42 U.S.C. § 1983 | Civil Rights

They say revenge is a dish best served cold.

But in Filarksy v. Delia, No. 10-1018 (Apr. 19, 2012), it apparently came with a side dish of “in your face victory dance.”

Check out this story about Mr. Filarsky’s reaction to his unanimous Supreme Court win in that case.

Disclosure: along with my colleagues

Here’s the motion for preliminary injunction we filed yesterday in the federal lawsuit challenging Hawaii’s exclusion of military personnel, their families, and university students who do not pay resident tuition, from the population count when reapportioning the state legislature.

The U.S. Census includes everyone who is a “usual resident” of Hawaii in its count of

In a per curiam unpublished decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit affirmed the district court’s dismissal in Crystal Dunes Owners Ass’n v. City of Destin, No. 2011-14595 (Apr. 17, 2012) (per curiam opinion here, or below).

The plaintiffs own a strip of private beach in Destin, Florida. If the

The editorial in today’s Honolulu Star-Advertiser writes:

The state Supreme Court’s ruling in January that determined how boundary lines should be drawn for this year’s election in August made scant reference to the agency created primarily for that purpose: the U.S. Census Bureau. That is why a lawsuit in federal court should result in the

The issue in in Filarksy v. Delia, No. 10-1018, yesterday’s opinion in which the unanimous Supreme Court held that a private lawyer who was retained by a local government is entitled to assert qualified immunity, was whether the lawyer was prohibited from asserting the defense merely because he was not formally employed by the

Today, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a unanimous opinion (by Chief Justice Roberts) in Filarksy v. Delia, No. 10-1018, holding that a private lawyer who was retained by a local government is entitled to assert qualified immunity. Along with my colleagues at the ABA Section of State and Local Government Law, I filed an

Here’s the latest in the federal court reapportionment lawsuit, filed last week (we represent the plaintiffs). Above is the audio archive of my appearance yesterday morning on KHVH’s Rick Hamada Program. KITV also aired this report on the case. Posted below is the District Court order granting the request for a three-judge district court.

Order

It may be Good Friday (an official State Holiday in Hawaii), but the federal courts are open, and today, on behalf of six plaintiffs including several veterans, we filed a lawsuit challenging under the Equal Protection Clause the State of Hawaii’s practice of excluding military personnel, their families, and university students who pay nonresident

Today is Good Friday, an official holiday in the State of Hawaii, so we’re reposting our annual recounting of how it came to be that the State celebrates the date of the crucifixion. Turns out that it doesn’t really, it’s just coincidence that the “spring holiday” occurs on the same day. Or so says

Here is the Reply Brief in Harmon v. Kimmel, No. 11-496 (filed Mar. 20, 2012), the case in which a Manhattan property owner is challenging New York’s rent control law as unconstitutional:

Respondents confuse the issues with their scattershot assertions that rent stabilization concerns merely “landlord tenant relations,” “economic regulation,” “price controls” and “economic