Amendment in Schools
  • The School of X recently suspended  Outspoken,
     who wore a teeshirt that said,  "Be Ashamed, Our
    School Has Embraced That Which God Has Condemned"
    emblazoned on one side, and "Homosexuality Is a
    Sin. Romans 127" on the other.
  • Outspoken wore the teeshirt to protest a
     school-sponsored Day of Silence devoted to
    opposing what the school officials deemed
    intolerance against gay, lesbian, and transgender
    teenagers.  
  • Outspoken was told to remove the teeshirt and
    subsequently was suspended from school for
    violating state law and school policy condemning
    hate speech toward homosexuals. Outspoken sued
    and lost.
  • The schools custodial authority  was upheld,
    meaning  that school officials act as custodial
    parents in the school setting and may exercise
    discretion in conducting searches and seizures,
    and censoring certain types of speech, including
    wearing certain colors, or making statements.   

25
Task
  • In response, the school authority has agreed to
    sponsor a program that will allow students to
    present alternative viewpoints.  
  • You will represent a group of parents, school
    officials, and students in developing the
    guidelines for that program to ensure that
    persons can voice their viewpoint, but balance
    the schools need to maintain order, comply with
    state law, and protect the civil rights of all of
    its students.

26
Problem
  • Develop guidelines for the program to ensure
    that
  • Permits persons to voice their viewpoint
  • Maintain law and order
  • Does not violate school policy (if applicable)
    and state law banning hate speech and
  • Protects the civil rights of all of its students.

27
What is Hate Speech?
  • Hate speech is a controversial term for speech
    intended to degrade, intimidate, or incite
    violence or prejudicial action against a person
    or group of people based on their race, gender,
    age, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual
    orientation, gender identity, disability,
    language ability, moral or political views,
    socioeconomic class, occupation and appearance
    (such as height and weight).

28
Facts
  • Not all speech is protected by the US
    Constitution and/or state constitutions.
  • Hate crime is fastest growing violent crime in
    California.
  • Suicide is the 3rd leading cause of death for
    youths 15-24 years.
  • Violence between students teachers in schools
    is on the rise.
  • Many schools in D.C. have three police officers
    assigned to it Metal detectors and X-ray
    machines and eight Hawk One security guards
    with walkie-talkies roam in pairs.

29
Facts
  • School environments for many school officials
  • A fight broke out in the school between two
    rival gangs. As a group of students rushed to
    watch the fight, Principal was trying to get the
    students to return to their classrooms. He
    grabbed one male student. Then another student,
    allegedly coming to the first student's defense,
    jumped on Principals back. Both were charged
    with misdemeanor simple assault.
  • Student sued teacher and school for 500K.
  • Unions fear it will dilute authority of principal
    to maintain control over students.

30
Unknown Facts
  • What facts dont you know that you need to know
    to solve the problem and Are they ascertainable?
  • Are there any facts that you cant determine and
    how do you account for that in the solution? E.g.
    Create a process to study or research the issue.

31
Unknown Facts-Quantifiable
  • 1) People have different sensibilities of what is
    offensive. Where do you draw the line?
  • 2) Is there a correlation between hate speech and
    increase in suicides?
  • 3) Are the speech codes that prohibit hate speech
    effective to deter hate speech at Schools
    Universities?
  • 4) Do religious schools have a problem with
    discrimination based on sexual orientation?
  • 5) People react differently to threat of fear or
    violence. E.g."The more nonverbal you do, the
    less confrontational it will be."

32
First Amendment
  • Congress shall make no law respecting an
    establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
    free exercise thereof or abridging the freedom
    of speech, or of the press or the right of the
    people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
    Government for a redress of grievances.

33
Fourth Amendment in Schools
  • Government officials cannot conduct unreasonable
    searches seizures.
  • Government officials include civil criminal
    authorities at federal and state level.

34
Warrantless Searches
  • Justification has evolved from
  • Individualized suspicion? Framers
  • Reasonable suspicion that search will produce
    evidence of a crime and reasonable in scope of
    circumstances ?Terry v Ohio (1968)
  • Balancing intrusion of rights vs. promoting
    legitimate government interest. Camara v
    Municipal Court
  • Special needs? In certain circumstances, so long
    as governments basis is more than law
    enforcement. New Jersey v. TLO

35
Special Needs Exception
  • School Search context School officials assume a
    custodial role to safeguard students. Affirmative
    obligation.
  • Given great deference by courts in determining if
    search is justified, either to address drugs or
    violence.

36
California law
  • In California, it is a crime, whether or not
    acting under color of law, to willfully injure,
    intimidate, interfere with, oppress, or threaten
    any other person, by force or threat of force, in
    the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or
    privilege secured to him or her by the
    Constitution or laws of the state, because of
    race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin,
    disability, gender, or sexual orientation, or
    because he or she perceives that the other person
    has one or more of those characteristics.

37
Bottom Line
  • Threat, fear, potential use of force. Acts
    Words ? fear intimidation
  • Someone is a member of protected class. E.g.
    Race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin,
    disability, gender, or sexual orientation.
  • Ability to exercise rights or privileges is
    infringed.

38
What is Hate Speech?
  • CA Law Hate speech is protected in public, but
    allows easy prosecution for alleged hate crimes,
    in verbal form as well in physical form.
    California law claims hate speech at the
    workplace does not constitute as "protected
    speech" and employers have the right to terminate
    or discharge those who committed hate speech on
    workplace grounds.

39
Which entities would you exclude and Why?
  • Pan Asian Awareness
  • Sons of Militia
  • Gangs of America
  • Skinheads
  • Heavy Acid Metal
  • Gay Lesbian Pride
  • Christian Rights

40
Whats in a Name?
  • Pan Asian Awareness promote understanding of Pan
    Asian culture issues.
  • Sons of Militia Separatist group who proclaim
    independence from US.
  • Gangs of America Ex-gang members promoting
    non-violence in inner cities.
  • Skinheads Promote white supremacy.
  • Heavy Acid Metal Promote the dark side.
  • Gay Lesbian Pride Tolerance and equal rights
    for alternative lifestyles.
  • Christian Rights Promote Christian values
    pro-life and anti-gay rights.
  • BOTTOM LINE NEED TO KNOW MORE THAN THE NAME OF
    THE ORGANIZATION TO UNDERSTAND THEIR MESSAGE AND
    ITS POTENTIA IMPACT ON OTHERS.

41
Devising a Solution
  • GOAL Enable the process to effectively screen
    illegal, inappropriate or unwanted speech without
    bringing in your own predispositions.
  • Step 1 What parts of the problem can be
    addressed through the structure or the process of
    selecting the participants.
  • Structure and process can provide the framework
    for solving the problem.
  • The structure needs to be inclusive and
    accessible to anyone within the defined
    community.
  • The process needs to be simple easy to follow.
  • Focus on registration, notification of
    acceptance, guidelines for participating etc.

42
Devising a Solution
  • Step 2 What are the biggest potential risks that
    need to be addressed.
  • Avoidance of risks need to be built-in to the
    guidelines to disqualify illegal speech, acts
    etc.
  • Guidelines need to be objective and applied
    without discrimination.
  • The guidelines must be clear and easy to
    understand.

43
Devising a Solution
  • Step 3 Focus on structure and process.
  • Can use any media, e.g. website, live, text,
    virtual.
  • Process should include deadlines for
    notifications and receipt of information.
  • Violations will disqualify participates.
  • GOAL Enable the process to effectively screen
    illegal, inappropriate or unwanted speech without
    bringing in your own predispositions.

44
Identify Three Possible Solutions
  • Break into groups of 8. Divide the group into 3
    subgroups representing School, Students, Parents.
  • 40 minutes to discuss develop a solution that
    describes the goal and purpose of the program
    who can qualify to participate any restrictions
    on qualifications penalty for violating rules.
  • Solutions have to be quantifiable and attainable
    through rules and procedures (educating students
    on tolerance-NO create up to 5 themes on
    addressing stereotypes-Yes)
  • Reconvene and discuss solutions. Will vote on
    most effective approach to solving the problem.

45
Requirements of Program
  • Develop program guidelines that describe
  • The goal and purpose of the program
  • Who can qualify to participate
  • Any restrictions on qualifications
  • Penalty for violating rules.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com