June 2014

Here are two recent reports on the progress of the Honolulu rail project that should be read in-tandem:

Both stories are partially behind a paywall, but here’s

A federal court authorized court-appointed counsel in a criminal prosecution to retain Marcum for forensic accounting and litigation support services. There’s a federal statute which allows for payment for these services, and if the cost exceeds $2,400, the chief judge of the regional circuit must approve. The work Marcum performed went over that amount. By

Remember that decision by a U.S. District Court in Tampa, Florida last year that we crowed about? The court held that a county’s “Right of Way Preservation Ordinance” which allows it to land bank for future road corridors by means of an exaction is “both coercive and confiscatory in nature and constitutionally

Here’s what we’re reading today:

Our thanks to Jacob Cremer for the heads-up on the Florida Court of Appeals’ decision in Ocean Palm Golf Club Partnership v. City of Flagler Beach, No. 5D12-4274 (May 30, 2014). Jacob did not post any analysis (undertstandable because his law firm is involved in the case) so we’ll add our two cents.  

Update: more on the issue from the New York Times: “Honolulu Shores Up Tourism With Crackdown on Homeless.”

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Check out the headline story from today’s Honolulu Star-Advertiser, “Mayor’s sidealk strategy targets Waikiki homeless,” about two bills proposed by Honolulu’s mayor to address some difficult urban issues. 

The first

Hawaii, like many other jurisdictions, has an open records law. Here, we call it “UIPA” (“yoo-pah” or “wee-pah”) becuase the statute is the Uniform Information Practices Act, and not “FOIA” or “FOIL.” But in substance, it’s mostly the same as our sibling jurisdictions: government records are strongly presumed to be public documents, available to

Here are the merits briefs in an important case set for argument later this month in the Hawaii Supreme Court.

The litigation is a series of two lawsuits that originated in state court in the Third Circuit (Big Island), one an original jurisdiction civil rights lawsuit, the other an administrative appeal. The essence of the

The final words in most appellate oral arguments by the jurists are usually something along the lines of “we’ll let you know.” In Hawaii state courts, the Chief Justice signals you’re done with “we’ll take the case under advisement,” while in many federal courts, the presiding judge informs you “the case is submitted.” Or words