100 episodes

Administrative Static is an irreverent legal affairs podcast that exposes the unlawful side of administrative power. Hosts Mark Chenoweth and John Vecchione will decry federal and state agency abuses, trot out legal arguments, grill expert guests, and bandy about the latest cases and controversies. 

Administrative Static Podcast Administrative Static

    • Government

Administrative Static is an irreverent legal affairs podcast that exposes the unlawful side of administrative power. Hosts Mark Chenoweth and John Vecchione will decry federal and state agency abuses, trot out legal arguments, grill expert guests, and bandy about the latest cases and controversies. 

    NCLA’s George Washington Award Recognizes Brave Clients and Accomplished Lawyers

    NCLA’s George Washington Award Recognizes Brave Clients and Accomplished Lawyers

    We awarded Drs. Azadeh Khatibi, Tracy Høeg, Ram Duriseti, Aaron Kheriaty, and Pete Mazolewski NCLA’s Award for Client Bravery. NCLA represented these courageous doctors in the successful Høeg v. Newsom suit challenging a California state law that would have subjected them to discipline for sharing information with patients that departed from the “contemporary scientific consensus” on Covid-19. Gov. Newsom signed a bill to repeal the law, marking a major victory for our clients, free speech, and medical liberty.

    NCLA also presented a “Georgie” award (a bust of George Washington) to Latham & Watkins partner Roman Martinez for outstanding service to NCLA and our clients. He delivered oral argument to the Supreme Court in January in our Relentless Inc. v. Dept. of Commerce case against the unconstitutional Chevron doctrine.

    The Buckeye Institute Director of Litigation David Tryon and Legal Fellow Alex Certo took home the Georgie for Best Amicus Brief, while A. Gregory Grimsal received the Best Local Counsel Award.

    NCLA recognized the winner of its Student Note Competition, Matthew Lambertson of the University of Florida’s Levin Law School, who earned a $10,000 prize to be split with the Florida Law Review for his illuminating publication entitled: “The Common Law and SEC Rule 10b-5(b): Narrowing the Securities ‘Fraud’ Exception to the First Amendment.”

    Finally, NCLA honored newly retired former Senior Litigation Counsel Richard Samp with the Cincinnatus Award, celebrating his illustrious 30-plus-year career defending justice in our Republic.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 12 min
    A Watershed Supreme Court Term Will Not Drown The Administrative State

    A Watershed Supreme Court Term Will Not Drown The Administrative State

    We discuss Mark's recent column in Forbes: a brief review of five pending SCOTUS cases: (1) SEC v. Jarkesy; (2) Relentless v. Department of Commerce/ Loper Bright v. Raimondo; (3) Corner Post v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve; (4) Garland v. Cargill; and (5) Starbucks v. McKinney. 

    Administrative statists have floated a false narrative about the many indisputably important administrative law cases pending at the U.S. Supreme Court this term. With at least half a dozen such cases still awaiting decision by month’s end, it promises to be a watershed year.

    Greater freedom and constitutional restoration appear to be in the offing, which may explain the liberal meltdown that has already begun. Before the Supreme Court (erroneously) upheld the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s funding mechanism last month, some commentators on the left were proclaiming that a decision leaving Congress to appropriate annual funds to the CFPB would trigger a second Great Depression.

    Similarly absurd claims have abounded about the remaining undecided cases, so it is time to set the record straight lest bureaucratic caterwauling lead the Court further astray.
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    • 12 min
    Fifth Circuit Topples SEC’s Unlawful Effort to Regulate Private Funds

    Fifth Circuit Topples SEC’s Unlawful Effort to Regulate Private Funds

    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit issued a decision in National Association of Private Fund Managers v. Securities and Exchange Commission vacating SEC’s recent final rule restricting—and in some cases prohibiting—certain common contractual agreements between private investment funds and investment advisers.

    Following the New Civil Liberties Alliance amicus curiae brief’s advice, the Court declared that SEC exceeded its statutory authority in promulgating the unlawful rule because Congress never gave SEC oversight of this aspect of private funds. NCLA thanks securities law scholars Paul Mahoney, Adam Pritchard, and J.W. Verret for joining in NCLA’s brief as amicus partners.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 12 min
    NCLA Demands Fauci and Co. Save Potentially Damning Covid Communications

    NCLA Demands Fauci and Co. Save Potentially Damning Covid Communications

    The New Civil Liberties Alliance sent a letter informing Dr. Anthony Fauci, his Senior Advisor Dr. David Morens, Dr. Peter Daszak, Dr. Gerald Keusch, Dr. Richard Roberts, Dr. Francis Collins, and Google that they are legally obligated to preserve all documents, communications, and electronically stored information related to their official government business.

    NCLA represents 4 of the 5 individual plaintiffs in the Murthy v. Missouri case with an appeal from the grant of a preliminary injunction now pending before the U.S. Supreme Court. Dr. Fauci and other government defendants violated our clients’ First Amendment rights through involvement in censoring their speech on social media that was not in line with the government’s position of Covid-19 and related issues.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 12 min
    Congressional Committee Investigates Fauci Advisor's COVID Emails

    Congressional Committee Investigates Fauci Advisor's COVID Emails

    The Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic probes into inflammatory emails authored by a top adviser to Fauci. David Morens, a seasoned federal scientist currently on administrative leave, admitted to deleting emails and using a personal account to avoid disclosing correspondence under the Freedom of Information Act.

    Join Mark, Vec, and Jenin as they dissect this hearing in the latest episode.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 12 min
    NCLA Fights Against Discriminatory Dept. of Education Rule for Fulbright-Hays Fellowships

    NCLA Fights Against Discriminatory Dept. of Education Rule for Fulbright-Hays Fellowships

    The Fulbright-Hays Fellowship supports U.S. students conducting foreign language research abroad. However, since 1998, the Department of Education has unfairly penalized "non-native-born" students who learned the language through heritage, denying them 15 points out of 105 for language proficiency. Samar Ahmad and Edgar Ulloa Lujan, fluent in Arabic and Spanish respectively, faced penalties despite their proficiency. This discrimination contradicts the fellowship's purpose and violates students' due process rights.

    NCLA filed Edgar Ulloa Lujan, Samar Ahmad, and Veronica Gonzalez v. U.S. Department of Education, et al. challenging the "native language penalty." This rule unfairly discriminates against American citizens from non-English-speaking countries and their children, barring them from the Fulbright-Hays Fellowship based on their national heritage language.

    In this episode, NCLA's Sheng Li joins Mark and Vec to discuss this case. 
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 12 min

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