Saturday, May 24, 2025

The Supreme Court Said States Can't Discriminate in Alcohol Sales. They're Doing It Anyway.New Foto - The Supreme Court Said States Can't Discriminate in Alcohol Sales. They're Doing It Anyway.

This month marks the 20th anniversary of the seminalGranholm v. Healdcase, in which the United States Supreme Court struck down protectionist alcohol shipping laws that discriminated against out-of-state wineries. Seen at the time as a harbinger of a truly national e-commerce marketplace for alcoholic beverages,Granholmcontinues to be treated more like a legal inconvenience than a binding precedent by lower courts. InGranholm, numerous wineries challenged a Michigan law that allowed in-state wineries to ship directly to state residents but required out-of-state wineries to sell their products through wholesalers. Because the case was a consolidation of several legal challenges, it also involved a New York law that only permitted out-of-state wineries to engage in direct-to-consumer shipping if they had a "branch factory, office or storeroom within the state of New York." In a 5–4decision, the Supreme Court struck down both laws as a violation of the so-called "dormant Commerce Clause," which establishes the principle that state governments cannot blatantly favor in-state economic interests by discriminating against out-of-state economic actors. Importantly, the law ushered in a host of state-levellegislative victoriesthat allowed wineries to ship their products directly to their customer base, thereby circumventing the notoriousthree-tier systemof alcohol regulation. Despite nearly always beingreferred toas a "landmark" ruling,Granholmhas been treated more on par with an obscure 19th-century SCOTUS case that has long since been reversed. In the years immediately followingGranholm, the so-calledArnold's Wineline of cases—named after the Second Circuit'sArnold's Wines, Inc. v. Boylecase—came out, in which lower federal courts effectively limited the Supreme Court'sGranholmdecision to alcoholproducers(not retailers). Other federal courts rejected such a cramped reading of theGranholmprecedent, andeventually, the dispute forced the Supreme Court to weigh in again in the 2019 caseByrd v. Tennessee Wine & Spirits Retailers Association. InTennessee Wine, the Courtheld—this time by a 7–2 vote—that a Tennessee law requiring liquor store owners to have been residents of the state for at least two years before applying for a license was unconstitutional. Again, therationalewasbasedon the fact that states were not permitted to discriminate against out-of-state economic interests unless there was a proper health and safety reason to do so. As attorney Sean O'Learyput it, the Court's majority opinion—penned by Justice Samuel Alito—"put to rest any ambiguity on the reach ofGranholm." Except, somehow, it apparently didn't, because lower courts almost immediately started to ignore the Court once again. Lower courts have coalesced around what has beencalledtheTennessee WineTwo-Step Test: 1. Does the alcohol law at issue either facially or effectively discriminate against out-of-state economic interests? 2. If so, is the discrimination still permissible by serving a "legitimate, non-protectionist interest" (such as protecting health and safety)? Lower courts are creatively using these questions to essentially manufacture workarounds for bothGranholmandTennessee Wine. In 2022, a panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a North Carolina law that allowed in-state retailers to ship wine to North Carolina consumers but forbade out-of-state retailers from doing the same. Although the court agreed that the law at issue was clearly discriminatory against out-of-state economic interests, it seized upon the second prong of the two-step,holdingthat a state protecting its system of alcohol regulation was in and of itself "a legitimate non-protectionist ground" for the law. The 9th Circuit recently went even further. Hearing a challenge to an Arizona law that requires wine retailers to have an in-state physical presence in order to engage in interstate direct-to-consumer shipments within the state, the court ruled that the lawwasn't even discriminatory. Under the court'sreasoning, "setting up a physical storefront in Arizona is not a 'per se burden on out-of-state companies'" because the ability to establish such a storefront is based "on a company's resources and business model, not its citizenship or residency." The 9th Circuit's rationale is already spreading, with a district court in Washington State using the decision as a basis to nowconcludethat a Washington law that discriminates against out-of-state distilleries in favor of in-state distilleries is similarly permissible. Lost in all the legal slicing and dicing of these post-Granholmand post-Tennessee Winecases is the simple reality that they're clearly ignoring the main import of these decisions. As AlitonotedinTennessee Wine, "the Commerce Clause did not permit the States to impose protectionist measures clothed as police-power regulations." Unfortunately, that appears to be exactly what states are doing—and they're being readily rubber-stamped by willing federal judges. "The decisions keep getting stranger and stranger," as O'Leary put it in aninterviewwithWine-Searcher. "I really thought this issue was put to rest when Alito wroteTennessee Wine. He wrote thatGranholmapplies to everyone. It was a 7–2 ruling. I thought that was the end of it." States embracing protectionism and clearly thwarting previous rulings may force the Supreme Court to step in once again. The postThe Supreme Court Said States Can't Discriminate in Alcohol Sales. They're Doing It Anyway.appeared first onReason.com.

The Supreme Court Said States Can't Discriminate in Alcohol Sales. They're Doing It Anyway.

The Supreme Court Said States Can't Discriminate in Alcohol Sales. They're Doing It Anyway. This month marks the 20th anniversary of...
Jeanine Pirro steps into spotlight with response to murders of Israeli embassy staffersNew Foto - Jeanine Pirro steps into spotlight with response to murders of Israeli embassy staffers

Barely a week into her tenure as Washington, DC's top federal prosecutor, Jeanine Pirro faced an urgent test – overseeing the investigation into the murders of two Israeli embassy staffers outside the city's Jewish museum. Pirro's response to the young couples' murder was under the microscope, as it was her first opportunity to enter the public eye no longer as a Fox News host but as a high-ranking government official leading the charge to bring justice after a public assassination. Her quick command over the investigation garnered high marks from Justice Department officials. Prosecutors who work for her felt cautiously encouraged. But she's also getting the benefit for who she is not: Ed Martin, her norm-busting, social media free-wheeling predecessor who drew attention for his email screeds to employees and letters threatening to investigate Democratic members of Congress and liberal groups. Like Martin, Pirro enjoys a close relationship with President Donald Trump and is expected to deviate little from the top priorities Martin was pursuing like immigration enforcement and reducing crime in the nation's capital. But top officials at the Justice Department found Martin's antics problematic at times. Pirro's marked difference in style, at least so far, has been welcome to officials at DOJ headquarters and prosecutors who work for her, many of whom are still exhausted by Martin's tumultuous tenure. "Whew, thank goodness," one official remarked when asked about Pirro's handling of the murder investigation. A longtime media personality, the interim US attorney had so far only spoken through social media posts and press releases. One of the posts – avideo on Xcriticizing the fact that her prosecutors had to join a paid "water club" to drink from a water cooler at the office – was particularly popular, officials inside the office told CNN, and people working there appreciated the notion despite feeling slightly annoyed by her method of delivery. But her appearance Wednesday was far more traditional, as she and Attorney General Pam Bondi arrived at the Capital Jewish Museum soon after a man fired point blank at 26-year-old Sarah Milgrim and her boyfriend, 30-year-old Yaron Lischinsky, killing both. Pirro's decision to go to the scene of the shooting Wednesday night with little publicity or fanfare earned her respect inside the US attorney's office, one person told CNN. She stood silently behind the attorney general as she addressed reporters, trying to maintain her composure but visibly shaken by the grisly murder at the museum. Washington, DC, Mayor Muriel Bowser, who has previously been criticized by Republicans for crime in the city, has been relieved by the how smoothly the shared investigation has been conducted, and that Pirro, Bondi and Bowser found a mutual respect for the work each was doing under the immense pressure they faced, sources with knowledge of their relationship told CNN. "A young couple at the beginning of their life's journey, about to be engaged in another country, had their bodies removed in the cold of the night in a foreign city in a body bag," Pirro said Thursday from a lectern in her office. She continued; "And I am not unaware, based upon my own background, of the repercussions of this kind of case. This is the kind of case that picks at old sores and old scars, because these kinds of cases remind us of what has happened in the past that we can never and must never forget." A spokesperson from the DC US Attorney's Office said, "Judge Pirro has a history of fighting crime for over three decades and will continue to utilize her expertise in implementing the highest standards to assess and prosecute cases. She expects nothing less from her staff. Her job right now is to bring Law And Order to DC and make it safe for everyone." "As for this case, it is of the greatest import that the evidence collected be assessed and analyzed in a sterile courtroom setting and not in a publicized political setting," the spokesperson added. The murder investigation is still in its initial phase, and department officials, including Pirro, have said they are looking to bring potential hate crime or terrorism charges against the suspect, Elias Rodriguez. But even if the case went to trial with the charges filed Thursday, Rodriguez could face the death penalty. If the Justice Department does choose to seek capital punishment, it will be a major legal and political test for Pirro and the US Attorney's Office, putting the case on a long path to trial that would need to be carefully handled in a largely liberal-leaning city. The federal court in the District of Columbia hasn't had a death penalty trial since 2003, when Rodney L. Moore was convicted of 10 murders and Kevin L. Gray was convicted of 19 murders. The jurorssaid they couldn't agree unanimouslyon sentences of death for the two men rather than life imprisonment. People close to the office felt encouraged by the fact that an experienced national security prosecutor, Jeffrey Nestler, was assigned to handle the possible death penalty case and was at the scene of the crime by midnight Wednesday to oversee evidence collection. Several other top prosecutors within the office had either left the Justice Department since the Trump presidency began or had been fired or demoted during Martin's tenure. Rodriguez has not entered a formal plea in court. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Jeanine Pirro steps into spotlight with response to murders of Israeli embassy staffers

Jeanine Pirro steps into spotlight with response to murders of Israeli embassy staffers Barely a week into her tenure as Washington, DC'...
Illegal border crossings have plunged. DHS still says it needs billions to build a wall.New Foto - Illegal border crossings have plunged. DHS still says it needs billions to build a wall.

The Trump administration's claim to the "most secure border in history" has some Senate Republicans asking why DHS needs billions for a border wall. The Department of Homeland Security has asked Congress for $45.6 billion to build hundreds more miles of fencing at the southern border as part ofa sweeping tax and spending billthat passed the House and is being debated in the Senate. "The border is the most secure border we've had in the history of the United States of America," DHS SecretaryKristi Noemtold the Senate Homeland Security Committee on May 20. "But what we need to do is address the areas that are still vulnerable." PresidentDonald Trumpfaces challenges as he looksto push his policy agendain the Senate, where Republicans have a narrow majority and GOP senators are working to balance their support for border security with concerns about rising national debt. The House version of the funding bill is predicted to add an estimated $3.8 trillion to the national debt over the next 10 years. Ron Johnson, R-Wisconsin, said during the committee hearing that at an estimated $14 million a mile, DHS could build more than 3,000 miles of border fence. The U.S.-Mexico border only runs 1,950 miles from California to Texas; roughly 700 miles of the border is already fenced off. "I'm asking you and the department to sharpen your pencil on that wall request," he told Noem. "It's more than you need." Noem suggested to the committee that the cost-per-mile was less, roughly $12 million per mile. Committee chairman Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, said even if DHS wanted to wall off another 1,000 miles – unlikely due to extremely rugged and mountainous terrain in some parts – the agency would need $12 billion, not $45.6 billion. "We're off here by a factor of three or four," Paul told Noem, asking for more detail. "We can't just throw another $30 billion out there and say, 'Things cost a lot.'" More:Kristi Noem botches definition of 'habeas corpus' at Senate hearing Illegal border crossings have plunged during the first four months of the Trump administration, accelerating a decline that began during the final year of the Biden administration. U.S. Border Patrol reported about 8,400 migrant encounters at the southern border in April, down from nearly 129,000 encounters during the same month a year ago. Noem said the funding would also go toward technology at the border where, she said, one in three surveillance cameras don't work currently and there are stretches that go un-patrolled. "The truth is there are portions of this border where we still don't know what happens there," she said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Republican senators push back over Trump's $46B border wall ask

Illegal border crossings have plunged. DHS still says it needs billions to build a wall.

Illegal border crossings have plunged. DHS still says it needs billions to build a wall. The Trump administration's claim to the "m...
More than 100 National Security Council staffers put on administrative leaveNew Foto - More than 100 National Security Council staffers put on administrative leave

The Trump administration has put more than 100 officials at the National Security Council at the White House on administrative leave on Friday as part of a restructuring under interim national security adviser and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, according to two US officials and another source familiar with the matter. CNNpreviously reportedthat a significant overhaul of the body in charge of coordinating the president's foreign policy agenda was expected in the coming days, including a staff reduction and a reinforced top-down approach with decision-making concentrated at the highest levels. An email from NSC chief of staff Brian McCormack went out around 4:20 p.m. informing those being dismissed they'd have 30 minutes to clean out their desks, according to an administration official. If they weren't on campus, the email read, they could email an address and arrange a time to retrieve their stuff later and turn in devices. The email subject line read: "Your return to home agency," indicating that most of those affected were detailed to the NSC from other departments and agencies. On Thursday, Rubio convened a meeting with principals, which raised speculation that it was about the re-organization, the official said. And on Friday at 3:45 p.m., shortly before the email went out, senior directors were summoned to a meeting with Rubio. A flurry of emails from those leaving then started going out with personal contact information. With this happening on a Friday afternoon before a long holiday weekend, the official called it "as unprofessional and reckless as could possibly be." Those put on leave include career officials, as well as political hires made during the Trump administration. In recent weeks staffers were being re-interviewed by the Office of the Presidential Personnel as the reshaping of the office was taking place, sources said. One of the questions asked was what officials thought was the appropriate size of the NSC, one source said. Staffed by foreign policy experts from across the US government, the NSC typically serves as a critical body for coordinating the president's foreign policy agenda. But under President Donald Trump, the NSC's role has been diminished, with the overhaul expected to further reduce its importance in the White House. Earlier this month, Mike Waltz – who previously led the NSC – wasremovedfrom his role in the first major staff shakeup of the new administration. Trump announced that he would nominate Waltz to serve as UN ambassador and Rubio would replace him on an acting basis at the NSC. Waltz had been on shaky ground within the administration – having lost most of his influence in the West Wing – after heinadvertently added a journalistto a messaging app group chat about highly sensitive military strikes. Even before the Signal fiasco, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles had been privately unimpressed with Waltz. And weeks before he was out, his influence internally had been waning, illustrated best by Trump's decision to dismiss several staffers from the NSCat the urging offar-right activist Laura Loomer, who told him they were disloyal. CNN's Katie Bo Lillis and Natasha Bertrand contributed to this report. This story and headline have been updated with additional details. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

More than 100 National Security Council staffers put on administrative leave

More than 100 National Security Council staffers put on administrative leave The Trump administration has put more than 100 officials at the...
Trump's top meme coin investors visit White HouseNew Foto - Trump's top meme coin investors visit White House

Despite repeated claims from the White House that President Donald Trump'sThursday night galafor the top holders of his cryptocurrency meme coin had nothing to do with his official duties, several of those investors visited the White House Friday afternoon for what they described as a special VIP event, the attendees told ABC News. Sangrok Oh, a Korean crypto investor and entrepreneur, told ABC News on Friday that he and other top investors had been invited to tour the White House Friday afternoon, though it was not clear to him whether Trump himself would meet them. "So, we're going to visit and tour the White House [and] at the same time talk about crypto industries and the future of crypto," Oh said. MORE: Protesters decry 'crypto corruption' as Trump fetes top investors in his crypto meme coin Thursday night's black tie event, held at Trump's Washington-area golf club, was attended by around 200 cryptocurrency traders, including many from overseas, who gained admission through a contest that awarded invitations to the top investors in Trump's meme coin -- with at least some of the funds flowing directly into the Trump family's coffers. Critics haveblasted the galaas a "pay for play" event in which investors who poured millions into Trump's crypto coin got special access to the president. News that top $TRUMP coin investors visited the White House appeared to contradict White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt's assertion Thursday that the president was attending the crypto gala in a personal capacity, and that since the dinner did not take place at the White House, it was separate from his official duties. "The president is attending [the dinner] in his personal time," Leavitt said Thursday. "It is not a White House dinner. It's not taking place here at the White House." The White House did not immediately respond on Friday to a request for comment from ABC News. Cherry Hsu, an executive at MemeCore, a Singapore-based blockchain startup, said the firm's founder, known publicly as "Ice," had also been invited to the White House on Friday afternoon. MemeCore, according to thecontest leaderboard, finished second in the competition with $TRUMP coin holdings in excess of $1 million. And late Friday, Justin Sun, a Chinese crupto mogul and the top investor in Trump's meme coin,posted a highly produced videoof his White House tour, writing on X, "Was an honor to be invited to tour the @WhiteHouse. Such a privilege to see it in person." In addition to his multimillion-dollar investment in the $TRUMP coin, Sun has also invested $75 million inWorld Liberty Financial, another Trump-backed crypto venture. One month after that investment, SEC lawyers under the Trump administration moved to halt an alleged fraud case against Sun. The Trump meme coin's website at one point earlier this month advertised a "Special VIP White House tour" for the top 25 meme coin holders as part of the contest -- but as of last week, the site said only that a "Special VIP tour" would be arranged, without mentioning the White House. The site also included a disclaimer saying the tour was being arranged by the Fight Fight Fight LLC, and that the president himself would be appearing as a "guest." Trump's top meme coin investors visit White Houseoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Trump's top meme coin investors visit White House

Trump's top meme coin investors visit White House Despite repeated claims from the White House that President Donald Trump'sThursday...

 

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