All posts by James Marc Leas

About James Marc Leas

James Marc Leas is a patent lawyer in South Burlington Vermont. He has a Bachelor’s in biology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Master’s in physics from the University of Massachusetts, where he completed all requirements for the Ph.D. in physics except the dissertation. He was an engineer at IBM for 20 years and at Solarex for five years. He holds 43 patents, most assigned to IBM. He was a staff physicist at the Union of Concerned Scientists for one year. He taught physics and biology at Mackenzie High School in Detroit, Michigan for three years.

Attack First, Kill First, and Claim Self-Defense

In response to the Call for Submissions from The United Nations Independent Commission of Inquiry on the 2014 Gaza Conflict, I prepared a 26 page submission on behalf of the  Palestine Subcommittee of the National Lawyers Guild. The full text, entitled, “Attack First, Kill First and Claim Self-Defense,” was posted on Truthout.org. A brief summary of the submission is below. This UN Commission was established by vote of the UN Human Rights Council on July 23, 2014. The Commission is scheduled to give its report to the Council in March 2015.

Supposed self-defense against rockets diverted attention from war crimes allegations, but neither facts nor law support Israeli self-defense claims.

Self-defense against the rockets was invoked by Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, US President Obama and the United States Senate to deflect criticisms that Israeli forces were committing war crimes by targeting civilians and civilian property in Gaza.

Though the war-crimes allegations came from respected sources, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the United Nations Human Rights Council, the National Lawyers Guild and the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, the central message that Israeli forces were protecting Israeli citizens from Hamas rockets was so ubiquitous in the Western media as to eclipse the war crimes charges. Pervasive self-defense claims against rocket fire have been crucial to Israeli political and military leaders maintaining impunity and avoiding accountability for their periodic assaults on civilians and civilian infrastructure in Gaza.

For example, on July 1, 2014, the United States Senate unanimously adopted a resolution, “Expressing the sense of the Senate regarding United States support for the State of Israel as it defends itself against unprovoked rocket attacks from the Hamas terrorist organization.”

Both facts and law refute the Israeli and US self-defense claims.

This submission to the Commission presents facts showing that Israeli air and ground attacks preceded Hamas rocket fire. Because Israeli armed forces launched large-scale attacks on the West Bank and Gaza during a period when a cease-fire with Hamas was in place, while Hamas continued to observe the cease-fire, before any Hamas rockets were launched from Gaza and while no non-Hamas rockets were being fired at Israel, Israeli forces could not have been defending Israeli citizens from rocket fire.

This submission also presents facts showing that the Israeli bombardment and ground invasion of Gaza not only did not defend Israel from rocket fire, they sparked a vast increase in rocket fire as compared to the level during the month preceding the Israeli onslaught.

This submission also shows that the Israeli prime minister admitted to military goals for the Israeli attacks that had nothing to do with stopping rocket fire.

This submission also presents the law regarding self-defense and shows that even if the facts were otherwise, self-defense is inapplicable to an occupying power, such as Israel in Gaza (despite its claims to the contrary).

Thus, in no way should Israeli government officials and military leaders continue to enjoy impunity or be given any credit based on claimed self-defense from rocket fire. When Israeli forces initiated and escalated attacks in the West Bank and Gaza to accomplish military and political objectives in violation of an existing cease-fire agreement, they were the ones putting aside the goal of protecting Israeli citizens from rocket fire. Because Israeli forces initiated and escalated attacks in view of the history of such attacks provoking a dialing up of rocket fire they should be precluded from using the foreseeable rocket fire from diverting attention from the war crimes they committed.

Renewed FOIA request for F-35 fleet flight hours submitted to F-35 Program Office

For immediate release

For further information contact James Marc Leas 802 864-1575

Renewed FOIA request for F-35 fleet flight hours submitted to the Joint Strike Fighter Program Office

Fire that destroyed an F-35A at Eglin Air Force base raises stakes in safety debate about basing F-35-A in Burlington in 2020

F-16 co-designer Pierre Sprey says F-35 cumulative fleet flight hours by 2020 will be further reduced because of mishaps and cost

Below this news release is the renewed FOIA request for F-35 fleet flight hours submitted to the Joint Strike Fighter Program Office. This request is similar to the FOIA request that VTDigger effectively suppressed last year in the months leading up to the Air Force decision to base the F-35-A jets in Burlington.

“Fleet flight hours” is a critical parameter for determining the safety of a new jet fighter, like the F-35-A. The F-16 had over one million worldwide fleet flight hours when it was first based in Burlington in 1986. According to calculations by F-16 co-designer, Pierre Sprey, the severely troubled F-35-A is unlikely to have anywhere near that number of fleet flight hours when it arrives in Burlington in 2020. Its safety record will therefore not be verifiably established when it arrives, and it is likely to have a much higher crash rate than the F-16 had.

An F-35-A burst into flames due to what Aviation Week called a “safety-critical problem” in its engine while the jet was speeding down the runway on take off at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida on June 23, 2014 (“F-35 Fire: In Search Of A Solution,” Aviation Week, September 8, 2014). According to Aviation Week, “no single root cause has yet been identified.”

According to that Aviation Week article, “Five F135 engines have been pulled from F-35s after failing an inspection regime that was instituted after the June 23 fire. One of the failed engines was removed from F-35 CF-9 (the ninth production F-35C), an aircraft with fewer than 70 flight hours, according to a retired military officer and JSF program veteran.”

Vermont Air National Guard Pilots and Burlington area residents will be at risk if the F-35-A fleet has not flown at least a million fleet flight hours, according to Pierre Sprey. As reported in Seven Days last year, “All new fighters have high accident rates, he explained, which are higher than mature fighter planes and much higher than scheduled commercial airliners.” If substantially less than a million fleet flight hours, there will be no solid basis for the plane’s safety record when it arrives in Burlington in 2020. Sprey’s calculations last year indicated that the F-35-A would not have more than 100,000 fleet flight hours when it arrives in Burlington in 2020, way less than sufficient for safety and for accurately determining the plane’s accident rate.

In view of the renewed FOIA request, in an email today Pierre Sprey wrote:

With respect to my prediction of 100,000 fleet flight hours by 2020, there is now no doubt that the total hours will be substantially less because a) F-35A flying hours per aircraft per month have increased more slowly than predicted (due to groundings and continuing aircraft unreliability); and b) there will be significantly less F-35As bought by 2020 than I used in my calculations due to their continuing high and unaffordable costs (this is already reflected in the DoD’s Five Year Plan). When you get the detailed flying hour info, we can sit down together and recalculate the fleet flying hours to be anticipated in 2020.

Here is how VTDigger not only failed to do its own digging into anticipated F-35-A fleet flight hours but interfered with and effectively sabotaged such digging before the Air Force announcement last December that it would base F-35 jets in Burlington.

The day after attorney and writer James Marc Leas called Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek requesting charts showing the anticipated fleet flight hours for the F-35-A by 2020, Stefanek wrote an October 22, 2013 email to VTDigger, saying:

   “Jim Leas called yesterday and said he is a freelancer for your publication. Unfortunately, I’ve misplaced his phone number so I was hoping you could send the following information his way.

   “The F-35 Joint Program Office with the Department of Defense (not the Air Force) is responsible for F-35 fleet flight hours. You may reach that office by calling [redacted].”

VTDigger did not abide by Ann Stefanek’s request to send his way the information as to whom to call for the anticipated fleet flight hour information nor otherwise inform Mr. Leas of the need to redirect his request to the Joint Program Office. VTDigger also refused a request to release the email correspondence from Ann Stefanek. Thus the request for anticipated F-35 fleet flight hours by 2020 was effectively suppressed, and the information about anticipated fleet flight hours was not made publicly available before the Air Force issued its decision to base F-35 jets in Burlington last December.

VTDigger also published an irresponsible story accusing me of “misrepresentation” based on Stefanek stating in her email that I said I was a freelancer for VTDigger,” said Mr. Leas.

Air Force rules expressly provide that that the Air Force considers a requester with a sufficient past publication record to be “a freelance journalist for” the publication. No employment contract, no payment for articles, and no assignment are required under the Air Force rules. All that is required is “a solid basis for expecting publication through that entity.” And for that determination the Air Force “may consider the past publication record of the requester.” The Air Force rules are identical to the wording in the federal Freedom of Information Act. The attached list includes the 39 articles VTDigger had published that had been authored by Mr. Leas in the four years previous, demonstrated that solid basis.

However, under another Freedom of Information Act request, the Air Force provided Mr. Leas with the entire email communication between Ann Stefanek and VTDigger (with specific names and phone numbers redacted). Although the article suggested otherwise, the emails from Stefanek show that she leveled no charge of any kind against Mr. Leas. The charge of “misrepresentation” was a fabrication of VTDigger in the weeks preceding the Air Force announcement. The emails also show that VTDigger did not believe Stefanek was quoting Mr. Leas precisely. But even if Stefanek had accurately quoted Mr. Leas, under the Air Force definition of “freelance journalist for a news media entity,” he would have been 100% accurate. Nevertheless, VTDigger’s personal attack article also announced that VTDigger would not publish any more articles by Mr. Leas.

“The (1) suppression of the request for information from the Air Force plus (2) the failure to pass on the contact information provided by Ann Stefanek plus (3) the defamatory attack on and the (4) silencing of a writer that the Air Force would consider a freelancer for VTDigger plus (5) the failure of VTDigger to do its own digging into anticipated fleet flight hours for the F-35A add up to a totally irresponsible role for VTDigger that facilitated the scheme to impose the high-risk F-35A on the most heavily populated region in Vermont,” Mr. Leas said. For details and a link to the full Stefanek-VTDigger correspondence see the article, “Open Letter to VTDigger Co-Publisher, Anne Galloway: Banned by VTDigger,” on greenmountaindaily.com.

The renewed FOIA request, below, should result in the public at last finding out what the Joint Strike Fighter Program Office thinks will be the F-35A fleet flight hours when the F-35A is scheduled to arrive in Burlington in 2020.

–30–

——– Forwarded Message ——–

Subject: FOIA request F-35 fleet flight hours

Date: Wed, 19 Nov 2014 21:57:31 -0700

From: James Marc Leas

Organization: Law Office of James Marc Leas

To: public affairs JSF

Joint Strike Fighter Program Office

Department of Defense

Dear Madam or Sir:

Under the Freedom of Information Act, please provide me with documents, including:

   a chart or charts or pages of documents having the information in any other format showing anticipated fleet flight hours for the F-35-A year by year

   a chart or charts or pages of documents having the information in any other format showing anticipated cumulative fleet flight hours for the F-35-A for each year or years for which information is available

   a chart or charts or pages of documents having the information in any other format showing anticipated fleet flight hours for all F-35 variants year by year

   a chart or charts or pages of documents having the information in any other format showing anticipated cumulative fleet flight hours for all F-35 variants for each year or years for which information is available

   a chart or charts or pages of documents having the information in any other format showing anticipated fleet flight hours for the F-35-A year by year until the end of 2020

   a chart or charts or pages of documents having the information in any other format showing anticipated cumulative fleet flight hours for the F-35-A by the end of 2020

   a chart or charts or pages of documents having the information in any other format showing anticipated fleet flight hours for all F-35 variants year by year until the end of 2020

   a chart or charts or pages of documents having the information in any other format showing anticipated cumulative fleet flight hours for all F-35 variants by the end of 2020

As to charge for the documents, I request consideration under C6.1.5.2.2.2 and under C6.1.5.7.1. for News Media. The attachments demonstrate a solid basis for expecting publication through a news media entity. I request that you look to the attached past publication record in making your determination as well as to the attached email from editor Leslie Thatcher, contents editor at Truthout.org, stating that I have a solid basis for expecting publication of my submissions by Truthout.org. I am willing to pay duplication charges in excess of 100 pages if more than 100 pages of records are provided.

As you may know, an order issued by the Secretary of the Air Force entitled, “Freedom of Information Act Program,” dated 21 October 2010 and updated on 24 April 2012 and having number DOD5400.7-R_AFMAN 33-302 has the same wording as the freedom of information act where it states:

In the case of “freelance” journalists, they may be regarded as working for a news organization if they can demonstrate a solid basis for expecting publication through that organization, even though not actually employed by it. A publication contract would be the clearest proof, but Components may also look to the past publication record of a requester in making this determination.

In addition, I request that the documents be furnished without charge, or at a charge reduced below fees assessed to the categories of requesters in subsection C6.1.5. because the waiver or reduction of the fees is in the public interest because furnishing the information is likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of the Department of Defense and is not in any way in the commercial interest of the requester.

Thank you very much.

best regards,

James Marc Leas

Open Letter to VTDigger Co-Publisher, Anne Galloway: Banned by VTDigger

Following is an open letter to VTDigger Co-Publisher, Anne Galloway. The Air Force provided the email correspondence between VTDigger and Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek in response to a Freedom of Information Act request. The full email correspondence, as provided by the Air Force (and annotated by me), can be downloaded by clicking here or on the link below.  

                                                                               September 16, 2014

RE: Banned by VTDigger

Dear Anne,                                            

On this, VTDigger’s fifth birthday, I would like to point out an important issue that hangs like a dark shadow over VTDigger’s credibility.

As you know VTDigger published 39 op-ed pieces that I authored or coauthored during the first four years of its existence. But on October 28, 2013 VTDigger published an article by Tom Brown announcing that it would no longer accept op-ed pieces from me based on an email communication from Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek. Although no confidential source and no confidential information were involved, VTDigger refused to release the email communication from Stefanek that was the basis for its attack on me.

Air Force released email exchange under the FOIA

However, in response to my federal Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, the Air Force sent me all the emails VTDigger exchanged with Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek.

Hurtful as it was to me, the reputation damage was not the most important failing. I write to you because the damage from your article and your banning effect thousands of innocent Vermont families who are in the flight path of F-35 basing and who need all voices speaking up.

Air Force spokeswoman never charged misrepresentation

The emails between VTDigger and Stefanek show that VTDigger made serious mistakes in its October 28, 2013 article, “F-35 opponent told Pentagon official he was a VTDigger freelancer.” The emails show that Stefanek said nothing disparaging about me and never charged me with, suggested, or hinted at any wrongdoing.

Federal law defines “freelancer” and provides for equal access to government information

As we shall see in this letter, federal law, the “Freedom of Information Act”  (FOIA), and an Order from the Secretary of the Air Force called “Freedom of Information Act Program,” which implements the federal law, define who is a “freelancer.” I fit perfectly under the federal and Air Force definition, and VTDigger was wrong in claiming that I had “misrepresented” myself in my communication with the Air Force. In addition, federal law provides equal access to information, and VTDigger was wrong that my motive was “to gain information [about projected F-35 fleet flight hours before basing in Vermont] that might not be available to a member of the general public.”

The Order and the law have identical wording defining “a freelancer.” Under the law, among the ways the Air Force may regard an information requester as a freelancer for a news-media entity is whether the requester can demonstrate a solid basis for expecting publication through that entity. The government can make that determination based on the requester’s “past publication record for that news-media entity.” Other ways, of course, include being on staff, being on assignment, and being paid by the news-media entity for articles.

Here is what the federal law and the Air Force Order both say:

A freelance journalist shall be regarded as working for a news-media entity if the journalist can demonstrate a solid basis for expecting publication through that entity, whether or not the journalist is actually employed by the entity. A publication contract would present a solid basis for such an expectation; the Government may also consider the past publication record of the requester in making such a determination.

The intent of Congress in passing this law with its broad definition of “freelancer for a news media entity” is clear: Congress passed the Freedom of Information Act to make government information widely available to the public. Thus, the sole government interest (in granting a fee waiver for searching for the requested documents) is whether the requester can demonstrate a solid basis for publication through a news-media entity. As expressly provided in the law, past publication record works for that demonstration. What VTDigger may view as of primary importance, being on staff or being on assignment and being paid, are merely other good ways of demonstrating satisfaction of the government interest in wide dispersal of the information sought. Nor does the law distinguish on the basis of the label given to the past publications by the freelancer, so long as they show publication of information. The law includes no restriction as to whether the publications are called news, feature, or opinion.

The 39 op-ed pieces that I authored or coauthored on various subjects that VTDigger published during its first 4 years of existence–and I thank you for publishing them and for keeping them posted on the VTDigger web site–provided a “past publication record” that provided a “solid basis for expecting publication through VTDigger.” Until I was banned.

Based on this past publication record on VTDigger–and many more published during the past few years on Truthout, Counterpunch, Mondoweiss, and Oped News, as well as oped pieces published years ago in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and Burlington Free Press, among others, a good case could be made that I fit the federal law definition of freelance journalist. (Of course, I also fit the ordinary Merriam-Webster dictionary definition, “a person who acts independently without being affiliated with or authorized by an organization.”)

It was not just the large number of fact-filled op-ed pieces of mine that would have qualified me as a “freelancer for VTDigger” under the Air Force and federal government standard. Also a large readership: A VTDigger article, “Recap 2012: Readers’ top stories”  notes that one of my oped pieces, about “smart meters,” was among the five most read VTDigger op-eds in 2012.

Let’s assume for the moment that Stefanek’s 5-word summary of what I said was perfectly accurate. Let’s assume that Stefanek had precisely quoted me representing myself as “a freelancer for your publication.” Had I actually said precisely that, I would still have been 100% accurate under the operative definition when speaking with the Air Force (or any other federal agency). This because of my past publication record for VTDigger (39 op-ed pieces). Thus, even if Stefanek had quoted me precisely, which she did not (and VTDigger’s second email to Stefanek shows that even VTDigger felt she had not quoted me precisely), and even if she otherwise also knew that I was not “on assignment” from VTDigger, and even if she also knew I was not paid for my articles, she would not have regarded me as “misrepresenting myself.” This is because under the above quoted federal law and the Order to Air Force personnel issued by the Secretary of the Air Force my past publication record on VTDigger would qualify me as a freelancer for VTDigger.

However, what I actually told Ann Stefanek during our phone call was a little different than what Stefanek said in her email to VTDigger: As I wrote in an email to VTDigger the day before VTDigger published its October 28, 2013 article, “I told Ann Stefanik that I write articles for VTDigger. She asked if I was on staff. I said no, I write articles for VTDigger freelance or that I was a freelancer.” VTDigger’s article failed to include any quote from me at all.

So why did VTDigger launch its wrongful attack?

21 of the 39 op-ed pieces of mine that VTDigger published exposed defects in the plan to base F-35 fighter/bombers in Burlington. The articles provided the public with information not provided in other media outlets:

o Corruption in the F-35 basing decision making process under pressure from Senator Patrick Leahy.

o Air Force acknowledgment of serious degradation of the health and safety of thousands of Vermont families from noise and crash risk if the F-35 was based in Burlington.

o How Vermont commercial real estate developers had already used the intense noise of the F-16 to get the federal government to pay for the removal of hundreds of families and demolish more than 100 affordable homes near the airport entrance so they could acquire that valuable land for commercial development and how the louder F-35 would facilitate that plan.

The October 28, 2013 VTDigger article misled readers into thinking that it was Stefanek who contacted VTDigger to level the charge that I had misrepresented myself. The emails show that Stefanek never leveled any charge against me. The charge of misrepresentation was authored solely by VTDigger. Not only that. The emails actually show that it was VTDigger trying to persuade Stefanek to agree with the charge of misrepresentation. But she never did.

VTDigger asked for and failed to get more precision

After failing to get Stefanek to agree with the charge, in the next email from VTDigger to Stefanek VTDigger asked her for more precision about what I had said to her:

as precisely as possible recall what James Leas said to you when he represented himself as a freelance writer for VTDigger.org. Did he use the word freelance writer? And anything else you might remember. I need to confront him on this and want to make sure I know as precisely as possible what words he used.

In asking for more precision about what I had said, VTDigger admitted that it did not think what it already had from Stefanek was sufficiently precise.

But Stefanek gave nothing more precise. Yet the article omits mention of VTDiggers own dissatisfaction with her precision. On what basis did VTDigger level its charge of “misrepresentation” if even VTDigger did not feel that Stefanek could provide what I had said precisely enough?

A comparison of the emails with the article also shows that VTDigger also threw several additional negative points into the article that Stefanek never said in any of her emails and that had no basis in fact.

VTDigger misled readers about its sole source

The emails also show that VTDigger misled its readers not just about what Stefanek said but also about who Stefanek is. In the article, VTDigger identified Stefanek as an authoritative figure, a spokeswoman for the Air Force, which is true. But VTDigger omitted mention that Stefanek self-identifies on her Facebook page as a supporter of Green Ribbons for the F-35-the local Vermont organization that was leading the campaign in support of F-35 basing in Burlington. Thus, VTDigger relied exclusively on the word of an avowed partisan for banning someone on the other side, and never let its readers know of her affiliation.

This was not only a matter of improper reporting. And misleading readers. In addition, because what VTDigger published was false and reputation damaging, its article put VTDigger on the wrong side of Vermont law regarding defamation.

Banned five weeks before the Air Force F-35 basing announcement

VTDigger published its personal-attack piece when the Air Force announcement selecting Burlington for F-35 basing was imminent. VTDigger announced the silencing of my voice in its statewide forum just 5 weeks before the December 3, 2013 Air Force announcement that Burlington was selected.

VTDigger effectively silenced me from VTDigger’s statewide audience at the most crucial time for the politicians and commercial real estate developers seeking to foist this immense danger onto Vermont communities–the same politicians and commercial real estate developers my articles were exposing. The silencing based on false charges facilitated the play book of those politicians and developers. The silencing allowed them to proceed without having to defend their conduct in this statewide forum.

Ann Stefanek, of course, bears some responsibility, too. She failed to correct VTDigger’s obviously wrong statements in its emails to her about who the Air Force regards as a freelancer. She failed to correct VTDigger’s wrong statements about who may receive Air Force documents. And in her emails she failed to divulge to VTDigger her Facebook association with the pro-F-35 basing organization in Vermont, “Green Ribbons for the F-35”.

If the motive don’t fit

The very release of the emails by the Air Force to me–even after VTDigger’s personal attack article–demonstrates that VTDigger was wrong about my supposed motive for “misrepresenting” myself. In the article, VTDigger explained how motive was crucial to its attack on me:

We believe he was attempting to leverage the privilege granted him by VTDigger to have his anti-F-35 opinions published on our site and that he used that connection to gain information that might not be available to a member of the general public.

VTDigger’s charge that I had “misrepresented” myself depended on its “belief” as to my motive for doing so, that the information “might not be available to a member of the general public.” However, under federal law and an Air Force Order, government information, including Air Force information, is equally available to members of the general public as it is to paid reporters.

The Order from the Secretary of the Air Force, “Public Affairs Responsibilities and Management,” 18 August 2010 provides no distinction between news media and private citizen regarding what documents will be provided. The Order also provides no distinction between news media and private citizen regarding the time for response from the Air Force. Even “expedited processing” is available to both news media and private citizens if requested and a “compelling need” is established. The Order states:

DOD makes available timely and accurate information so that the public, Congress, and the media may assess and understand the facts about national security and defense strategy. Requests for information from organizations and private citizens shall be answered in a timely manner. In responding to requests, the following guidelines apply:

1.10.1. Information will be fully and readily available, consistent with statutory and regulatory requirements and exemptions. The provisions of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and the Privacy Act will be supported in both letter and spirit.

Notwithstanding the additional handicap posed by the reputation-damaging article VTDigger published, the Air Force decision to release to me the email correspondence between VTDigger and Stefanek demonstrates in action the equal access to information.

Thus, VTDigger published a motive for its charge of “misrepresentation”–a motive that was central to the case made by VTDigger against me–that was flat wrong.

The author of the October 28, 2013 VTDigger article, Tom Brown, effectively admitted that the motive presented in his article was wrong in a comment he posted to the article the morning after his article appeared. In the comment Brown said “the Pentagon PIO cannot handle inquiries from all citizens and therefore grants a higher priority to legitimate media requests, a privilege upon which Leas was trying to capitalize. Case closed.” Thus, the motive for “misrepresenting” myself, was no longer “to gain information that might not be available to a member of the general public.” Necessity to gain the information was now replaced by mere “priority.” Thus, Brown himself acknowledged that what he had published one day earlier was wrong.

Nor did Brown explain why a reader should believe that the new motive presented in his comment was any more accurate than the one he had errantly tossed into the article. Nor did he let readers know that the FOIA and the Air Force Order broadly define what he calls “legitimate media” to include as “freelancers” people like me, who write opinion pieces without employment, assignment, or deadline but who have a substantial past publication record. As to priority, nor did he let readers know that the FOIA expressly provides for “expedited processing,” and that both reporters and members of the general public are entitled to expedited processing if they can show “compelling need.” To meet that standard a reporter would have to show “urgency to inform the public concerning actual or alleged Federal Government activity.” The emails from Stefanek show no request by me for “expedited processing” or any other priority. Nor did I ask for priority in making my request.

Nor did Brown mention in his article or in his subsequent comment to the article that nothing in the emails from Stefanek or in the law supports either his original guess as to my motive, (necessity to get otherwise unavailable information), nor his replacement guess, (priority).

VTDigger attempted to lead Stefanek but failed

The emails also show that VTDigger fixed up the reputation-damaging personal attack from the start and attempted, but failed, to lead Stefanek toward VTDigger’s conclusion. And, as new information became available to the members of the commenting public that demolished one aspect of VTDigger’s story after another, VTDigger acknowledged nothing and corrected nothing. Amazingly, after some of the 123 comments posted to the article showed serious flaws in the article and its conclusion you, VTDigger’s co-publisher,  posted a comment repeating the charge of “misrepresentation.” Thus, VTDigger cannot deny that it knowingly published a defamation.

Certain supporters of F-35 basing in Vermont have extensively used personal attack in anonymous comments they have posted in response to articles on the Burlington Free Press. The VTDigger article was the first time a mainstream media organization in Vermont had effectively legitimized and put names to this personal attack mode.

Reaffirm appropriate standards

A posted correction by VTDigger is essential to unambiguously reaffirm appropriate standards for the ongoing debate on this issue and all other issues. And to assure readers that silencing opponents of powerful political and economic interests in Vermont will not be allowed unless an independent and impartial review demonstrates a solid basis for this sanction.

As every American knows, the fundamental job of our news organizations is to question authority and hold the government to account. Instead, in this case, VTDigger did the opposite.

VTDigger’s personal attack publication was made with reckless disregard for the truth, showed ill will, showed VTDigger acting with complete disregard for its duty to verify and for its duty to support the right of the one being attacked to answer the attack–as provided in ordinary journalist ethics. VTDigger’s article included statements that had no support whatsoever in the emails but just added to the insult, and VTDigger must have known they had no basis and were false at the time it first published them. Worst of all, VTDigger put itself in the position of being viewed as obsequious to politicians and real estate developers rather than in its proper role as a watch dog over government action and powerful private interests with influence over government, and unabashedly for the public interest.

VTDigger suppressed news gathering vital to public safety

Notwithstanding VTDigger’s notice, later added to the article, that it will continue to report on both sides of the F-35 issue, VTDigger failed to follow up on its own to obtain and provide the facts about the anticipated fleet flight hours for F-35 jets in 2020 (the year the so-far unqualified fighter/bombers are scheduled to arrive in Burlington under the decision announced by the Air Force on December 3, 2013). The F-16 had more than a million fleet flight hours before it was deemed to have a safety record sufficient for basing in a residential area. VTDigger has suppressed not just the speech of a single individual but also suppressed publication of vital safety information that would by now be available to the public if not for VTDigger interference.

Neither continued harsh repetition of the defamation nor denial nor silence will work to remove the deep shadow over VTDigger’s journalistic integrity that its October 28, 2013 article produced.

Readers and supporters of VTDigger have a right to request (a) prompt correction of each and every one of the statements in the article that it knows have no basis in fact, and (b) VTDigger promptly agreeing to a fully independent and impartial investigation as to how and why this bogus article was published so the public can regain confidence that this type of abuse will never happen again, particularly when public health and safety are at risk and particularly when the beneficiaries are rich and powerful commercial real estate developers, politicians at the highest level in our state and in the US Senate, and the military-industrial complex. And when the people being severely shafted are thousands of Vermont families living in modest housing in Winooski, Burlington, Williston, Colchester, and South Burlington.

A change is needed, and this fifth VTDigger birthday provides the time for VTDigger to announce the sunshine of an independent and impartial investigation and that VTDigger will make appropriate correction so the dark shadow may be lifted.

Thank you very much for considering this. I look forward to your response.

                                                                                   Sincerely,

                                                                                   James Marc Leas

Senators Sanders & Leahy support deeply flawed Senate resolution promoting Israeli war on Gaza

All 100 Senators, including Vermont’s Bernie Sanders and Patrick Leahy, joined in passing a Senate resolution on July 17, 2014 supporting “the State of Israel as it defends itself against unprovoked rocket attacks from the Hamas terrorist organization.”

However, the facts differ.

A report issued by the authoritative “Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center” (ITIC) unintentionally debunked the Senate resolution more than a week before its unanimous consent vote in the Senate. The ITIC is a private Israeli think tank that “has close ties with the country’s military leadership,” according to The Washington Post. The weekly ITIC reports regarding rocket fire are frequently quoted on the Israeli government’s own web site.

Israeli forces assault West Bank and Gaza. Then Hamas fires rockets

The ITIC July 8, 2014 weekly report, “News of Terrorism and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (July 2 – 8, 2014),” states:

For the first time since Operation Pillar of Defense [November 2012], Hamas participated in and claimed responsibility for rocket fire [on July 7, 2014].

During the three weeks before Hamas launched those rockets, Israeli forces cracked down on Hamas members in the West Bank and Gaza. “Operation Brothers’ Keeper” was supposedly to find and rescue the three teenage settlers kidnapped on June 12.

According to weekly reports issued by the Palestine Center for Human Rights (PCHR), Israeli soldiers and settlers killed 11 Palestinians and wounded 51 during 369 incursions into the West Bank between June 12 and July 2. Israeli forces raided hundreds of houses on the West Bank each week. Israeli forces also attacked 60 targets in Gaza and engaged in one ground incursion there, wounding 27 people in Gaza during those three weeks.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported on July 3:

Israel’s military operations in the West Bank following the abduction and killing of three Israeli teenagers have amounted to collective punishment. The military operations included unlawful use of force, arbitrary arrests, and illegal home demolitions.

The Israeli forces thus emphatically ended their side of the 19 month cease-fire in June, well before a single rocket was fired by Hamas.

“Operation Pillar of Defense” was the Israeli government’s 8 day aerial assault on Gaza in November 2012 that ended with an Egypt brokered cease-fire on November 20, 2012. Not only do ITIC weekly reports show that Hamas was not involved in any rocket fire at last until June 30, 2014, an article in the Jerusalem Post, “IDF source: Hamas working to stop Gaza rockets,” reported that Hamas was policing other groups in Gaza to prevent rocket fire. Thus, to the extent Israeli forces had observed the 2012 cease-fire agreement, Israeli government officials had scored major success at bringing Hamas rocket fire to zero and recruiting Hamas to police other groups.

Not only that. The facts show that Israeli forces had to work quite hard to get Hamas to end its side of this cease-fire agreement. Even the Israeli forces and settlers going wild on the West Bank from June 12 until June 30 was not enough to shake Hamas into launching a single rocket.

While all the attacks by Israeli forces in the West Bank and Gaza provoked rocket fire from other “terrorist” groups during June-which the ITIC reports had been almost zero during the previous month–the attacks at least up to June 30 did not provoke Hamas itself to fire rockets. To predictably accomplish that feat, Israeli forces had to go further. And they did.

Israeli forces finally provoke Hamas by killing Hamas members

The July 8 ITIC report divulged why Hamas launched and claimed its first rocket fire at Israel in more than 19 months on July 7: On that night Israeli forces had bombed and killed 6 Hamas members in Gaza. The ITIC report includes a picture of the six Hamas members.

The July 10 PCHR weekly report gives further details of the events that immediately preceded the July 7 Hamas rocket launchings. PCHR reports:

Between 01:00 and 16:00, the bodies of 5 members of the ‘Izziddin al-Qassam Brigades (the armed wing of Hamas) were recovered from a tunnel dug near Gaza International Airport in the southeast of the southern Gaza Strip town of Rafah.  They were identified as: Ibrahim Dawod al-Bal’awi, 24; ‘Abdul Rahman Kamal al-Zamli, 22; Jum’a ‘Atiya Shallouf, 26; and Khaled ‘Abdul Hadi Abu Mur, 21, and his twin brother, Mustafa.  Another three members were recovered alive, but one was in a serious condition.  It should be noted that the tunnel was repeatedly bombarded by Israeli warplanes and tanks.  According to medical sources, the deceased inhaled toxic gases. The ‘Izziddin al-Qassam Brigades declared in an online statement that 5 of its members were killed as a result of airstrikes that targeted places of resistance activities.

On that night the Israeli Air Force also attacked approximately 50 more “terrorist targets” in the Gaza Strip, as described in the ITIC report.

Thus, reports from authoritative Israeli sources described the multiple provocations that the Senate resolution denied existed. Hamas launched and claimed rocket fire only after Israeli forces had engaged in nearly a month of intensive military operations in violation of the cease-fire agreement and only after Israeli forces had killed 6 Hamas members in Gaza.

Or did Hamas actually fire rockets on June 30?

However, uncertainty about exactly when Hamas rocket fire began is indicated in the July 1 ITIC weekly report:

During the operation the terrorist organizations operating in the Gaza Strip escalated their rocket fire into the western Negev (52 rocket hits have been identified since the beginning of the operation, not including the mortar shells and rockets that fell by mistake inside the Gaza Strip). The IDF responded with the targeted killing of terrorist operatives and by attacking more than 60 terrorist targets in the Gaza Strip. Most of the rockets were fired by rogue terrorist organizations, although in one instance (June 30, 2014), Hamas operatives were apparently involved.

This July 1 ITIC report also states:

On June 30, 2014, 12 rocket hits were identified. Some of them may have been fired by operatives of Hamas’ military-terrorist wing. If Hamas was in fact responsible for rocket fire, it was the first time since Operation Pillar of Defense (November 2012). (emphasis in original)

A June 30 article in The Times of Israel, “Hamas fires rockets for first time since 2012, Israeli officials say,” explains why Hamas “probably launched” the rockets on June 30:

At least 16 rockets were fired at Israel Monday morning [June 30], most of them hitting open areas in the Eshkol region, the army said.

The security sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, assessed that Hamas had probably launched the barrage in revenge for an Israeli airstrike several hours earlier which killed one person and injured three more.

A member of Hamas’s militant wing was killed in the attack, Gaza health official Ashraf al-Kidra said.

While Israel has maintained it holds Hamas responsible for all rocket attacks, officials have said that smaller groups, such as Islamic Jihad, are usually behind the rocket attacks, while Hamas squads generally attempt to thwart the rocket fire.

Hamas hasn’t fired rockets into Israel since Operation Pillar of Defense ended in November 2012, and has yet to take responsibility for this latest barrage.

Regardless of whether it was June 30, after Israeli forces killed the Hamas member, or July 7, after Israeli forces killed six more Hamas members, the Senate resolution got it wrong. Israeli military operations that began soon after the three Israeli settler teens were kidnapped on June 12 ended what until then was an effective 19 month cease-fire. There is no controversy that Israeli forces then finally provoked Hamas to end its side of the cease-fire either when they directly targeted and killed a Hamas member in Gaza on June 30 or when they directly targeted and killed six more Hamas members and attacked 50 other targets in Gaza on July 7.

Israeli operations do not stop rocket fire; just the opposite

Israeli political and military leaders claim that their operations have been designed to stop rocket fire. For example, the Israeli Defense Force web site states:

On July 7, 2014, the IDF launched Operation Protective Edge in order to restore quiet to the region and stop Hamas terrorism. The single goal of the operation is to stop Hamas’ incessant rocket attacks against Israel’s civilians.

However, the facts show that the Israeli escalations not only never stop rocket fire, they actually dial up rocket fire. The biggest increase in rocket fire followed the July 7 launching of Operation Protective Edge.

Here are the facts:

∙ During the 40 days from May 1 to June 10, before Israeli forces launched Operation Brothers’ Keeper, a weekly ITIC report shows that Israel was hit by a total of 3 rockets, an average of 0.07 rockets per day.

∙ During the 18 days of Operation Brothers’ Keeper, the ITIC reports that 52 rockets struck Israel, an average of 2.9 rockets per day.

∙ However, in response to the Israeli onslaught on July 7 when Israeli forces killed the 6 Hamas members, rocket fire dramatically escalated: the ITIC reports that Israel was hit with 120 rockets on that single day.

On July 25 the Israeli government reported, “since the start of Operation Protective Edge [on July 7], at least 2,400 rockets have been launched at Israel.” During those 18 days of the operation, that was an average of 138 rockets per day.

For comparison, during the 23 days of Operation Cast Lead, which lasted from December 27, 2008 until a cease-fire on January 18, 2009, the ITIC reports that 925 rockets hit Israel, and the average was 40.2 rocket hits per day. To get that operation going, Israeli forces had violated an effective cease-fire on November 4, 2008, entering Gaza and extra-judicially executing six members of Hamas, as reported in the New York Times. In the months before that violation, the cease-fire had brought rocket fire down to near zero, as reported by the ITIC.

Also, for comparison, the leap in rocket fire provoked by the November 2012 Israeli assault, Operation Pillar of Defense, was greater than occurred during Operation Cast Lead. During 2012 from January 1 until November 14, the date Operation Pillar of Defense began, the ITIC reports that Israel experienced 787 rocket hits-an average of 2.5 rocket hits per day. During the 8 days of Operation Pillar of Defense, 845 rockets hit Israel–an average of 105 rocket hits per day. Thus Israel was hit by 42 times as many rockets per day during Operation Pillar of Defense as were hitting Israel before its bombing of Gaza began. More than twice as many per day as even during Operation Cast Lead.

The cease fire that brought Operation Pillar of Defense to an end on November 20, 2012 was quite effective, bringing the average down to 0.09 rockets per day during the 13 months through the end of 2013, as derived from the numbers in a graph in the ITIC report .

Israeli officials have their hands on the rocket dial

These facts show that Israeli officials have control over the rocket fire dial: what works effectively to stop Hamas rocket fire is for Israeli forces to observe the cease-fire agreements the Israeli government signs. Conversely, Israeli government officials can provoke rocket fire by violating those cease fire agreements and launching lethal military operations on the West Bank and Gaza. What has been most effective to very dramatically dial up rocket fire is for Israeli forces to launch a massive military operation, as show in December 2008, in November 2012, and in July 2014.

Senate resolution flawed

The Senate resolution names Hamas in nearly every one of its deeply flawed paragraphs. Yet it fails to mention any of the facts about Israel’s military operations in the West Bank and Gaza that preceded Hamas launching any rockets. Nor does it mention the Israeli government’s misleading incitement campaign following the kidnapping of three Israeli settler teens.

Israeli officials deceived the Israeli public

As Jewish Daily Forward Editor J. J. Goldberg wrote in an editorial in the Forward on July 10, “ How Politics and Lies Triggered an Unintended War in Gaza:”  

Only on July 1, after the boys’ bodies were found, did the truth come out: The government had known almost from the beginning that the boys were dead. It maintained the fiction that it hoped to find them alive as a pretext to dismantle Hamas’ West Bank operations.

The truth came out when part of the recording of the emergency call from one of the teens was widely circulated on WhatsApp and social media on June 30. The Israeli government then lifted a gag order on part of the recording. A July 1, 2014 report, “ Recording of teen’s emergency call released,” in The Times of Israel, includes a partial transcript and The Jerusalem Post posted part of the recording in which one can hear the gunshots. Putting that together with the blood stains and bullet shells found in the burned out car Israeli authorities must have known that the three teens were dead. Israeli officials suppressed that information and organized a campaign to rescue the three boys “to bring the three Israeli teenagers home safely and as soon as possible” as described by IDF Spokesman Brig. Gen. Moti Almoz.

The frenzy whipped up by Israeli political and military leaders based on the fiction that Israeli forces were seeking to rescue the three teens led to what Netanyahu himself decried on July 4 as “murder, riots, incitement, vigilantism,” including the kidnapping and gruesome murder of  16-year-old Palestinian Mohammad Abu Khdeir on July 2. Police injured 170 Palestinian demonstrators in East Jerusalem protesting after an autopsy revealed that Abu Khdeir was burned alive. After describing the Israeli operations that caused Hamas to pay a “heavy price” on the West Bank, Netanyahu acknowledged in his speech on July 4, that “in Gaza we hit dozens of Hamas activists and destroyed outposts and facilities that served Hamas terrorists.” Thus Netanyahu himself acknowledged the provocation denied by the US Senate resolution.

Imagine in reverse

Let’s turn this around for a moment: Had some country used some pretext to whip up a racist frenzy, attack Israel, and subject the Israeli public to a massive military crackdown including 369 military incursions into Israel and a total of 110 bombing attacks on Israel during which 11 Israelis had been killed, 78 wounded, and 700 arrested, and then had six Israeli soldiers been killed in a single air and ground military operation, would the US Senate have omitted mention of all such facts and voted by unanimous consent that responding Israeli forces were “unprovoked?” Would the US Senate have twisted the facts to vote that the country attacking Israel was defending itself and that Israeli forces were the ones engaging in “belligerent actions?”

Why did the Senate get this so wrong? Why did Bernie Sanders and Patrick Leahy allow their names to be used for pro-war propaganda so at variance with the facts?

This is a substantially updated version of an article that appeared on Counterpunch on July 24, 2014.

James Marc Leas is a Vermont attorney and is a past co-chair of the National Lawyers Guild Free Palestine Subcommittee. He collected evidence in the Gaza Strip from November 27 to December 3, 2012 as part of a 20 member delegation from the US and Europe and co-authored several articles describing findings. He also participated in the National Lawyers Guild delegation to Gaza after Operation Cast Lead in February 2009 and contributed to its report, Onslaught: Israel’s Attack on Gaza and the Rule of Law.

F-35 Air Force “Mitigation and Management Plan” NOT

For Immediate Release

For further information contact:

Rosanne Greco 497-0711(o)  301 919-9313(c)

James Marc Leas 802 864-1575

Jim Dumont 802 453-7011(o) 802 349-7342(c)

Air Force “Mitigation and Management Plan” NOT

“Mitigation” plan includes no additional action regarding noise

                   and

“Mitigation” plan is a giant backward step regarding crash

In its just released “Mitigation and Management Plan” for Burlington and in its Final Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) the Air Force admits major additional environmental and health effects of basing and operating F-35 warplanes in Burlington compared to the current F-16 basing.

In the EIS The Air Force admits that thousands more families living in communities near the airport will be in high noise and crash zones and at higher risk of serious harm with F-35 jets as compared with the current F-16 jets.

In the EIS and in the “mitigation” plan the Air Force admits that these risks are so serious that additional mitigation is necessary.

But the Air Force “mitigation” plan fails to include any actual additional mitigation measures. In fact, a key mitigation measure that was adopted for the F-16 appears not to be taken for the F-35 with regard to crash risk.

Despite the Air Force admission that the F-35-A will be more than four times louder than the screechingly loud F-16 no reasonable additional mitigation measures are included in the “mitigation” plan.

“The plan is not a real mitigation plan. At best it is a plan to plan,” said James Marc Leas, an opponent of F-35 basing who lives in South Burlington. “It is a pretend plan.”

The plan calls for waiting until the F-35-A arrives before deciding on mitigation. Tempering any hope of effective mitigation, the plan expressly states that mitigation takes a back seat to flight ground and weapons safety (page 3). The plan includes no commitment for effective mitigation after the plane arrives.

1. Noise

According to the “mitigation” plan, the Air Force says it is already taking measures to mitigate F-16 noise and it will do the same for the F-35.

But a chart in the Air Force Final EIS (page BR4-23) states that the noise level of the F-35 is 115 dB compared to 94 dB for the F-16. The Final EIS (page C-2) also states that a 10 dB increase in sound level is perceived as a doubling of the sound’s loudness. Thus, the 21 dB higher sound level of the F-35 means the F-35 will be more than two doublings, or more than four times louder than the F-16. “If it was not a pretend plan, the mitigation plan would include actions to mitigate that much-higher noise level,” said Mr. Leas. “But it does not. Not a word.”

As written, the mitigation plan does not specify any measures beyond those already implemented for the F-16. It is all left to the future to figure out. “This is a serious flaw in view of the Air Force saying the F-35 is more than four times louder than the F-16 and the Air Force saying that thousands more families will be living in high noise zones that are harmful to human health,” said Mr. Leas.

Questions about noise

If, as the mitigation plan says, the Air Guard is doing all it can to mitigate F-16 noise–and the F-16 is still screechingly loud as jets take off over Winooski, Williston, Burlington and South Burlington–why does the supposed “mitigation plan” not list additional measures that will definitely be implemented to mitigate the F-35 noise? Why is it all left until after the F-35 warplanes arrive?

Will thousands of houses be sound insulated? Will air conditioning systems be installed so windows need not be opened in summer? No such mitigation for thousands of families is mentioned in the plan.

Will children and elderly be warned in advance of flights and told not to go outside during those times? Nothing in the plan.

Will potential buyers be notified that property in the high noise zones is considered by the US Government to be “unsuitable for residential use.” Not in the plan.

Will thousands of homes have to be purchased and more communities destroyed–like the part of South Burlington near the airport?

2. Crash

“The best way to mitigate crash risk is to do what was done with the F-16 before the F-16 was based in Burlington: accumulate a million fleet flight hours,” said Mr. Leas. “If safety were truly a priority–as it appears to have been for the F-16 basing–the time for basing in Burlington would not be set before one million fleet flight hours were accumulated.” The time for basing has been set at 2020.

Although plenty of F-16 jets have crashed over the years, one factor in the F-16 safety record here in Burlington is that enough fleet hours were flown and enough bugs were fixed that the crash rate was significantly lowered before the F-16 was allowed to be based in the middle of communities with thousands of families.

The supposed mitigation plan includes no mention of F-35-A fleet flight hours anticipated to be accumulated when F-35-A warplanes arrive in Burlington in 2020 compared to the number of F-16 fleet flight hours actually accumulated–over one million hours–when F-16 warplanes arrived here.

So far the Air Force says that all three models combined, F-35-A, F-35-B, and F-35-C, have only accumulated 15,000 flight hours, a tiny percentage of what is needed.

“Safety is denied if the number of F-35-A fleet flight hours anticipated to be accumulated when F-35-A warplanes arrives is significantly lower than one million hours,” said Mr. Leas. “Basing before then will be a giant step backward in safety mitigation compared to F-16 basing.”

“The ‘mitigation’ plan fails to mitigate the crash risk if it fails to include a provision that no F-35-A planes will be based in Burlington until the F-35-A fleet has accumulated a million flight hours, just like the F-16,” he said.

Question about crash

Will the Air Force and the National Guard still allow basing of the F-35-A in Burlington in 2020 if the F-35-A fleet has not flown a million hours, as the F-16 did worldwide before it was based in Burlington?

—30—

Complaint filed with Vermont Attorney General alleges open meeting law violation

For Immediate Release

For further information contact:

James Marc Leas 802 864-1575

Complaint filed with Vermont Attorney General alleges open meeting law violation

Requests investigation and enforcement

Vermont Attorney General Bill Sorrell received a letter today asking him to investigate violation of Vermont’s open meeting law by three South Burlington City Councilors, Pam Mackenzie, Chris Shaw, and Pat Nowak.

The open meeting law finds support in article 1, chapter 6 of the Vermont Constitution, which provides:

That all power being originally inherent in and consequently derived from the people, therefore, all officers of government, whether legislative or executive, are their trustees and servants; and at all times, in a legal way, accountable to them.

As the Vermont Supreme Court said:

In 1957, the Vermont Legislature enacted the Open Meeting Law.  The Legislature’s purpose was to “give meaning to Chapter I, Article 6 of the      Vermont Constitution.”  Rowe v. Brown,    Vt.    ,    , 599 A.2d 333, 336 1991). (Animal Legal Defense Fund, Inc v. The Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Vermont and University of Vermont http://libraries.vermont.gov/s… 1992)

“As the first line of defense against corruption, the importance of the open meeting law cannot be over stated,” said South Burlington attorney James Marc Leas, who submitted the letter. “This law is a check on the ability of a quorum of city councilors to meet privately with monied interests. Allowing its degradation opens the door wide to corruption.”

“Like everyone else, law-makers, including city government officials, must be held fully accountable when they break the law,” said Mr. Leas. “The oath of office provided in the Vermont Constitution and sworn by the Attorney General to ‘do equal right and justice to all persons’ would be devoid of meaning if he gave public officials a pass because of who they are or the position they hold.”

The three councilors, Pam Mackenzie, Chris Shaw, and Pat Nowak, each announced their attendance at a meeting of the South Burlington Energy Committee on February 15 at a South Burlington City Council meeting three days later 13:50, 17:47, and 21:56 on CCTV.  Additional facts were presented in a news item on WPTZ on February 19, “Accusations fly about open meeting violations, City lawyer says councilors did nothing wrong” http://www.wptz.com/news/vermo… an article in the Burlington Free Press on February 19, “Violation of open meeting laws alleged in South Burlington, Three city council members convened without warning” http://www.burlingtonfreepress… and in an article in Seven Days, on February 19, “South Burlington Councilor Decries ‘A Mockery of Democracy'” http://www.sevendaysvt.com/Off…

Several residents brought the violation of the open meeting law by a quorum of the City Council to the attention of the Council immediately after the opening remarks by City Council members on February 18 [23:30 and 59:15 on CCTV].

City officials in denial

Also on February 19, City Manager Kevin Dorn issued an email stating “there was no violation of the open meeting law.” However, Mr. Dorn’s email self-servingly misquoted the law (he wrongly asserted that for the law to be violated the councilors had to take action on city business rather than merely participate in discussion of city business or listen to discussion of city business. In his email, Mr. Dorn replaced an “or” in the law with an “and” to reach this result).

After the misquoting was pointed out by Keith Epstein, a member of the energy committee, and by James Marc Leas, in a later email, Mr. Dorn then further incorrectly insisted that the councilors “did not attend the GUEP meeting to discuss or conduct the business of the public body (the Council) nor did they do either of those things.” However, Mr. Dorn omitted mention of the fact that all three councilors did in fact discuss the business of the city during the meeting and that one of them had been invited to give a speech at the meeting and did speak.

After the failed interventions by the City Manager failed to quell the issue, in response to a request from Mr. Dorn, on February 19 City Attorney Jim Barlow issued a memorandum supposedly addressing the facts and law at issue. The memorandum, “Alleged Open Meeting Law Violation” http://www.burlingtonfreepress… was posted to the web site of the Burlington Free Press. However, like the email from Mr. Dorn, the memorandum failed to mention the fact that all three of the city councilors spoke at the meeting. With the facts wrong, there was no way the memorandum could be relied upon as reaching a correct conclusion.

That city business was discussed at the February 15 energy committee meeting is demonstrated by the 3-page list of ideas for action generated during the discussion (attachment B).

The memorandum also omitted mention of the clear direction provided by Vermont Secretary of State Jim Condos in a presentation, “Got Transparency 2013” http://www.google.com/url?sa=t…

The presentation explains what is “discussing the business of the public body [the city council]”:

• Discussing anything that the public body has the authority to oversee.

• Open Meeting laws apply regardless of where a quorum of the public body is gathered

The assertion in the memorandum that the open meeting law does not apply if the council voted and “no further action by the Council was necessary or required for the City’s participation in this event,” is in sharp conflict with the law as written, with the constitutional provision, and with direction from the Secretary of State. Under the direction from the Secretary of State, the open meeting law applies if the quorum is present when “anything the public body has the authority to oversee” is discussed. Requirement for further action by the Council is irrelevant, under the law and under the direction from the Secretary of State.  

Attached is the letter requesting investigation and enforcement submitted to Attorney General Bill Sorrell by James Marc Leas. Also the three attachments to that letter, including the various emails and the list of ideas generated during discussion at the February 15 meeting.

The violation of open meeting law by the three members of the South Burlington City Council immediately follows the charge of open meeting law violation by one of them, Pam Mackenzie, in her other capacity as chair of the Vermont Public Television Board.  

To Bill Sorrell: Constitution Provides Tools to Defend Vermont Law Restricting Money in Elections

(I asked Bill Sorrell this question during the AG Debate at Contois in Burlington.  He tried to skirt the answer.  Jimmy Leas has done an excellent job articulating what I was trying to have answered by Mr. Sorrell. James Marc Leas is a Vermont patent lawyer who has written several articles about money in elections. Rob Hager is an experienced public interest litigator, and he filed the amicus brief in the Montana case on behalf of Essential Information.

– promoted by Maggie Gundersen
)

Vermont won a suit filed by Vermont Right to Life seeking to bar enforcement of provisions of Vermont’s campaign finance law. US District Court Judge William K. Sessions III issued the 80 page

decision on June 21.

Notwithstanding this important victory,on July 25 Attorney General Bill Sorrell announced that he will not enforce certain provisions of Vermont’s campaign finance law in future cases and that he will seek a change in the law, opening the floodgates of money in Vermont state elections.

One of the first beneficiaries of this non-enforcement was Attorney General Bill Sorrell himself. An out-of-state PAC started purchasing nearly $184,000 of TV ads in support of Attorney General Sorrell’s re-election campaign against Chittenden County State’s Attorney T.J. Donovan soon after Mr. Sorrell’s announcement that he would not enforce Vermont’s limits on “independent” PAC contributions.

The authors of this article reviewed US Supreme Court cases and found four grounds on which Vermont can enforce and defend its campaign finance law notwithstanding the Supreme Court decision in Citizens United. These grounds, and the US Supreme Court cases supporting, them are described in a detailed open letter to Vermont Attorney General Bill Sorrell and Assistant Vermont Attorney General Megan J. Shafritz. They include state sovereign immunity, standing, the political question doctrine, and an exception to Citizens United carved out by the Supreme Court for foreign sources of money. Most importantly, the authors found recent US Supreme Court decisions showing that the usual exception to sovereign immunity, called the Young fiction, does not apply when the fundamental sovereign legitimacy of the state government is at risk by a suit against the state. Nothing is more fundamental to the legitimacy of state government than election integrity that ensures a government of, by, and for the people. That election integrity was unnecessarily put at risk by Mr. Sorrell’s non-enforcement of Vermont campaign finance law.

You can read the open letter by clicking to see the rest of this article.

August 22, 2012

Bill Sorrell, Vermont Attorney General

Megan J. Shafritz, Esq.,

Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division Chief

Office of the Attorney General

109 State Street, 3rd Floor

Montpelier, Vermont 05609-1001

Dear Attorney General Sorrell and Assistant Attorney General Shafritz:

Thank you very much for responding to my email to Attorney General Sorrell regarding the defense of Vermont law restricting corporate and individual spending in Vermont elections. This letter also responds to public statements about sovereign immunity made on August 16 by Mr. Sorrell during a debate in Burlington with TJ Donovan, his opponent in the Democratic Primary.

Defending Vermont election finance law is important to all Vermont citizens who want to prevent a regime in Vermont in which our Vermont candidates-or anyone acting on their behalf–“have the constitutional right to purchase their election,” Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 260 (1976) (White, J. dissenting).

Because your letter and Mr. Sorrell’s statement reflected a fundamental misunderstanding of the law related to sovereign immunity I asked Rob Hager, an expert in this area of law who prepared an amicus brief in the recent Montana election finance case, to join me in the following detailed letter.

In this letter we will show that US Supreme Court decisions provide ample grounds for Vermont to enforce its election finance law and for the defense of that law from suit by a private party. These US Supreme Court decisions suggest that, while the Ex Parte Young exception to sovereign immunity you mention is certainly applicable to many civil rights matters, the exception is not applicable where the fundamental sovereign legitimacy of a state is put at risk by a private party lawsuit. Attorney General Sorrell’s recent public statement equating the use of 11th Amendment sovereign immunity to protect state election integrity laws that prevent purchase of elections with the proper federal enforcement of civil rights laws against states in the South several decades ago shows that his understanding of 11th Amendment jurisprudence may be somewhat out of date.

Several legal tools are available in addition to the 11th Amendment. Vermont and its state officials can raise the venerable political question doctrine to defend Vermont’s election finance legislation from judicial interference.  Vermont can also raise the closely related lack of “standing” of any private party to sue the state or its officials based on the reasoning the Supreme Court used in its decision in Citizens United.  Finally, Vermont and its state officials can invoke the Supreme Court’s modification of the decision in Citizens United in its more recent Bluman v. Federal Election Commission case in order to defend Vermont’s elections from money originating outside Vermont. The recent purchase of hundreds of TV ads on behalf of Vermont Attorney General Bill Sorrell, paid for by a PAC with out-of-state funds largely obtained from the Washington D.C. based Democratic Attorneys General Association, falls into this category.

Assertion of the above four defenses under the cases described here, would make any private suit to overturn Vermont election financing law difficult, regardless of whether the private party sues Vermont in federal court or in state court.

Section 1983

In support of your decision not to enforce a key portion of Vermont election integrity law, you invoke the dangers of US Supreme Court precedent under federal civil rights law, Section 1983. You state that under §1983 a court can declare a state law unconstitutional and require the state to pay plaintiff’s attorney’s fees. You also state that the 11th Amendment does not bar such lawsuits.

However, we would respectfully ask you to consider the US Supreme Court’s holding in Will v. Michigan Dept. of State Police, 491 U.S. 58 (1989) and related cases that, although § 1983 applies to local and municipal governments, a State is not “a person” within the meaning of § 1983 and a State cannot be subject to suit under § 1983 without either its consent or legitimate abrogation of its sovereign immunity by Congress. The Court held:

Section 1983 provides a federal forum to remedy many deprivations of civil liberties, but it does not provide a federal forum for litigants who seek a remedy against a State for alleged deprivations of civil liberties. The Eleventh Amendment bars such suits unless the State has waived its immunity, Welch v. Texas Dept. of Highways and Public Transportation, 483 U. S. 468 (1987) (plurality opinion), or unless Congress has exercised its undoubted power under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment to override that immunity.

In the same case the US Supreme Court held that § 1983 similarly does not apply to state officials acting in their official capacities:

Obviously, state officials literally are persons. But a suit against a state official in his or her official capacity is not a suit against the official, but rather is a suit against the official’s office. Brandon v. Holt, 469 U. S. 464, (1985). As such, it is no different from a suit against the State itself. See, e.g., Kentucky v. Graham, 473 U. S. 159, (1985); Monell, supra, at 436 U. S. 690, n. 55. We see no reason to adopt a different rule in the present context, particularly when such a rule would allow petitioner to circumvent congressional intent by a mere pleading device.

We hold that neither a State nor its officials acting in their official capacities are “persons” under § 1983.

Moreover, as said in Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Idaho, 521 U. S. 261, 269 (1997) (Kennedy, J.) :

When suit is commenced against state officials, even if they are named and served as individuals, the State itself will have a continuing interest in the litigation whenever state policies or procedures are at stake. (emphasis added)

 In Howlett v. Rose, 496 U.S. 356 (1990) the Court further held that

the State and arms of the State, which have traditionally enjoyed Eleventh Amendment immunity, are not subject to suit under § 1983 in either federal court or state court.

Howlett also reaffirmed the Court’s general holding in Quern v. Jordan, 440 U. S. 332 (1979) that “§ 1983 does not ‘override the traditional sovereign immunity of the States.'”

The US Supreme Court has thus now long held that § 1983 does not allow for suits in either state or federal court against states, arms of the state, or state officials acting in their official capacities, or even in certain instances, discussed more fully in the next section, when state officials are sued in their individual capacity.

Thus, if Vermont refrains from consenting to a suit that challenges its election integrity laws, under this long standing precedent, neither state nor federal courts will have jurisdiction to allow a non-consensual suit under § 1983 to proceed against Vermont or against Vermont officials if Congress has not expressly abrogated the states’ sovereign immunity in such cases.

In cases where states, arms of the state, and state officials are not subject to suit under § 1983 there is also no liability for attorney’s fees under § 1988.

Ex Parte Young

Your email also mentions Ex Parte Young (1908) which provided an exception to 11th Amendment sovereign immunity in certain types of cases where a private suit names state officials in their individual capacities as defendants .

Supreme Court decisions during the past 25 years have sharply narrowed application of what the US Supreme Court has labeled “the Young fiction,” a doctrine created by the Supreme Court at the height of the judicial activism that typified the “Lochner era.” These more recent cases indicate that both Montana’s Corrupt Practices Act, which was challenged in the ATP v. Bullock case, and Vermont’s election finance law would not be denied sovereign immunity from private suit by the Young fiction. Thus, if Montana’s AG had not waived the state’s sovereign immunity by inaction, contemporary Ex Parte Young jurisprudence discussed below shows that the suit by the private corporate entities that challenged Montana’s law would likely have been barred. Unlike Article III constraints on jurisdiction, 11th Amendment sovereign immunity must be affirmatively asserted by the state or may be deemed waived.  See Calderon v. Ashmus, 523 U.S. 740, 745 n.2 (1998). “Unless the State raises the matter, a court can ignore it.”Wisconsin Dep’t of Corrections v. Schacht, 524 U.S. 381, 388 (1998). Accordingly, Attorney General Sorrell’s public statement that the Supreme Court already knows about the 11th Amendment–as if the Court can be expected to itself raise and argue this defense on behalf of a state-is inconsistent with an important feature of 11th Amendment jurisprudence.

When the Supreme Court first overturned a state’s campaign finance law in First National Bank v. Bellotti, 435 U.S. 765 (1978), the Supreme Court had only just begun its retreat from Young. Any view that “the Ex Parte Young fiction” still allows suits against state officials as a means to legitimize challenges to the core sovereignty interests of states is now antiquated in view of later 11th Amendment jurisprudence.  These developments are addressed in detail in two complementary amicus briefs filed in the  Montana case: Amicus brief of The Eleventh Amendment Movement (TEAM) and Amicus brief of Essential Information.  

As these amicus briefs note, Justice Kennedy in Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Idaho announced the rule that where “special sovereignty interests” of the state are at risk:

We must examine the effect of the … suit and its impact on these special sovereignty interests in order to decide whether the Ex parte Young fiction is applicable.

The Young fiction was held inapplicable to the Idaho case.  Justice Kennedy explained that where  special sovereignty interests are at stake, “the dignity and status of its statehood allow [a state] to rely on its Eleventh Amendment immunity.”  Justice Kennedy further reasoned:

To interpret Young to permit a federal-court action to proceed in every case where prospective declaratory and injunctive relief is sought against an officer, named in his individual capacity, would be to adhere to an empty formalism and to undermine the principle, reaffirmed just last Term in Seminole Tribe, that Eleventh Amendment immunity represents a real limitation on a federal court’s federal-question jurisdiction. The real interests served by the Eleventh Amendment are not to be sacrificed to elementary mechanics of captions and pleading. Application of the Young exception must reflect a proper understanding of its role in our federal system and respect for state courts instead of a reflexive reliance on an obvious fiction. (emphasis added)

The Supreme Court subsequently went even further to limit the “obvious fiction” on which Young is premised, saying simply: “suits against state officers are barred … if the suits are, in fact, against the State.” Alden v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706 (1999).  Soon after that, the Court broadly undermined the sustaining premise of the Young fiction by holding that “sovereign immunity applies regardless of whether a private plaintiff’s suit is for monetary damages or some other type of relief.”  Federal Maritime Comm’n v. South Carolina State Ports Auth., 535 US at 765-66 (2002) (Thomas, J.).  Regardless of the relief requested it is now established that “Ex parte Young jurisprudence requires careful consideration of the sovereign interests of the State.” Verizon Maryland v. Public Service Commission of Maryland, 535 U.S. 649 (2002) (Kennedy J., concurring).   Last year the Supreme Court reconfirmed that: “The [Young] doctrine…does not apply when the state is the real, substantial party in interest,” Virginia Office for Protection and Advocacy v. Stewart, 563 U.S.___ (2011) (Scalia, J.) (internal quotes and citations omitted), to which Chief Justice Roberts, joined by Justice Alito, added a dissent adamantly “refusing to extend Ex parte Young to claims that involve “special sovereignty interests,” [by] rote application of the Ex parte Young  fiction.”

The last case showed disagreement among the justices about whether investigation of a state hospital  was a “special sovereignty interest.”  But Virginia Office demonstrates that Roberts and Alito, the two justices appointed after the last major 11th Amendment developments, are now the strongest advocates of the doctrine that Eleventh Amendment immunity fully applies when special sovereignty interests of the state are at risk, and that they would apply that doctrine to situations far beyond such obvious core sovereignty interests as the legitimacy of elections.  Accordingly, the five Supreme Court justices who decided Citizens United have all penned or joined opinions indicating that where significant sovereignty interests of the state are involved in a suit pleaded against state officials, such that the real party in interest is the state itself, the “rote application” of the Young fiction is inappropriate.  Your suggestion that Vermont’s campaign finance law should “simply” be subject to such a rote application of Young is thus opposed by five justices, the vote of only one of whom would be sufficient to uphold Vermont’s law when added to those of the four justices who oppose Citizens United as a blatant misstatement of first amendment law.

In the republican system of government established and protected by the Constitution, nothing is more central to the dignity of a state and no sovereignty interest can be more important than the sovereign legitimacy conferred by elections that faithfully express the consent of the governed.  In upholding Montana’s Corrupt Practices Act, for example, the Montana Supreme Court described how that state lost all sovereign dignity and legitimacy in the corrupt era of its “copper kings.” In that era, Montana’s governmental processes were subordinated to corporate money.  Montana’s Supreme Court made an impressive factual record of the impact of corrupt elections on Montana’s sovereignty prior to enactment of Montana’s election integrity law.  Unfortunately, Montana’s Attorney General failed to protect Montana’s sovereign dignity with the legal tools the Constitution provides, including 11th Amendment immunity.

If a state such as Vermont, in a suit that reaches the US Supreme Court, defends its election integrity law by asserting 11th Amendment immunity, along with the other available defenses against federal judicial interference in this core sovereignty interest described here, each of those five justices will need to choose for the first time between two competing doctrines to which they strongly adhere.  Each such justice’s rigid adherence, in six cases since 2006, to empowerment of the 1% by forcing unlimited corporate political spending and corruption on elections would be pitted against his strong support for state sovereign immunity when the fundamental sovereignty interest of the state involved happens to be the legitimacy of its elections.  Again, only one of these five justices need opt for sovereign immunity and join with the four justices who oppose corporate-controlled elections for Vermont to win such a case.

As shown, the unsourced assertion in your email of a rule that “sovereign immunity, which is protected by the 11th Amendment . . . simply does not prevent lawsuits challenging state campaign finance laws in federal court” is in fact simply not to be found in any decision of the Court itself.  It could not be found until the judges are forced to make such a choice by an Attorney General who cares sufficiently about both clean elections and states’ rights to assert the 11th Amendment defense in a case involving the regulation of money in elections.  Until then the general principle found in the several Supreme Court cases cited above will provide strong support for asserting the sovereign immunity defense and for arguing that the Young fiction does not apply where a state’s core sovereignty interests are challenged.

You also express concern about the prospect of attorney’s fee awards.  The rule that attorney’s fees would be allowed in a valid Young action, though such an award would “resemble a money judgment payable out of the state treasury,” as prohibited by Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U. S. 651 (1974), rests on the authority of Hutto v. Finney, 437 U. S. 678 (1978) and Missouri v. Jenkins, 491 U.S. 274 (1989). Hutto involved the rights of an individual prisoner while Jenkins involved racial discrimination against African-American students. In neither of these Young actions was the sovereign legitimacy of the state put at risk by the suit. Indeed, in each case, the sovereign legitimacy of the state was arguably enhanced by the outcomes of the suits. These cases demonstrate the actual and proper application of Young.

Moreover, the fact that “federal courts have repeatedly addressed the constitutionality of state campaign finance laws,” as you say, does not make such laws less central to Vermont’s sovereign legitimacy and hence any less exempt from the Young fiction.  The federal court involvement merely illustrates the failure of Attorneys General defending challenges to state election integrity laws to assert their states’ sovereign immunity from such suits. For example, Attorney General Bullock failed to do so in the Montana case – thereby wasting public resources on a losing strategy.

The Montana AG could have but did not use the open opportunity to present a previously unlitigated issue to the US Supreme Court, which could at least have avoided the humiliation of a summary reversal of the Montana Supreme Court decision upholding Montana election law. The Montana AG could have tested whether or not the five justices–who have opposed the Ex Parte Young exception when the sovereign legitimacy of a state is involved–would also refuse to allow Young to be applied to an election finance case in which corporations seek to freely buy state policies, contracts, laws, regulations, politicians, and their elections – essentially putting the core of the state’s sovereign  powers at risk.  

Likewise, Mr. Sorrell did not assert sovereign immunity as amicus in the Montana case, in Randall v. Sorrell (2006), or in a Vermont election financing case recently before Judge Sessions. Mr. Sorrell now declines to defend Vermont’s law at all in future cases and announced on July 25 he will seek a change in the law, opening the floodgates to money in Vermont state elections.

The public comment by the Montana Attorney General’s office in defense of his failure to assert sovereign immunity to defend Montana’s law was not that it was a losing argument, as your email suggests.  The reason given, the 11th Amendment’s “implications in other contexts,” was more a concern that the strategy would succeed and set a precedent!  The public record thus shows that AG Bullock did not raise the state’s sovereign immunity defense because he does not support the 11th Amendment itself, although his oath of office required him to support the Constitution, of which the 11th Amendment is an essential part.

Since Vermont Attorney General Sorrell recently asserted 11th Amendment sovereign immunity in a case now in federal district court in which Mr. Sorrell is seeking to prevent Vermont state workers from receiving overtime pay, one cannot conclude that Mr. Sorrell shares Montana Attorney General Bullock’s opposition to asserting 11th Amendment sovereign immunity because of “implications in other contexts.” As Mr. Sorrell appears to  support the 11th amendment-even in a context in which the state is seeking to revoke the legal and contractual rights of its own workers–he could surely also  assert Vermont’s sovereign immunity to avoid capitulation to out-of-state interests seeking to undermine Vermont election integrity who have no contractual claims whatsoever on the state.

Protecting civil liberties of individuals and protected groups

Under its 14th amendment § 5 powers, Congress has expressly abrogated sovereign immunity for certain civil rights actions. Unquestionably, if it wanted to do so, Congress could also abrogate a state’s immunity from certain suits that challenge election anti-corruption laws on 1st Amendment grounds. But, under the 14th Amendment, only Congress can abrogate sovereign immunity, and Congress has not done so regarding election financing. Though the Lochner era Court gave itself the power to abrogate sovereign immunity in the Young case in order to gut the 11th Amendment restriction on its power  to protect the interests of railroads, the contemporary Court recognizes that the Constitution does not allow the Court to abrogate 11th Amendment immunity in a case involving a state’s sovereign legitimacy  in the absence of congressional authority under § 5 of the 14th Amendment.  

The Supreme Court has held that such congressional abrogation must be specifically applicable to the case in which it is invoked.  “A general authorization for suit in federal court is not the kind of unequivocal statutory language sufficient to abrogate the Eleventh Amendment.”  Atascadero State Hosp. v. Scanlon, 473 U.S. 234, 246 (1985).  Congress has enacted no such specific abrogation of state immunity from private suit with respect to restrictions on spending in elections.  In fact Congress showed its support for such laws by passing its own laws restricting spending in elections that the Court invalidated.

The most closely analogous federal civil rights law would be the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965. While that law does abrogate 11th Amendment immunity as a means to protect the federal civil right to vote free from discrimination, it does not protect the “civil right” to buy elections and influence politicians by financing their “independent” electioneering broadcasts.

Vermont election law restrictions are distinguished from cases in which the federal courts have properly enforced the civil rights of American citizens by the fact that enforcing civil rights does not put the sovereign legitimacy of the state at risk.  For example, when a state was preventing citizens from voting based on race, this state action in violation of federal civil rights laws undermined the state’s sovereign legitimacy; enforcing the federal law enhanced the state’s sovereign legitimacy. By contrast, Vermont’s election finance restrictions protect Vermont sovereign legitimacy by protecting the right of Vermont voters to have elections that reflect the will of the people and not the will of monied interests that corruptly profit from the influence they purchase.

The Constitution in Article 4, Section 4, guarantees Vermonters’ the right to a republican form of government-a government in which each person has an equal voice and an equal vote: as Lincoln said a government of, by, and for the people. This right will be denied or abridged if Vermont election finance law is left undefended in the future or is amended by the legislature so as to legalize bogus elections dominated by vast infusions of private money, just as federal elections have become. We therefore urge the Vermont Attorney General to assert 11th Amendment immunity and the other defenses described here to avoid this sure path to tyranny.

Citizens United

In Citizens United the US Supreme Court granted all voters an unrequested 1st Amendment “right” to hear electioneering messages purchased by anyone. This decision, opening the floodgates to unlimited corporate spending in elections, was not based on a right of the person or entity doing the speaking, including the corporate plaintiffs in Citizens United.  Although some fund-raising interest groups have popularized the contrary assertion, the decision in Citizens United had nothing to do with corporate personhood and recognized no 1st Amendment right of corporate speakers.  The decision was entirely based on the supposed 1st Amendment right of all voters to hear electioneering advertisements from all sources. Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe made this point clear:

The little-noted theory of Citizens United, after all, was not that corporations enjoy all the rights that ordinary people enjoy but, rather, that the First Amendment protects “speech” and listeners, not particular “speakers.”

Invoking 11th Amendment sovereign immunity to protect state election finance law does not abridge the rights of individuals or protected groups–or even the “rights” of corporations–since the decision in Citizens United did not actually grant corporations any additional rights.  Rather Citizens United imposed on all voters’ the “right” to hear what corporations pay to broadcast.

When the question for decision involves balancing competing universal rights of all the people in the state or nation, rather than the rights of a particular individual or protected group, this is a political question for decision by the people through their elected branches of government.  In this case the question is how to balance the right of all the people to have elections free of domination by monied interests versus the right of all the people to hear an unlimited number of broadcast election messages from corporations and others working for the 1%. Courts have power to protect the particularized rights of individuals and certain protected groups. The Constitution’s separation of powers denies Courts the power to resolve political questions.  Invoking state sovereign immunity to defend state election finance law from encroachment by a federal court is a necessary and appropriate means to protect the state’s fundamental legislative power to decide political questions consigned exclusively to state legislatures by the constitutional design.

Moreover, when a non-discriminatory law intended to protect the integrity of elections is challenged, its disparate impact on a small fraction of the persons affected does not create any individual right to file suit for such persons. Only a small fraction of 1% of the voters who contribute enough money are affected by Vermont’s campaign finance restrictions. As Justice Scalia noted in upholding voter ID laws, “without proof of discriminatory intent, a generally applicable law with disparate impact is not unconstitutional.”  See Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, 553 U.S. 181 (2008) (“we have never held that legislatures must calibrate all election laws, even those totally unrelated to money, for their impacts on poor voters or must otherwise accommodate wealth disparities.”)  Similarly, in determining how large a contribution may be before it risks inducing corruption, a state legislature is not required to accommodate the minutely small number of donors who seek to profit by giving more.

When the asserted right is that of all voters in the state or nation to hear from all sources, as opposed to the right of all such voters to a fair and honest election process, the decision as to how those competing rights should be balanced is a political question for decision by the people through their elected branches of government in the legislative forum.  Our founding fathers understood that an unelected court has no role to play in such political decisions.  They provided for such balancing by the elected branches – the state legislatures and Congress, with participation by the elected executive.  For federal elections, the Constitution specifically codified this separation of powers in Article I, Sections 4 and 5.  Section 4 provides that the state legislatures and Congress decide the manner of conducting federal elections, including most importantly, election integrity; Section 5 provides that Congress-not the courts-shall be the “judge” of its elections. The framers of the Constitution, and the states that ratified it, were very careful to leave the unelected court out of such political decisions by uniquely giving the judging power over federal elections to Congress, not the Court.  James Madison, in Federalist 47, showed the importance given by the framers to maintaining the separation of powers: “The accumulation of all powers legislative, executive and judiciary, in the same hands … may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.”  By presuming to usurp the legislative power over federal elections, this accumulation of judicial and legislative powers is precisely what five justices on the US Supreme Court have done.

To prevent the tyranny Madison feared, the Constitution provides a variety of checks and balances on all three branches of the federal government as well as on the relationship between the federal government and the states.  One of the most important of those checks and balances is state sovereign immunity from suit exemplified by the 11th Amendment.  

Invoking state sovereign immunity to defend state law from federal court encroachment on powers regarding elections that are reserved by the Constitution to the elected branches and to the states is a way to enforce both the political question doctrine and the constitutional design for state-federal relations.  Congress has a parallel check and balance to defend its own constitutional powers from judicial usurpation.  The Constitution’s “Exceptions Clause,” Article III, section 2, clause 2, authorizes Congress to remove issues, such as money in politics, from the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.  Congress’ failure to use this power–due to its growing comfort with a corrupt system where unlimited money legally buys influence over its members–makes it all the more important that the states not similarly abandon their authority under the 11th Amendment to prevent judicial intervention in their core sovereignty interests, especially when the issues also happen to be political questions upon which the federal judiciary has overstepped its constitutional authority.

Standing

The holding by the US Supreme Court that all voters have a 1st Amendment right to hear from all sources raises a closely related issue of standing. Normal rules of standing would preclude a corporate plaintiff, which, not being a citizen or a voter, lacks the right created by Citizens United to hear electioneering from all sources.  Rules of standing would also preclude any person from asserting a generalized grievance concerning this right of access to information that the Supreme Court in Citizens United attributed to all voters. See United States v. Richardson, 418 U.S. 166, 179, 205 (1974).  Therefore, no individual or corporation would have standing to bring a suit against Vermont to protect the first amendment rights of all voters, and Vermont could move to dismiss any such suit for lack of standing, whether in federal court or in state court.

Possibility that a corporate entity will sue Vermont in state court and avoid 11th Amendment sovereign immunity

The Montana Supreme Court decided that Citizens United applied only to federal election financing law and not to Montana’s election financing law.  The US Supreme Court summarily reversed this decision by the Montana Supreme Court because the Montana Attorney General did not offer any arguments, nor assert any constitutional right, that the court had not already considered two years earlier in Citizens United itself in overturning the federal law.  

Vermont state courts could make the decision to uphold Vermont election financing law for a variety of additional state grounds, provided that Vermont rested its decision on issues not presented in the Montana case and which would distinguish the Vermont case from Citizens United.  The Montana case teaches that the distinguishing grounds, however, should not be unique to Vermont but rather unique to all state elections as compared to federal elections.  

Unlike the defective litigation strategy of the Montana Attorney General, the Vermont AG could assert common law sovereign immunity in state court and 11th Amendment sovereign immunity in federal court to protect Vermont election integrity.  It could thus maintain Vermont sovereign legitimacy and the proper federal-state relationship set forth in the constitutional design, by defending Vermont’s right to have a government in which elections are determined by the people, and not by private self-seeking monied interests.

Moreover the Vermont Court could deny standing to a corporation seeking to assert the generalized right of voters to information, and also enforce the related political question doctrine to prevent judicial intrusion on legislative powers.

The appearance of conflict of interest

For an officer sworn to uphold the state’s laws to make legally unsupported arguments favoring interests opposing Vermont law and its voters, rather than choosing to research and make  available to the public well-considered arguments in support of Vermont’s law creates an appearance of a conflict of interest. This is of particular concern with respect to a law in which the public and the state have such an enormous stake and about which no worthy party has yet complained of injury.

The news that Mr. Sorrell’s campaign for reelection has been accused of “benefiting directly from official state policy” that he himself made and which undermines Vermont’s election integrity law raises additional concern. An out-of-state PAC, funded from outside Vermont, started purchasing nearly $184,000 of TV ads in support of AG Sorrell’s re-election campaign soon after Mr. Sorrell’s announcement that he would not enforce Vermont’s limits on PAC contributions.

Defending Vermont Elections from out-of-state money

Focusing for a moment on the out-of state-source of that contribution, we respectfully ask: what valid role do such out-of-state interests have to play in Vermont’s elections? Vermont can and should at the very least enforce its election campaign finance law against such out-of-state interests on the ground affirmed in Bluman by which the Supreme Court narrowed the right of voters to hear electioneering advertisements from all sources that it created for them in Citizens United.  Bluman validates the prohibition of electioneering expenditures from foreign sources on the ground that foreign interests do not share the same concerns as voters.  Judge Sessions observed that, in Bluman “[t]he three judge panel found (and the US Supreme Court affirmed) the government interest in ‘exclud[ing] foreign citizens from activities that are part of democratic self-government in the United States’ sufficient to justify the law’s expenditure ban.”  

Following the principle affirmed in Bluman, Vermont should – in the interest of the same democratic self governance – at least enforce existing Vermont law to prevent or limit all expenditures by sources foreign to Vermont, while simultaneously asserting its 11th Amendment immunity from being sued by any foreign interest against whom such a law might be enforced.

In light of the above, we would request that you reconsider your strategy on this issue of paramount importance to Vermont and consider asserting sovereign immunity, standing, the political question doctrine, and the Bluman decision allowing restriction of contributions foreign to Vermont.  We would be happy to respond further should you have any questions concerning legal principles discussed here.

Sincerely,

James Marc Leas and Rob Hager

James Marc Leas is a Vermont patent lawyer who has written several articles about money in elections. Rob Hager is an experienced public interest litigator, and he filed the amicus brief in the Montana case on behalf of Essential Information.