Tuesday, March 17, 2026

CREATORS: Circumventing Legislatures by Ignoring the Constitution

Matthew T. Mangino
CREATORS
March 17, 2026

Last June, a federal judge in Texas blocked a two-decade-old law offering undocumented residents the same discounted tuition as other in-state college students, after the Trump administration sued Texas over the law.

That is not surprising. Making it difficult for undocumented residents has become the cornerstone of this administration. However, what is surprising is that the state's Republican lawmakers tried unsuccessfully to change the law only days before the lawsuit was filed.

Most surprisingly, the day the federal lawsuit was filed, the state of Texas settled. According to The New York Times, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a close ally of President Donald Trump, simply agreed that the state law should be invalidated.

The legislature, which was unable or unwilling to amend or strike the law, was sidestepped. What is wrong with smart lawyers at the Department of Justice and the Texas Attorney General's Office finding a clever way to get done what the 181 members of the Texas legislature could not?

The problem is that sham lawsuits violate the U.S. Constitution and this is not the only time the Trump Justice Department has colluded with states to violate the Constitution, circumventing the legislative process.

Article III, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution limits federal court jurisdiction to actual, ongoing disputes between adverse parties, prohibiting courts from issuing advisory opinions or ruling on hypothetical scenarios.

Pursuant to the "Cases and Controversy Clause," parties to a lawsuit must truly be adverse to each other, the dispute must be concrete and the dispute must be capable of being resolved through an award of specific relief. That was not the case in Texas. The outcome was known before the suit was filed.

In Florida, according to The New York Times, the Trump administration reached a legal settlement in February, with the Republican-led state requiring the Department of Homeland Security to forgo its authority to admit immigrants for 15 years. Though reached with a state government, the settlement could affect immigration policy for the whole nation.

In Kentucky, the federal Department of Transportation proposed a settlement in a case with a pair of industrial companies challenging decades-old racial and gender-based preferences, acceding to the businesses and agreeing to end use of the preferences in its contracting nationwide.

More than a half a century ago, Chief Justice Earl Warren suggested that cases and controversies "limit the business of federal courts to questions presented in an adversary context and in a form historically viewed as capable of resolution through the judicial process ... a tripartite allocation of power to assure that the federal courts will not intrude into areas committed to the other branches of government." As a result, suits that are collusive or feigned by two friendly parties to resolve a question of interest to them are unconstitutional.

If the blatant legal schemes in Texas, Florida and Kentucky — defying the Constitution —are not enough, consider this major Trumpian hustle. Trump is suing himself and demanding a settlement. The IRS falls under the executive branch of the U.S. government. It operates as a bureau within the Department of the Treasury, which is one of the 15 executive departments. The Secretary of the Treasury is appointed by the president and serves at his pleasure.

At the heart of the case is Trump's contention that the federal government should be held liable for the leak of his federal tax returns during his first term as president.

Trump wants the Treasury Department and IRS to pay damages to him in the amount of $10 billion. Could Trump demand that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent settle the case and pay out?

You probably think something like that is far-fetched. Well, Democrats in the United States Senate don't think so; they introduced the "Stop Presidential Embezzlement Act," which would block any financial benefit to Trump resulting from the $10 billion lawsuit. 

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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Monday, March 16, 2026

Idaho legislator doesn't want judicial review of execution protocol

The director of the Idaho prison system has exclusive authority to set and revise the state’s protocols for carrying out the death penalty, and a lawmaker wants to ensure those decisions are not subject to judicial review, reported the Idaho Statesman.

 In January, Rep. Bruce Skaug, R-Nampa, proposed the change in law and described it as a “cleanup bill” for technical updates to statute. Facing pushback from fellow representatives at a committee hearing, Skaug agreed to retool the bill so it did not go beyond his stated intent.

The issue for which Skaug takes aim is at the heart of a death row prisoner’s lawsuit on appeal with the Idaho Supreme Court. Gerald Pizzuto’s attorneys argue that former Idaho Department of Correction Director Josh Tewalt abused his power when he arbitrarily changed lethal injection procedures in late 2024. That decision violates a law that grants oversight of state agencies and their actions to the legislative and judicial branches of government, attorneys with the Federal Defender Services of Idaho said. “The director of the Idaho Department of Correction believes the Legislature gave him a license to kill condemned prisoners any way he wants,” Pizzuto’s attorneys with the legal nonprofit wrote in a recent court filing. “The director is wrong. The Legislature has not given him unlimited power, cannot give him that power, and has not stripped the courts of jurisdiction.”

Tewalt’s changes to the state’s lethal injection protocols came about eight months after the prison system failed to execute a different death row prisoner in early 2024 when its execution team could not find a vein in his body suitable for an IV to deliver the chemicals. The change added a room where prisoners are to be examined and prepped for either a standard peripheral IV, or a central line — a more invasive procedure that inserts into the internal jugular in the neck, a femoral vein in the upper thigh or a subclavian vein in the chest. The next year, Skaug, who chairs the House judiciary committee, sponsored a bill that makes a firing squad the state’s lead execution method.

The Republican-controlled Idaho Legislature approved the bill that kept lethal injection as a backup option, and Gov. Brad Little signed it into law. Executions are on hold in Idaho as the prison system completes renovations to its execution chamber as part of the transition to a firing squad. The cost of that construction is roughly $1 million. Idaho is one of 27 states with the death penalty, but has not executed a prisoner in what will soon be 14 years.

The state counts eight prisoners on its death row, including Pizzuto. ‘A second bite of the apple’ The Idaho Attorney General’s Office represents IDOC in the legal appeal. It asserts that the agency’s director and their execution procedure decisions are excluded from Administrative Procedure Act review, including by the courts.

With limited exceptions, the governor-appointed Board of Correction, which oversees the state agency and selects its director, is exempt under that law. A district court judge in Ada County sided with IDOC and dismissed the case brought by Pizzuto, who was convicted in 1986 of killing two people in a robbery north of McCall and sentenced to death.

The Supreme Court in 2022 already ruled against Pizzuto in a similar lawsuit based on the same overarching law, leading the Attorney General’s Office to argue this new appeal “seeks a second bite of the apple,” which should be denied. Pizzuto, 70, is Idaho’s second-longest death row prisoner after nearly 40 years, and has overcome five scheduled execution dates during that time. In 2021, the state parole board voted to drop Pizzuto’s sentence to life in prison, but Little rejected it.

To read more CLICK HERE

Sunday, March 15, 2026

DOJ darling Ed Martin in trouble, again

 Oh how the mighty have fallen. According to Slate, Trump DOJ crony Ed Martin is in trouble again.

It seems fair to assume that Donald Trump’s second presidency hasn’t turned out quite the way Martin had hoped. The former interim U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia has faced a series of embarrassing setbacks over the past 14 months, tumbling down the Justice Department’s ladder, rung by rung, as fellow Republicans turned sharply against him. But the biggest blow so far arrived on Tuesday, when disciplinary counsel for the D.C. bar announced a formal complaint against Martin for professional misconduct. The charges accuse him of violating his oath to the Constitution, then interfering with the investigation into his alleged malfeasance. If found culpable, he could be suspended from the practice of law or disbarred in D.C.

A year ago, Martin fired off a letter to Georgetown University Law Center (GULC) Dean William Treanor demanding that the school immediately cease all DEI initiatives and proactively informing the school that none of its graduates would be considered for positions at the DOJ. Treanor spanked him for being a bad lawyer and a bad Catholic and a bad American — check, check, and check! — and Martin wandered off to piss into the wind somewhere else.

According to Above the Law, that wasn’t the end of the story, because retired California judge Phillip Argento (GULC ’75) was so incensed that he fired off a complaint to the DC Board of Professional Responsibility. At which point Martin LOST HIS DAMN MIND.

From the Specification of Charges:

Instead of responding to Disciplinary Counsel’s letter, on March 31, 2025, Mr. Martin sent, ex parte, a letter to the Chief Judge and the Senior Judges of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. In that letter, he stated that he would not be responding to Disciplinary Counsel’s inquiry, complained about Disciplinary Counsel’s “uneven behavior,” and requested a “face-to-face meeting with all of you to discuss this matter and find a way forward.” He copied the White House Counsel “for informational purposes because of the importance of getting this issue addressed.”

And although the judges told him immediately that ex parte communications were inappropriate and he should continue with the process, he kept on firing off notes to the court two more times, all the while ignoring letters from the Disciplinary Counsel. Notably, Martin cc’d the White House Counsel on the first nastygram, which raises some interesting questions about the ethical advice David Warrington is giving the administration.

So now Martin has two charges, one for violating the First Amendment and punishing GULC for its protected speech, and one for communicating ex parte with a judge during a proceeding. Perhaps this is why Attorney General Pam Bondi has been desperately trying to take over state bar complaints!

To read more CLICK HERE

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Killer apologizes before lethal injection in Texas prison

 The 6th Execution of 2026

Cedric Ricks, a Texas man, was put to death on March 11, 2026 for fatally stabbing his girlfriend and her 8-year-old son in 2013, apologizing profusely to her older son who survived with multiple stab wounds and witnessed the execution, reported The Associated Press

Ricks, 51, was pronounced dead at 6:55 p.m. CDT following a lethal dose of the sedative pentobarbital at the state penitentiary in Huntsville.

He was condemned for the May 2013 killings of 30-year-old Roxann Sanchez and her son Anthony Figueroa at their apartment in the greater Dallas-Fort Worth suburb of Bedford. Sanchez’s 12-year-old son, Marcus Figueroa, was stabbed 25 times and feigned death in order to survive.

Ricks apologized repeatedly to seven relatives of his victims who looked on, particularly Marcus Figueroa. The attack survivor showed no emotion, watching through a glass window just steps from where Ricks was strapped to a gurney. On the back of Marcus Figueroa’s neck, visible above his shirt collar and below his hair, were several scars apparently from the attack.

“I want to say that I’m sorry for taking Roxann and Anthony from y’all,” Ricks said when asked by the warden if he had a final statement. “I’m glad to be able to speak to tell y’all that face to face.”

He said he hoped one day that his victims’ relatives would be able to find it in their hearts to forgive him. He also addressed Marcus Figueroa, saying he hated that he took his mother and brother away.

“I always thought about you and I’m sorry that I took your mom and your brother away. I hate that you had to experience that, I just can’t imagine, but I’m truly sorry for what I’ve done, and I wish y’all peace and joy as much as you can but I’m sorry, that’s all I can say,” Ricks said. His voice cracking and tear forming in his eye, he added that he hoped to find the woman and her son in heaven and “tell them I’m sorry face to face.”

“I hope y’all go in peace. I really do. I’m sorry,” he concluded before the injection began.

As the drug took effect, he took 19 quick breaths, then made 10 snoring sounds, followed seconds later by some intermittent gurgles. Then all movement and sounds stopped, and he was pronounced dead 30 minutes after the injection had begun.

Among the other witnesses were Roxann Sanchez’s stepfather and brother, and Anthony Figueroa’s father, brother and grandmother. None of them showed any emotion in the death chamber witness area and declined to speak with reporters afterward.

The night of the killings, prosecutors said, Ricks and Sanchez had been arguing in their apartment when the woman’s two sons from a previous marriage tried to break up the fight. Ricks grabbed a knife from the kitchen and began to stab Sanchez multiple times, court records showed.

Marcus Figueroa ran to his bedroom closet and tried to call police. After killing Anthony Figueroa, Ricks began stabbing Marcus Figueroa, who played dead until his attacker left the apartment, authorities said. Ricks did not harm his own then-9-month-old son Isaiah, according to court records. Ricks fled and was later arrested in Oklahoma.

At his ensuing capital murder trial, Ricks testified that he had anger issues and had been defending himself against the two boys after they had come to their mother’s defense.

“Explaining my rage, I was upset. Things happen. I don’t know. I don’t know. I don’t know. I wish I could bring them back, like, right now,” said Ricks, who also apologized at the time for the killings.

A day before the stabbings, Ricks had appeared in court after having been charged with assaulting Sanchez during a previous incident.

The U.S. Supreme Court rejected Ricks’ final appeal without comment. His attorneys had argued that prosecutors violated Ricks’ constitutional rights by eliminating potential jurors on the basis of race while selecting the trial panel.

The Texas Attorney General’s Office said court records show the prosecution’s jury selection decisions were “race neutral” and lower courts have already concluded that prosecutors’ actions were not discriminatory.

And earlier this week, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles denied Ricks’ request to commute his death sentence or grant a 90-day reprieve.

Ricks was the second person put to death this year in Texas and the sixth in the country. Texas has historically held more executions than any other state.

To read more CLICK HERE

Friday, March 13, 2026

Trump administration doing legislative end run by suing friendly adversaries

Last June, the Trump administration hauled Texas into court, claiming that a decades-old state law once championed by Republicans violated federal law.

Within six hours, the two sides reached an agreement, reported The New York Times.

Instead of fighting, Texas immediately settled. Led by Attorney General Ken Paxton, a close ally of President Trump, Texas simply agreed the state law, which allowed undocumented high school students to pay in-state tuition at public universities, should be invalidated. The resolution eliminated any need for a slow and messy vote to overturn the statute in the State Legislature.

It was one of a string of lawsuits in which the Trump administration has reached settlements with friendly adversaries.

The strategy appears to have allowed the administration to do an end run around the legislative process and enact policies that will affect states and, in some cases, the whole country.

The settlements have come despite Supreme Court rulings that require lawsuits to be waged between adversarial parties and a reticence among administration officials dating to Mr. Trump’s first term with entering legal settlements that bind the government’s hands.

In some cases, like in Texas, the legal maneuver has allowed states to quietly break free from their own laws, outside the normal legislative process. In others, it has helped the Trump administration lock in changes at the federal level that could persist for years after Mr. Trump leaves office.

In Florida, for instance, the Trump administration in February reached a legal settlement with the Republican-led state requiring the Department of Homeland Security to forgo one of its authorities to admit immigrants for 15 years. Though reached with a state government, the settlement could affect immigration policy for the whole nation, through the next four presidential administrations.

In Kentucky, the federal Transportation Department proposed a settlement in a case with a pair of industrial companies challenging decades-old racial and gender-based preferences, acceding to the businesses and agreeing to end use of the preferences in its contracting nationwide.

Asked to comment on the pattern of settlements, a spokeswoman for the Justice Department indicated that the laws at issue in each case were problematic for different reasons. In Florida, a judge had already sided with the state before the agreement. And in Texas, the spokeswoman said the fact that the law remained on the state’s books, despite the parties agreeing it was illegal, amounted to a real dispute.

But the speed at which cases have been settled and the shared political priorities involved have led outside groups and former officials to call foul, arguing that the cases appear plainly collusive.

“This isn’t a controversy,” Shelby Leighton, a lawyer at Public Justice, said of cases the Justice Department has brought regarding in-state tuition. She is asking a judge in Kentucky to reject a settlement there similar to the one in Texas. “The federal government and the state government agree a hundred percent on the issue, and they’re just working together to do an end run around the democratic process.”

The Supreme Court has long maintained that federal judges cannot hear cases where there is no genuine dispute between the parties, warning that the Constitution bars judges from hearing cases that are not adversarial. Such collusive lawsuits are dangerous, the justices have found in multiple instances, because they exclude third parties with real stakes in the outcome.

For decades, the Justice Department has likewise discouraged legal settlements that could reduce the executive branch’s power in the long run.

In 1986, President Ronald Reagan’s attorney general, Edwin Meese III, sent a memo to colleagues specifically urging them to use caution when ending lawsuits through consent decrees, a particular type of settlement in which the resolution is monitored by a judge.

At the time, the Reagan administration was defending the government against a crush of lawsuits from environmental groups.

The department, Mr. Meese wrote, should not enter into a consent decree that “divests the secretary or agency administrator, or his successors, of discretion committed to him by Congress or the Constitution,” particularly if the power had been granted to allow government officials “to respond to changing circumstances.”

The vision was reaffirmed and expanded in 1999 by Randolph D. Moss, now a federal judge in Washington, under President Bill Clinton.

In the mid-2010s, during President Barack Obama’s second term, conservative scholars accused him too of collusive lawsuits, criticizing what they called “sue and settle” schemes, especially in the environmental realm. Academics cataloged a number of examples in which they said watchdog groups sharing the administration’s environmental goals sued the Environmental Protection Agency or a related department, followed by a quick settlement that shifted regulations.

But Mr. Trump’s officials have generally been critical of using legal settlements to achieve policy aims, particularly given their history of use to force police reform. Last year, Mr. Trump issued an executive order prompting the Justice Department to withdraw from oversight of nearly two dozen police departments. 

For that reason, the administration’s actions in Florida stunned many legal experts.

The state had sued the Biden administration in 2023, seeking to stop the federal government from paroling scores of migrants arrested at the southern border into the country, just as strict pandemic-era restrictions at the border were expiring.

At the beginning of February, Mr. Trump’s Department of Homeland Security entered a consent decree to settle the three-year-old suit, agreeing to impose a 15-year freeze on using a mass parole power that allows the government to quickly release migrants into the country while they wait for a court date.

Strikingly, of the six members of the Florida attorney general’s office helping represent the state when the suit was filed, four are now senior officials in Mr. Trump’s Justice Department. Just two months before the case was settled, a fifth — James Percival — took over as the top lawyer at the Department of Homeland Security.

A homeland security spokesman provided a signed ethics agreement Mr. Percival submitted to the Office of Government Ethics in which he agreed to recuse himself from lawsuits that he worked on, directly related to Florida. A separate signed authorization from the department’s secretary, Kristi Noem, directed Mr. Percival to step aside from cases involving the state “if you personally worked on litigation related to the same matter while serving in the Florida Office of the Attorney General.”

“Mr. Percival has fully complied with that commitment during his D.H.S. employment,” the spokesman said.

A spokeswoman for the Justice Department said that the agreement was approved by the department’s leadership and that the agency does not entirely avoid consent decrees.

Under the consent decree, Florida can return to court at any time to challenge any federal parole policy, citing the consent decree in which the government agreed to forgo the authority. The agreement will be overseen by Judge T. Kent Wetherell, a Trump appointee.

Tom Jawetz, who served as the Homeland Security Department’s deputy general counsel in the Biden administration, said the agreement would put “an asterisk” on future presidents’ ability to use the parole power, even if they hold different policy views on immigration than Mr. Trump.

“They’re going to have to think about, not just whether using parole is within their legal authority, but also whether Florida is going to believe it’s a violation of this consent decree, and what the consequences of being hauled into court will be over that decision,” he said.

In the case out of Kentucky that the Trump administration inherited, officials used a lawsuit as an opportunity to take a swipe at diversity requirements set out in a law passed by Congress.

On returning to office, one of Mr. Trump’s earliest priorities was purging race-based preferences and other hiring practices he deemed “diversity, equity and inclusion” from the federal government and beyond. The president has said those policies, intended to correct years of systemic racial inequality, amounted to reverse racial discrimination against white people.

Two federal contractors sued in 2023 over set-asides in the Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program, which Congress enacted in 1983. Last year, the Transportation Department ceased defending the law and moved to settle with the companies, adopting their stance that the practice of favoring businesses owned by women or certain ethnic minorities was unconstitutional.

A judge has not yet accepted the settlement agreement. But after a coalition of minority-owned business groups intervened in the lawsuit, the Transportation Department bypassed the court proceedings, issuing a new federal rule that effectively tossed out the diversity requirements nationwide.

To read more CLICK HERE

Thursday, March 12, 2026

DOJ will pursue guardianships in state courts for homeless veterans

The Trump administration announced a new effort to initiate legal guardianships for hundreds of veterans, including some who are homeless or “at risk of homelessness,” that could be used to force more of them into involuntary or institutional care, reported The New York Times.

Under the new arrangement, the Justice Department would give officials at the Veterans Affairs Department authority they currently lack to initiate guardianship proceedings in state courts for veterans who have no family and are “unable to make their own health care decisions.”

If a state court determines that a veteran is incapable of making health care decisions, it would appoint a third-party guardian not employed by the V.A., who would be charged to act in the veterans’ best interests, said Pete Kasperowicz, the V.A. press secretary.

The initiative comes amid a push by the Trump administration to compel more homeless people into institutional treatment for mental illness and drug addiction.

President Trump identified homelessness as a priority during the 2024 presidential campaign and promoted it last July in an executive order that called on agencies to use civil commitment to move homeless people into “long-term institutional settings.”

Critics say the policy shift raises significant civil liberties concerns, noting that in earlier generations, people with severe mental illness were routinely stripped of their legal rights and confined to state hospitals.

To read more CLICK HERE

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

CREATORS: Forget Habeas Corpus at Your Own Peril

Matthew T. Mangino
CREATORS
March 10, 2026

Normally, when someone is confronted with a Latin legal term their eyes glaze over and their brain shuts down. Well, here is a Latin term you need to know — habeas corpus.

The term is a legal concept meaning "that you have the body." Known as "The Great Writ," habeas corpus has been around a long time, dating back to England's Magna Carta in 1215. It is a procedure that allows any person detained on a charge "without sufficient cause" to challenge their detention in court.

The founders included habeas corpus in Article I, Section 9 of the U.S. Constitution, "The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it."

In the spring of 2025, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller responded to a question from reporters about the Trump administration suspending habeas corpus in regard to immigration law enforcement. "The Constitution is clear and that, of course, is the supreme law of the land, that the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus could be suspended in time of invasion ... (s)o that's an option we're actively looking at."

When the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice adopted a policy that made most detained immigrants who entered the country without permission — including those who had lived in the United States for years and had no criminal history — ineligible for a bond hearing, lawyers responded with habeas corpus. According to Mother Jones, habeas corpus, "once an emergency legal remedy against unlawful imprisonment ... is now an everyday tool."

The authority outlined in Article I is vested in Congress, and that includes Section 9. Suspending habeas corpus is an extraordinary response to an extreme crisis. The writ has been suspended only four times in our nation's history.

Former President Abraham Lincoln suspended habeas corpus in 1861 during the Civil War. According to the Brennan Center, that move was challenged in court and led to a constitutional showdown between the executive and judicial branches. Chief Justice Roger Taney wrote that only Congress had the power to suspend habeas corpus, not the president. It took two years to get Congress to act — but in the meantime, Lincoln never followed Taney's ruling.

The three other instances, according to the Constitution Center, include Congress granting former President Ulysses S. Grant the ability to suspend the writ during an ongoing crisis involving the Ku Klux Klan after the Civil War.

In passing the KKK Act of 1871, lawmakers made it clear that the president had authority to suspend habeas corpus within any state or territory where persons sought to "overthrow, or to put down ... the government of the United States." Grant used that authority; he deployed the 7th U.S. Cavalry to work with U.S. Marshals to detain suspected Ku Klux Klan members.

The United States had annexed the Philippines under the terms of the Treaty of Paris that ended the Spanish-American War. In 1902, Congress passed a law that allowed the writ of habeas corpus to be suspended by the president or governor if needed in the Philippines.

In 1905, the appointed Gov.Luke Edward Wright used the law to suspend the writ of habeas corpus in two provinces. Wright believed the independence forces had caused "a state of insecurity and terrorism among the people, which makes it impossible in the ordinary way to conduct preliminary investigations before justices of the peace and other judicial officers."

Hawaii was a territorial possession of the United States when Pearl Harbor was attacked by Japanese on Dec. 7, 1941. After the attack, the Territorial Governor declared martial law, and suspended habeas corpus. Two days later, former President Franklin Roosevelt approved the suspension of the writ and martial law remained in place until October 1944.

Can the president convince Congress to suspend habeas corpus for illegal immigrants or how about American citizens who smuggle drugs or sell drugs on the streets? Could Congress, at the behest of the president, suspend habeas corpus for people protesting the war in Iran or the release of the Epstein Files?

Forget habeas corpus at your own peril.

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.

To visit Creators CLICK HERE