EAllusion wrote:This isn't what you are discussing, but I have been deeply bothered by the extent to which Supreme Court decisions have turned on empirical questions where the justices got it flat wrong and obviously so. I'm not sure what the solution is, but it happens more often and more egregiously than what we have a right to expect.
To pick an issue seemingly dear to DT's heart, important precedents regarding the rights of sex offenders rest in part on Kennedy horribly sourcing a false idea about recidivism rates.
Well, it is kind of. I think I talked about this problem a few threads ago. I'm not familiar with the record in that case. Without reviewing the actual findings of fact by the trial court, it's hard for me to say exactly what went wrong there. The problem, as I see it, is that Kennedy shouldn't making factual decisions. That's the job of the trial court. I'm inclined to suspect that the study was referenced in a friend of the court brief, where standards are much looser than they are in briefs by the parties. In my opinion, the Justices should be much more restrained in relying on studies in friend of the court briefs to reach factual conclusions. If the findings of fact from the trial court did not include a finding of fact about recidivism rates, and Kennedy thought that such a finding was material to the Court's decision, he should have ordered the case remanded to the trial court for additional evidence and a finding of fact on recidivism. If there is a finding of fact that is not supported by evidence presented to the trial court, he should reverse and send it back down. What he shouldn't do is find facts on his own. But, unfortunately, that's what happens when friends of the court make public policy arguments, throwing in all kinds of statistics and studies.
Some appellate judge somewhere once said: These "friends" of the court, aren't. I agree. We have a system set up where appellate courts must never, never, ever, ever, decide the facts. But then they go ahead and decide the facts under the guise of examining public policy. I would favor the Court narrowing the role of the friend of the court brief over having the Court hire advisory experts that would lead to further expansion of the Court's fact finding.
I think you point out a legitimate problem, but I don't think the solution is to help the Court become a better super fact finder.