I’m going to try and avoid going too deep into the woods tonight — because it’s late and because I’m tired — but I have to note the essential facts that exist right now, a result of the permanent injunction granted Tuesday by U.S. District Court Judge Virginia A. Phillips in the Log Cabin Republicans v. United States case:
In the Massachusetts cases regarding the Defense of Marriage Act (Gill v. Office of Personnel Management and Massachusetts v. Department of Health and Human Services), DOJ worked with the plaintiffs to get a stay put in place while the appeal is pending prior to the issuance of the judgment by U.S. District Court Judge Joseph Tauro.
In the Proposition 8 case (Perry v. Schwarzenegger), the proponents had requested a stay from U.S. District Court Judge Vaughn Walker pending any appeal before Walker even issued his ruling.
Here, however, the U.S. Department of Justice apparently had no plans in place to deal with one of the most likely outcomes of Judge Phillips’s ruling. This, despite the DOJ statement in its earlier filing (pdf) before Phillips:
Entering an injunction with immediate effect would frustrate the ability of the Department of Defense to develop necessary policies, regulations, and training and guidance to accommodate a change in the DADT law and policy. An injunction with immediate effect will put DoD in the position where it must implement ad hoc potentially inadequate policies at a time when the military is in the midst of active combat operations.
So, the question I end this day with is: What is DOJ thinking?
The answer could go in several directions:
All of these questions, of course, echo out to the White House and President Barack Obama, who ultimately could direct the Justice Department not to appeal the injunction. He also, in the opposite direction, could direct the DOD to defy Phillips’s order. (This is — as David Law put it at Above the Law — the “Virginia Phillips has made her decision; now let her enforce it” option.)
There are legitimate questions to be discussed about whether either or both of those are proper actions, but the singular point on which I’d like to focus people’s attention tonight is the strange circumstance of the Justice Department — even if only for a half-day at this point — allowing a single federal trial judge to put an abrupt and total stop to a 17-year-old law relating to military policy.
The questions this raises multiply as one moves from the initial and obvious questions. Were any directives sent to commanders in the field alerting them to this changed circumstance? If so, what did they say? If not, what’s happening right now? If the law is invoked and a DADT investigation is begun by an unknowing commander, is someone in contempt of court? How would Phillips deal with such a situation?
Of course, in the morning, a motion for a stay pending appeal could be filed in the Ninth Circuit, and the motions panel could — and I imagine, likely would — grant an emergency, temporary stay until it could decide whether to grant the stay pending appeal.
But, in the meantime, there are a bundle of law students’ constitutional law, federal courts and civil procedure exams getting questions written for them in real time.
I am seeking out others’ views on this issue — particularly as the circumstance becomes more strange every hour that passes without DOJ action — and will provide them as I receive any.
[UPDATE @ 5 P.M. WEDNESDAY: Some people expected a filing by now, but it’s clear from everyone with whom I’ve spoken today that they agree this is worth very close attention being paid to it.]
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