You have no doubt seen the ways in which the Supreme Court made decisions that b

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You have no doubt seen the ways in which the Supreme Court made decisions that brought about significant change for the entire country. It is also true that the Supreme Court makes decisions that affect public administration and public policy.
For this assignment, you will focus on how case law both guides and affects public policy.
Begin by researching a Supreme Court case of interest to you and pertaining to an oral argument. The Oral Argument 2.0: October 2019 TermLinks to an external site. website offers a list of recent cases you might want to consider.
Then, using your chosen case, write a case brief. Consult the Briefing CasesLinks to an external site. website for further explanation of what a case brief is and what the steps are to writing one. You should also review How to Write a Case Brief [PDF] and take a look at the following example case briefs:
Case Brief Example 1 [PDF].
Case Brief Example 2 [PDF].
Your case brief should be 2–3 pages and include the following:
Provide a caption identifying your case and brief.
Identify the facts of the case.
State the procedural history of the case.
Identify the issue in question.
State the holdings in your own words.
Describe the court’s rationale for each holding.
Explain the final disposition.
Include other opinions.
This course requires the use of Strayer Writing Standards (SWS). The library is your home for SWS assistance, including citations and formatting. Please refer to the Library site for all support. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
The specific course learning outcome associated with this assignment is:
Determine how case law guides and affects public administration and public policy
TOPIC
Trump v. Vance
No. 19-635 – Argued May 12, 2020At Issue
Whether a state grand-jury subpoena of the President’s personal financial records from a third-party custodian violates either Article II or the Supremacy Clause?
AdvocatesJay Alan Sekulow, for the petitioner
Noel J. Francisco, for the United States, as amicus curiae, supporting reversal
Carey R. Dunne, for the respondent
Background and Case CommentaryTrump v. Vance involves a grand jury subpoena issued by the District Attorney for the Southern District of New York served on Mazars USA seeking various financial documents and tax records related to President Trump and his affiliates. The investigation arose from reports of possible criminal misconduct connected to the Trump Organization that may have occurred in New York County over the last ten years. As part of the investigation, the District Attorney subpoenaed Trump’s tax records, kept by Mazars. To ease the burden of producing the requested documents, the District Attorney used the same language in its office’s subpoena for the same materials issued in an unconnected investigation by the House of Representatives. Additionally, the District Attorney limited the request to materials involving Trump’s unofficial conduct before he took office. When Mazars indicated that it would comply with the request, President Trump filed for injunctive relief, arguing that the President possesses absolute immunity from state criminal process. The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled against the President.
In this case, as in its tandem case, the focus was on how the Court’s precedents should be applied, if at all, and here all the justices, except perhaps for Justice Thomas, seemingly recognizing that balancing the competing interests was the appropriate methodology to follow. The President’s Counsel, Mr. Sekulow, argued for “temporary presidential immunity” even though the Court had unanimously rejected such immunity in Clinton v. Jones on pre-presidential matters. Solicitor General Francisco insisted that the District Attorney have “special needs” for the requested documents, and both he and Mr. Sekulow stressed the fact that there were 2,300 state prosecutors who had to be prevented from being able to harass a president with subpoenas for political purposes. This latter argument ran into trouble because the case was actually litigated in federal court, and both the justices and the advocates seemed satisfied that the case was appropriately in federal court and, indeed, always would end up there whenever subpoenas issued by state authorities were challenged in federal court.
Trump v. Vance on Oyez: https://www.oyez.org/cases/2019/19-635Key Questions from Oral Argument
Justice Kagan to Petitioner (16:55): So, Mr. Sekulow, you’ve said that a number of times and made the point, which we have made, that presidents can’t be treated just like an ordinary citizen. But it’s also true and, indeed, a fundamental precept of our constitutional order that a president isn’t above the law. . . . [W]hy isn’t the way to deal with these two things, (that the President is special but that the President is like an ordinary citizen in that he’s subject to law), is to say the President can make these usual objections that a subpoena recipient can make about harassment or about burden, and the courts in reviewing those, of course, should take seriously the President’s objections and treat those with a certain kind of sensitivity and respect due to somebody who is a branch of government. Why isn’t that the right way to do it?
Michael Gerhardt: Your Honor, the President should not be treated like an ordinary citizen because he is not. This is especially true with respect to a criminal proceeding. True, Clinton v. Jones says that in civil cases based on pre-presidential misconduct a president is not entitled to any immunity, but in criminal cases the potential for distraction and interference with the President’s doing his job are acute. Presidents may well be like ordinary citizens in that they will fear for their lives and their freedom when confronted with possible criminal charges, but their understandable fear is bound to interfere with their duties – and their preeminent need to be focused on those duties in times of crisis.
Justice Sotomayor to Respondent (1:33:46): I’m not sure that I understood your statement earlier that the only difference between you and the SG — well, there are two differences, one in the articulation of special needs or heightened standard, but you said it’s the burden of proof. But you’ve already conceded to — to one of my colleagues that there’s an automatic burden on an article — on the Article II clause by subpoenaing a sitting president, period. . . . What then are you conceding when you say there’s a burden? . . . And — and what kind of burden are you talking about? And, number three, articulate more precisely what problems you have with the heightened standard that Nixon set in its grand jury subpoena.
Michael Gerhardt : Your Honor, I am sorry for any confusion. Briefly, the Solicitor General is trying to apply to this case standards designed to ensure proper consideration of any presidential claims of executive privilege, but there are none here. Therefore, it is inappropriate, we submit, for those standards to be used here. Our concern is that the heightened scrutiny used for Nixon was used in order to protect rightful claims of executive privilege, but here we urge the Court not to allow Mr. Trump to use the presidency as a shield on matters that are unofficial and personal. We ask the Court to follow the same methodology here as it used in the Clinton v. Jones case, a balancing test that takes into account the need for the information and any personal inconvenience caused to the President, such as interference with meetings with foreign leaders. In applying that balancing test in this case, the Court should place the burden of persuasion on the President because he is resisting the subpoena. He must therefore be the one to show why, on balance, he has great needs for privacy here. We do not believe that unsupported claims of inconvenience should shield Mr. Trump from complying with a lawful subpoena. I conclude, your Honor, reminding this Court that our framers rebelled against a king who indeed killed people and engaged in criminal conduct with impunity; the Constitution was not designed to allow a president to act with impunity under any conditions. To the contrary, the Constitution was designed to allow for checking a president, and the checks here, your Honor, are especially important because they have to do with the President’s personal, pre-presidential conduct. Giving Mr. Sekulow and General Francisco what they are requesting on matters that have nothing to do with the presidency places the President above the law.

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