Law Federal judge rules PA Gov. Wolf’s shutdown orders were unconstitutional

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Federal judge rules Gov. Wolf’s shutdown orders were unconstitutional
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A federal judge in Pittsburgh on Monday found that orders issued by Gov. Tom Wolf restricting the size of gatherings and closing non-essential businesses to protect against the spread of covid-19 were unconstitutional.

U.S. District Judge William S. Stickman IV wrote in his 66-page opinion that even though the actions taken in the spring by Wolf and Health Secretary Dr. Rachel Levine were laudable, they violated the First Amendment right to freedom of assembly, and the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the 14th Amendment.

“It’s a complete and total victory for the counties, the businesses and the representatives,” said attorney Thomas W. King III, who represented the plaintiffs in the case. “You can’t order the entire population of Pennsylvania to stay at home.”

The Pennsylvania Attorney General’s office, which represented the defendants in the case, did not immediately return a request for comment. Wolf has a right to appeal the ruling. The state Health Department has a press conference scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today.

The plaintiffs in the case included seven businesses and their owners, U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Butler, state Reps. Daryl Metcalfe, Marci Mustello and Tim Bonner, as well as Butler, Fayette, Greene and Washington counties. The businesses included three hair salons, an appliance store, a farm and two drive-in theaters.

The complaint was filed May 7, arguing that the governor’s orders — setting numeric limitations on the size of gatherings, the stay-at-home order and the closure of non-life-sustaining businesses — were unconstitutional.

After reviewing the record, Stickman said that he “believes that defendants undertook their actions in a well-intentioned effort to protect Pennsylvanians from the virus. However, good intentions toward a laudable end are not alone enough to uphold governmental action against a constitutional challenge. Indeed, the greatest threats to our system of constitutional liberties may arise when the ends are laudable, and the intent is good — especially in a time of emergency.”

Stickman, who was appointed to the bench in 2019, said that “even a vigilant public may let down its guard over its constitutional liberties only to find that liberties, once relinquished, are hard to recoup and that restrictions — while expedient in the face of an emergency situation — may persist long after immediate danger has passed.”

King said that the judge’s decision finding gathering limits to be unconstitutional now applies to everyone in Pennsylvania.

He said that the finding that the stay-at-home order was unconstitutional means it can never be repeated.

As for the closure of non-essential businesses, King believes that will open the door to business owners filing lawsuits against the state seeking relief, or compensation, for their losses during the closure.
“Our goal in bringing this action was that our county commissioners in Butler believed these orders were unconstitutional and unconstitutionally affected residents of their county.”

Thus far, in Pennsylvania, 7,869 people have died from the virus, with 145,063 testing positive.

In testimony for the case, King said, there was no medical evidence presented relative to the spread of covid-19, and Levine did not testify and instead sent a representative to do so.

King said that he posed the question — once the stay-at-home order was lifted in early June — what establishments in Allegheny County were responsible for the increased spread of the virus, and no one could answer.

“You can’t just shut down American society,” King said.

In his opinion, Stickman agreed.

“There is no question that this country has faced, and will face, emergencies of every sort,” Stickman wrote. “But the solution to a national crisis can never be permitted to supersede the commitment to individual liberty that stands as the foundation of the American experiment.”

Stickman wrote that the Constitution “sets certain lines that may not be crossed, even in an emergency.”

“The fact is that the lockdowns imposed across the United States in early 2020 in response to the covid-19 pandemic are unprecedented in the history of our commonwealth and our country,” Stickman wrote. “They have never been used in response to any other disease in our history. They were not recommendations made by the CDC.”

Stickman wrote that the defendants never had a set definition for what constituted a “life-sustaining” business, and instead the definition remained in flux.

Stickman wrote that there was no precedent for the closure of non-essential businesses.

“Never before has the government taken a direct action which shuttered so many businesses and sidelined so many employees and rendered their ability to operate, and to work, solely dependent on government discretion,” he said.

Stickman wrote that the right of citizens to support themselves in their chosen occupation “is deeply rooted in our nation’s legal and cultural history.”

“A total shutdown of a business with no end-date and the specter of additional, future shutdowns can cause critical damage to a business’s ability to survive, to an employee’s ability to support him/herself, and adds a government-induced cloud of uncertainty to the usual unpredictability of nature and life.”
 

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I think this is probably the first win for the Anti-Lockdown crowd. I don't recall anyone having a successful case before this. The one church that sued over their first amendment right to gather for religious reasons was shot down.
In most cases though the lower courts agreed that the lock down wasn't constitutional but then ruled against the people suing.

Wolf was one of the first Democratic governors who tried to restrict firearm sales.

As soon as the suit was filed the PA Supreme Court had a conversation with Wolf and the order was rescinded while not ruling against him.
 
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Stickman, who was appointed to the bench in 2019, said that “even a vigilant public may let down its guard over its constitutional liberties only to find that liberties, once relinquished, are hard to recoup and that restrictions — while expedient in the face of an emergency situation — may persist long after immediate danger has passed.”

There was a poster who repeatedly stated that U.S. government was trying to do exactly this - restrict liberties in a time of crisis and then never reinstate them. It seems a judge has picked up on this threat as well.
 
I think this is probably the first win for the Anti-Lockdown crowd. I don't recall anyone having a successful case before this. The one church that sued over their first amendment right to gather for religious reasons was shot down.

Wisconsin's governor ordered a full scale lockdown early on, and that got knocked down by the Supreme Court in April, I think it was. Now we have to wear masks everywhere in public, minus restaurants and bars, but at least we can go to work. And unless something big happens, the mask order is going to time out at the end of this month.
 
What is that sound I hear? Is it the sound of some chickens coming home to roost?

Next talk about how Wolf when the legislature tried to take power away from him was like, "No thanks I am going to be an actual fucking fascist."

Perhaps a federal investigation into why he attempted to grant his own business an exemption until he was caught and then his business just kept on running anyway. Are cabinets essential?

Also pretty sure the lockdowns were criminal. I remember reading something that outlined a law regarding taking people's rights through government authority but I am too lazy to look it up.
 
There was a poster who repeatedly stated that U.S. government was trying to do exactly this - restrict liberties in a time of crisis and then never reinstate them. It seems a judge has picked up on this threat as well.
Several of us were saying it and it is obvious if you don't trust the government. Governments all of the world were popping boners over an excuse to ride roughshod over whatever passes for civil liberties in their country. Governments are not benevolent. They do not give. They take. It's why sycophants who want Trump to go crazy with federal overreach legitimately scare me. You do understand whatever powers he uses will be normalized right? And that whoever comes after him will use them right? We still have the unconstituional PATRIOT Act and it isn't going away any time soon. We should strive for as little government involvement in our lives as realistically possible.
 
There was a poster who repeatedly stated that U.S. government was trying to do exactly this - restrict liberties in a time of crisis and then never reinstate them. It seems a judge has picked up on this threat as well.

It's exactly what they did, that's how we got the Patriot Act after 9/11, everyone was scared and politicians immediately jumped on the chance to fuck the Constitution as much as possible before anyone was even aware it was happening. Presidential hopeful Joe Biden also voted YEA on said bill when it came time to vote it into law. Never let a good crisis go to waste as the old saying goes.
 
How quickly does this apply to every other lockdown order?
I don't believe this changes anything, just a case that can be referenced when suing the PA Government for damages for driving your business into insolvency. Someone with a law degree will likely get around to explaining it. I skimmed the opinion pdf and the Judge shits all over the Governor for having a bunch of office workers with no medical or legal experience just slapping shit together at random because they liked the way it sounded.
 
How quickly does this apply to every other lockdown order?

It doesn't.

For a federal order to affect multiple states' lockdown, the lockdowns and the procedure of implementing them would have to be exactly, literally identical. Since each state structures their government in different ways, even though they could be very minor, the ruling does not apply to anybody other than Pennsylvania.
 
It doesn't.

For a federal order to affect multiple states' lockdown, the lockdowns and the procedure of implementing them would have to be exactly, literally identical. Since each state structures their government in different ways, even though they could be very minor, the ruling does not apply to anybody other than Pennsylvania.

Unless it goes to the SCOTUS, of course. That wouldn't mean a SCOTUS decision would be applied equally to all states, but it would set a federal standard at national level which could then be litigated in the various states. But I don't expect any SCOTUS decision on lockdowns, unfortunately, even though this is exactly what the Supreme Court ought to have taken up immediately. Still, the wheels of justice move slowly. Let's not have our base instincts take over, as they have with antifa and BLM, to demand immediate retribution outside the ancient foundations of Anglo-American jurisprudence.
 
There was a poster who repeatedly stated that U.S. government was trying to do exactly this - restrict liberties in a time of crisis and then never reinstate them. It seems a judge has picked up on this threat as well.
That's always the way it is, and why you guys are lucky your gun lobby/2A advocates never cucked out like ours did in the UK. I always found it kinda funny after I moved to the states when everyone assumed I'd be a gun grabber on account of being a Brit, and instead I'm more aggressively pro 2A than even most of my inlaws who are goddamn Texans.
 
That's always the way it is, and why you guys are lucky your gun lobby/2A advocates never cucked out like ours did in the UK. I always found it kinda funny after I moved to the states when everyone assumed I'd be a gun grabber on account of being a Brit, and instead I'm more aggressively pro 2A than even most of my inlaws who are goddamn Texans.
The NRA has repeatedly knuckled under in the past. GOA is another story.
 
The NRA has repeatedly knuckled under in the past. GOA is another story.

That is just because the two organizations have different outlooks on how to deal with the issue. NRA-ILA prefers to lobby politicians to prevent shit laws being written up. GOA prefers to gamble and roll the dice in the courts to strike down laws. NRA-ILA's path is slow and steady and GOA is dangerous but quick to unfurl damage done. Heller was a good example of the two organizations being on the same side but feuding over the approach to the issue brought up. NRA-ILA felt that it would lose in the Supreme Court and be impossible to undo the damage and GOA felt it was work risking since they had strong 2A justices like Scalia.
 
That's always the way it is, and why you guys are lucky your gun lobby/2A advocates never cucked out like ours did in the UK. I always found it kinda funny after I moved to the states when everyone assumed I'd be a gun grabber on account of being a Brit, and instead I'm more aggressively pro 2A than even most of my inlaws who are goddamn Texans.
They cucked out a while ago sadly. That’s why I can’t buy a full auto gun and dynamite from the hardware store anymore.
 
This balding tard and his faggot health department head ruined the lives of multiple people by shutting down everyone else's business but his own fucking business (his business makes cabinets, real fucking essential in a pandemic), and when they were confronted by this, his own business threw him under the goddamn bus and then closed like everyone else. Richard (now Rachel) Levine is a fucking coward by having a representative speak in his stead and a criminal by pulling HIS OWN MOTHER OUT OF A NURSING HOME WHILE PUTTING COVID PATIENTS IN NURSING HOMES.

As a life long Pennsylvanian, I hope Tom Wolf gets forcibly dragged into a cell while Richard necks himself like the tranny faggot he is.
 
Neat, now do that Whitmer lady in Michigan.
People thought she had a huge chip on her shoulder too, and before Kalama stepped up people thought she'd be Ridin' With Biden to the White House, would be funny to see her sperg out in court on this.
 
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