Wednesday round-up

The repercussions of two major recent decisions – Brown v. Plata and Citizens United v. FEC – are in the news today.

The Wall Street Journal reports that, in an effort to comply with the Court’s directive in Brown v. Plata to reduce prison overcrowding, California officials yesterday presented a plan “that relies mostly on moving low-level offenders to county jails and building new prisons to accommodate serious criminals.”   The Associated Press (via the Washington Post, with hat tips to Sentencing Law and Policy and Crime & Consequences) reports that “questions abound on whether the [California] Legislature will sign off on tax extensions to pay for shifting thousands of convicts from state prisons to local jails, whether voters will approve the taxes, whether the state can meet the deadlines set by the high court and how the shift will play out at local jails around the state.” And the Los Angeles Times reports, “California is in danger of violating . . . a November deadline to lower its [inmate] head count by more than 10,000” if it cannot secure the funding to shift prisoners to local authorities; California officials, however, have yet to request a delay. NPR’s Morning Edition notes an additional complication for the state’s plan to shift prisoners to county jails: many of those jails themselves are already overcrowded.  The San Francisco Chronicle, the Sacramento Bee, the San Jose Mercury News, and the Redlands Daily Facts have additional coverage of the state’s plan. (Thanks to Howard Bashman of How Appealing for the latter two links.)

Meanwhile, across the country in Alexandria, Virginia, a federal district court judge ruled that last year’s Citizens United decision overrides the Court’s reasoning in a 2003 case, FEC v. Beaumont, which upheld a ban on direct corporate contributions to federal candidates. (The judge’s decision affirmed and narrowed his previous ruling in the case.) According to The Caucus blog of the New York Times, the ruling “set[s] into motion what could be a pivotal court battle over one of the biggest legal and political issues of the day,” and SCOTUSblog’s Lyle Denniston reports that “the issue is [already] headed toward the Supreme Court within a matter of months in one or more cases.” Further coverage of the decision is available in the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal’s Washington Wire blog, Bloomberg, Politico, and Election Law Blog (also here).

Briefly:

Posted in: Round-up

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