CREATORS
September 30, 2025
The U.S. Supreme Court's "Shadow Docket" conjures
up this mysterious image of justices surreptitiously moving through the Supreme
Court building in the dead of night, making monumental, yet anonymous
decisions.
University of Chicago law professor William Baude first
coined the phrase "Shadow Docket" in 2015. The name may be modern,
but the concept has been around as long as the Supreme Court itself. The term
refers to the U.S. Supreme Court's practice of issuing emergency orders and
summary decisions outside its regular case docket, typically without oral
argument.
Traditionally, the Shadow Docket was rarely used. Like
seeking injunctive relief in a trial court, a litigant had to prove that they
would suffer irreparable harm if the request was denied.
According to Jack Laskey, writing on EBCO, a litigant
wishing to get their case decided via the Shadow Docket applies to any one of
the nine justices, who can then forward the case to the rest of the Court for
review. If at least five of the justices agree to grant the litigant's request,
the case is placed on the Shadow Docket.
There have been 25 emergency applications sent to the court
by the Trump administration this year. In each of those cases, a lower court
had ruled that the president's actions were unconstitutional.
For example, recently in California, judges ruled that
immigration agents could not arrest someone without reasonable suspicion based
solely on a person's ethnicity or the language they spoke. President Donald
Trump sent an emergency request to the Supreme Court to overrule the decision
of the California judges and lift that ban.
In Noem v. Perdomo, the Court allowed immigration agents to
consider race, language and work status when deciding whom to stop in Los
Angeles.
Cooley Law School Professor Joseline Jean-Louis Hardrick
wrote about how the Shadow Docket is impacting fundamental protections
previously provided by the Supreme Court. In 1968, the Court created the
"reasonable suspicion" standard in Terry v. Ohio. It was meant as a
compromise, allowing police to act on less than probable cause while protecting
civil liberties.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh, concurring with the majority in
Noem, wrote that while ethnicity alone cannot justify a stop, it "can be a
relevant factor when considered along with other salient factors." That
formulation opens the door for immigration agents to use race, language, and
class as part of the suspicion calculus.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor dissented, writing, "We should
not have to live in a country where the Government can seize anyone who looks
Latino, speaks Spanish, and appears to work a low-wage job. Rather than stand
idly by while our constitutional freedoms are lost, I dissent."
University of Texas law professor Stephen Vladeck examined
the implications of the Shadow Docket in his book, "The Shadow Docket: How
the Supreme Court uses stealth rulings to amass power and undermine the
republic."
According to NPR's Nina Totenberg, Vladeck pointed to a
speech Justice Amy Coney Barrett gave in 2021, in which she assured the
audience that the current court "is not composed of partisan hacks"
and urged people to "read the opinions." But as Vladeck noted,
"What's remarkable about the Shadow Docket is that so often the court is
handing down rulings with massive impacts in which there's no opinion to
read."
"We may not agree with the specific principles the
justices are articulating" in major decisions, Vladeck wrote, but at least
we have some sense that these decisions are based on legal principles. In
contrast, he argued, "The shadow docket has none of that."
Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett,
Kelly & George P.C. His book The Executioner's Toll, 2010, was released by
McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him
on Twitter @MatthewTMangino
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