| Antonin Scalia |
Article Index for Antonin |
Website Links For Antonin |
Information AboutAntonin Scalia |
Antonin Gregory Scalia (born March 11 , 1936 ) is an American Jurist who has been a prominent Conservative and Originalist voice on the Supreme Court Of The United States Of America and one of the most outspoken advocates of Textualism in statutory interpretation and Original Meaning in Constitutional Interpretation . EARLY LIFE Antonin Scalia was born in Trenton, New Jersey . His mother, Catherine, was born in the United States ; his father, S. Eugene, a professor of romance languages, emigrated from Sicily at age 15. When Scalia was five years old, his family moved to the Elmhurst section of Queens , New York City , during which time his father worked at Brooklyn College in Flatbush , Brooklyn . A member of the Roman Catholic Church, Scalia attended Xavier High School , a Catholic and Jesuit school in Manhattan . He graduated first in his class and '' Summa Cum Laude '' with an A.B. from Georgetown University in 1957 . While at Georgetown, he also studied at the University Of Fribourg , Switzerland and went on to study law at Harvard Law School (where he was a Notes Editor for the Harvard Law Review ). He graduated Magna Cum Laude from Harvard in 1960, becoming a Sheldon Fellow of Harvard University the following year. The fellowship allowed him to travel throughout Europe during 1960 - 1961 . On September 10 , 1960 , Scalia married Maureen McCarthy, an English major at Radcliffe College . Together they have nine children – Ann Forrest, Eugene, John Francis, Catherine Elisabeth, Mary Clare, Paul David (now a Priest in the Catholic Diocese of Arlington at St. Rita's Catholic Church), Matthew (a West Point graduate and Army Officer currently serving in ROTC at the University Of Delaware ), Christopher James, and Margaret Jane. Scalia is sometimes referred to by the nickname "Nino", and his colleagues refer to the frequent short case-related memos he sends as Ninograms. {Link without Title} Scalia is 5' 7" (170 cm). LEGAL CAREER Scalia began his legal career at Jones, Day, Cockley And Reavis in Cleveland, Ohio , where he worked from 1961 - 1967 , subsequently becoming a Professor of Law at the University Of Virginia in 1967 . In 1971 , he entered public service, working as the general counsel for the Office Of Telecommunications Policy , under President Richard Nixon , where one of his principal assignments was to formulate Federal policy for the growth of cable television. From 1972 to 1974 , he was the chairman of the Administrative Conference Of The United States , before serving from 1974 to 1977 in the Ford Administration as the Assistant Attorney General for the Office Of Legal Counsel . Following Ford's defeat by Jimmy Carter , Scalia returned to academia, taking up residence first at the University Of Chicago Law School from 1977 - 1982 , and then as Visiting Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center and Stanford University . He was chairman of the American Bar Association 's Section of Administrative Law, 1981 - 1982 , and its Conference of Section Chairmen, 1982 - 1983 . In 1982 , President Ronald Reagan appointed him to be a Judge of the United States Court Of Appeals For The District Of Columbia Circuit . Four years later, in 1986 , Reagan nominated him as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Of The United States to fill in the vacancy left by Reagan's nomination of Associate Justice William Rehnquist to be Chief Justice Of The United States . Scalia, whose nomination was backed by liberals such as Mario Cuomo , was approved by the Senate in a vote of 98-0 and he took his seat on September 26 , 1986 , becoming the first Italian-American Justice on the Supreme Court of the United States. LEGAL PHILOSOPHY AND APPROACH in 2006 .]] A Formalist , Scalia is considered the Court's leading proponent of Textualism and Originalism (he is careful to distinguish his philosophy of Original Meaning from Original Intent ). These schools of jurisprudence emphasizes careful adherence to the text of both the Constitution Of The United States and federal statutes as that text would have been understood to mean when adopted. Scalia often relies upon tradition and history to discern the original meaning of unclear constitutional provisions, and when interpreting statutory language, he considers legislative history to be an irrelevant and unreliable interpretive tool. This disdain for legislative history is a central tenet of Textualism , and is infused with both an appreciation for Public Choice Theory and of the realities of legislative compromise (i.e., the statutory text being the only reliable evidence of the deal that was struck). This position often puts him at odds with Justice Breyer , who is perhaps the Court's most steadfast proponent of attempting to discern and vindicate the overarching legislative objectives of statutes, and who values legislative history in that pursuit. These precepts lead Scalia to seek out bright-line rules rather than abstract balancing tests (one of his most frequently-cited works off the bench is an essay titled "The Rule of Law as a Law of Rules", which also neatly encapsulates Scalia's formalist view of law), and frowns upon judicially-crafted compromises between the requirements of the Constitution and perceived expediency (see, e.g., his dissent in '' Maryland V. Craig ''); he has frequently pointed out that, regardless of whether or not moderate views are a good idea in politics, they are at root incompatible with the job of a judge: " is a 'moderate interpretation' [of the Constitution )? Halfway between what it says and what you want it to say?" [http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2006/03/15/scalia_critical_of/] Scalia's originalism frequently puts him on the conservative side of the Court in constitutional cases, but occasionally brings results that defy conservative administrations. Judged by results alone, like his colleague Justice Clarence Thomas , Scalia has handed down decisions that might be called Libertarian in certain cases. For example:
By contrast, Scalia's decisions on Abortion or Gay Rights issues could be characterized as opposing a libertarian viewpoint; for example, in '' Lawrence V. Texas '', Scalia denied that the Constitution protected the right to engage in Sodomy , and in various cases - most comprehensively in '' Webster V. Reproductive Health Services '' and '' Planned Parenthood V. Casey '' - he has argued that the Constitution does not protect a right to have an abortion (arguing that the Constitution neither forbids a state from permitting abortion nor requires it to. {Link without Title} {Link without Title} ). However, these seemingly conflicting trends become rational when considered in terms of ''process'' rather than ''results''; Scalia strongly defends rights protected by the Constitution (such as the Fourth amendment rights at issue in ''Kyllo'', or the sole prerogative of the Congress to suspend the writ in ''Hamdi'') but is unwilling to protect rights that the Constitution does ''not'' guarantee on the presumption that the courts are the default vindicator of every claimed right. The latter, Scalia argues, is an invalid intrusion by courts on the democratic process. IMPORTANT CASES This section lists cases which form an essential introduction to Scalia's jurisprudence, views and writing style.
Sixth Amendment case study There is a particularly strong line of cases, beginning in 1989 and reaching its logical conclusion last term in ''Booker'', which illustrates Scalia's writing style and views on a particular subject, viz., the requirement that a jury must determine all facts which relate to a sentence, a Constitutional guarantee which endangered (in ''Blakely'') and then led to the outright overturning (in ''Booker'') of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines . That line of cases is as follows:
(Refer to Morano, "Justice Scalia: His Insaturation of the Sixth Amendment in Sentencing" for pre-''Booker'' discussion of this line of cases). JUDICIAL TEMPERAMENT AND PERSONALITY Scalia's approach to textual interpretation is not the only substantial change he has brought to the bench. In a position that has often been characterized by substantial circumspection in writing and public behavior, Scalia has been especially willing to display his personality and caustic wit and to attract, if not embrace, public controversy. At oral argument and in written opinions Scalia is well known for his lively questioning during arguments before the court; one litigator who argued before the Court compared Scalia's questioning style to "a big cat batting around a ball of yarn" ( {Link without Title} ). It has been observed that his aggressive questioning style at oral argument was virtually unknown upon his arrival at the Court, but has become virtually the norm in the succeeding twenty years as new Justices arrived. In his concurring and dissenting opinions, he frequently takes what may be characterized as sarcastic, biting, and personal "potshots" at the other justices, quoting them from past opinions to point out what he considers inconsistencies in their reasoning or broad judicial philosophy, or accusing them of inventing legal standards out of thin air. His strongest scorn has often been directed at his more moderate fellow conservatives, Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony Kennedy , for reasons including what he saw as the former's equivocation on abortion and the latter's willingness to take persuasive guidance from foreign law in his opinions. Relations with the electronic media Strongly protective of his privacy, Scalia formerly barred (or at least, severely restricted) the Electronic Media from recording his speaking engagements, citing (possibly sarcastically) his "''First Amendment right not to speak on the radio or television when I do not wish to do so''." In April 2004, at a Scalia speech in Hattiesburg, Mississippi , U.S. Marshal Melanie Rube, acting as security detail, confiscated the audio tape of a reporter covering the event. After some controversy over the incident, Scalia apologized and stated he did not order the Marshal to do so. He has since amended his policy so that print reporters are now allowed to record his speeches to "promote accurate reporting." More recently, he appears to be relaxing the electronic media structure as well -- at least two of his recent speeches have been covered by CSPAN . This is possibly related to the graduation from college of the last of his children, whose privacy has potentially been a major factor in the strongly family-oriented Scalia's desire for privacy (see discussion in Mark Tushnet, ''A Court Divided''), and Scalia has recently been quoted as saying that "''my kids have been working on me to get out and do more public appearances. ... They think it makes it harder to demonize you - and I agree''." {Link without Title} Views on televising Supreme Court sessions Like Justice at the National Archives -- also carried by CSPAN -- he noted that he would approve of both audio and televisual broadcasts if he could be confident that it would go out ''and be watched'' gavel-to-gavel. He characterized his objections as relating to the possibility for sensationalism, excerptation, and the fostering of an inaccurate picture of the Supreme Court's operation. Controversial recusals and non-recusals Perhaps more than any other recent Justice, Scalia's choices regarding whether to recuse himself from upcoming cases following controversial statements and acts have garned public attention.
::War is war, and it has never been the case that when you captured a combatant you have to give them a jury trial in your civil courts. Give me a break. If he was captured by my {Link without Title} army on a battlefield, that is where he belongs. :Of particular concern to those petitioning for recusal in ''Hamdan'' was an additional comment that "I had a son Scalia on that battlefield; they were shooting at my son, and I'm not about to give this man who was captured in a war a full jury trial." Scalia declined to recuse himself from Hamdan, this time without comment. [http://smh.com.au/news/world/comments-on-rights-of-detainees-cast-doubt-on-judges-role-on-court/2006/03/27/1143441083311.html This incident led law professor Ron Cass to complain that it was becoming fashionable in certain circles that Scalia is perceived as voting against as a rule (but see ''Hamdi'', discussed supra) to demand that Scalia recuse himself as a strategy to nullify his vote.[http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/03/stalking_justice.html] The hand gesture controversy In March 2006, a Boston Herald reporter approached Scalia after a Red Mass , asking if he faced questioning over impartiality on matters of church and state. Scalia replied, "You know what I say to those people?" and made a gesture originally misreported by both liberal and conservative sources as The Bird . Subsequent reports clarified that it was the traditional Italian gesture of disdain, "cupping the hand under the chin and flicking the fingers like a backward wave".[http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/local/states/pennsylvania/counties/philadelphia_county/philadelphia/14227487.htm After the ''Herald'' ran the article (which, inter alia, referred to Scalia as an "Italian jurist" Scalia submitted a letter to the editor of the ''Herald'', stating "from watching too many episodes of The Sopranos , your staff seems to have acquired the belief that any Sicilian Gesture is Obscene -- especially when made by an 'Italian jurist'. (I am, by the way, an American jurist.)" His letter quoted from the Luigi Barzini book, ''The Italians'': "The extended fingers of one hand moving slowly back and forth under the raised chin means 'I couldn't care less. It's no business of mine. Count me out.'"[http://news.bostonherald.com/galleries/?title=Letter [http://www.cnn.com/2006/LAW/03/29/scalia.gesture.ap/][http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=49468] The gesture was captured by a . The photographer said later that Scalia accompanied the gesture with the utterance "vaffanculo" (loosely translated as " Fuck you" a nearby ''Boston Herald'' reporter, however, claimed to have heard no such utterance.[http://news.bostonherald.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=132932 . At the 2006 White House Correspondents Dinner, comedian and Fake News pundit Stephen Colbert parodied this incident in his routine. Scalia himself was in the audience and was seen laughing at the parody. FURTHER READING
REFERENCES
EXTERNAL LINKS Biographical
Websites
Works by Scalia
Newspaper articles and miscellaneous content
|
|
|