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Re: The controversial article Matthew Kacsmaryk did not disclose to the Senate 

By: zzstar in FFT4 | Recommend this post (2)
Sun, 16 Apr 23 12:07 AM | 49 view(s)
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Msg. 06913 of 15869
(This msg. is a reply to 06912 by clo2)

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He’s history now…….just like that bitch in Palm Beach with the documents bs she pulled.

One by one they will become irrelevant. This is their hurrahhhhh we’re living through……tik tok tik tok tik tok…..




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The above is a reply to the following message:
The controversial article Matthew Kacsmaryk did not disclose to the Senate
By: clo2
in FFT4
Sat, 15 Apr 23 11:55 PM
Msg. 06912 of 15869

Look at this, another liar, willing to ruin millions of lives !

The controversial article Matthew Kacsmaryk did not disclose to the Senate
The judge who delivered a high-stakes abortion pills ruling last week removed his name from a law review article during his judicial nomination process, emails show

As a lawyer for a conservative legal group, Matthew Kacsmaryk in early 2017 submitted an article to a Texas law review criticizing Obama-era protections for transgender people and those seeking abortions.

The Obama administration, the draft article argued, had discounted religious physicians who “cannot use their scalpels to make female what God created male” and “cannot use their pens to prescribe or dispense abortifacient drugs designed to kill unborn children.”

But a few months after the piece arrived, an editor at the law journal who had been working with Kacsmaryk received an unusual email: Citing “reasons I may discuss at a later date,” Kacsmaryk, who had originally been listed as the article’s sole author, said he would be removing his name and replacing it with those of two colleagues at his legal group, First Liberty Institute, according to emails and early drafts obtained by The Washington Post.

What Kacsmaryk did not say in the email was that he had already been interviewed for a judgeship by his state’s two senators and was awaiting an interview at the White House.

As part of that process, he was required to list all of his published work on a questionnaire submitted to the Senate Judiciary Committee, including “books, articles, reports, letters to the editor, editorial pieces, or other published material you have written or edited.”

The article, titled “The Jurisprudence of the Body,” was published in September 2017 by the Texas Review of Law and Politics, a right-leaning journal that Kacsmaryk had led as a law student at the University of Texas. But Kacsmaryk’s role in the article was not disclosed, nor did he list the article on the paperwork he submitted to the Senate in advance of confirmation hearings in which Kacsmaryk’s past statements on LGBT issues became a point of contention.

Now, six years later, as Kacsmaryk sits as a judge in Amarillo, Tex., his strong ideological views have grabbed the country’s attention after his ruling this month that sought to block government approval of a key drug used in more than half of all abortions in the country — an opinion that invoked antiabortion-movement rhetoric and which some medical experts have said relied on debunked claims that exaggerate potential harms of the drug.
more:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/04/15/matthew-kacsmaryk-law-review/


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