Vol. 120

Introduction In Apple Inc. v. Pepper, the Supreme Court held that consumers who allegedly paid too much for apps sold on Apple’s App Store because of an antitrust violation could sue Apple for damages because they were “di­rect purchasers.” The decision sidesteps most of the bizarre complexities that have resulted from the Supreme Court’s 1977 […]

Introduction My article Harmless Errors and Substantial Rights challenged conventional wisdom about the harmless constitutional error doctrine in criminal procedure. Specifically, I contended that the traditional way of understanding harmless error as a remedial doctrine rooted in so-called “constitutional common law” created significant anomalies. The remedial perspective does not explain which errors can properly be […]

THE LAW AND POLITICS OF PRESIDENTIAL TERM LIMIT EVASION

Mila Versteeg,* Timothy Horley,** Anne Meng,*** Mauricio Guim**** & Marilyn Guirguis*****

Since the turn of the millennium, a remarkably large number of incumbent presidents have managed to stay past the end of their consti­tutionally mandated terms. Russia’s Vladimir Putin, Rwanda’s Paul Kagame, and Colombia’s Alvaro Uribe represent a sizeable collection of presidents who were democratically elected but remained in power long past their original mandates. Such attempts to stay in office are not new, but in recent decades their...

The Supreme Court’s 2018 Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC decision caused uncertainty for future and ongoing Alien Tort Statute (ATS) litigation in federal courts. In holding that foreign corporations are not subject to liability under the ATS, the Court foreclosed one avenue hu­man rights plaintiffs have sought to use for the past few decades to garner attention, and in some cases receive significant monetary settle­ments, for the abuses. Further,...

DISAPPROPRIATION

Matthew B. Lawrence*

In recent years, Congress has repeatedly failed to appropriate funds necessary to honor legal commitments (or entitlements) that are them­selves enacted in permanent law. The Appropriations Clause has forced the government to defy legislative command and break such commit­ments, with destructive results for recipients and the rule of law. This Article is the first to address this poorly understood phenomenon, which it labels a form of “disappropriation.”

The...