The "cert. pool" is a mechanism by which the U.S. Supreme Court manages the influx of petitions for certiorari to the court. It was instituted in 1973, as one of the institutional reforms of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger.

Contents

Purpose and operation [link]

Each year, the Supreme Court receives thousands of petitions for certiorari; in 2001 the number stood at approximately 7,500,[1] and had risen to 8,241 by October Term 2007.[2] The Court will ultimately grant approximately 80 to 100 of these petitions,[3] in accordance with the rule of four. The workload of the court would make it difficult for each Justice to read each petition; instead, in days gone by, each Justice's law clerks would read the petitions and surrounding materials, and provide a short summary of the case, including a recommendation as to whether the Justice should vote to hear the case.

This situation changed in the early 1970s, at the instigation of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. In Burger's view, particularly in light of the increasing caseload, it was redundant to have nine separate memoranda prepared for each petition and thus (over objections from Justice William Brennan) Burger and Associate Justices Lewis Powell, Byron White, Harry Blackmun and William Rehnquist created the cert pool.[4] Today, all Justices except Justice Samuel Alito participate in the cert pool.[5] Justice Alito withdrew from the pool procedure late in 2008.[6]

The operation of the cert pool is as follows: Each participating Justice places his or her clerks in the pool. A copy of each petition received by the Court goes to the pool, is assigned to a random clerk from the pool, and that clerk then prepares and circulates a memo for all of the Justices participating in the pool. The writing law clerk may ask their Justice to call for a response to the petition, or any Justice may call for a response after the petition is circulated.[7]

It tends to fall to the Chief Justice to "maintain" the pool when its workings go awry:

Rehnquist memos in the Blackmun files chide the clerks for submitting the memos too late and too long, and for leaving copies in the recycling bin — a major security breach. But a 1996 note to pool law clerks is perhaps the most intriguing, suggesting Rehnquist was concerned that clerks might be shading their summaries to reflect biases. Rehnquist reminded the clerks that cases are assigned to them for summarizing "on a random basis" partly "to avoid any temptation on the part of law clerks to select for themselves pool memos in cases with respect to which they might not be as neutral as is desirable."
[8]

The same note went on to observe, with typical Rehnquist understatement, that "[t]his sort of trade has the potential for undermining the policy of random assignment of memos, and is, to put it mildly, 'not favored.'"[9]

Criticisms [link]

The cert pool remedies several problems, but creates others.

  • Memos prepared for an audience of nine cannot, by definition, be as candid as private communications within chambers; moreover, they must be written in far more general terms.
  • The fate of a petition may be disproportionately affected by which clerk writes the pool memo:
[Cert] pool memos should ideally be balanced and nonideological. But my memory is that it mattered a great deal which case wound up with which clerk. For example, a hard-luck petition by a death-row inmate was likely to get a far more sympathetic hearing in a more liberal chambers than it would in a more conservative chambers . . . On the other hand, a messy regulatory takings petition was far more likely to get a thorough airing if it happened to land on the desk of a clerk in a conservative chambers.
[10]
  • Prof. Douglas A. Berman has argued that the cert pool substantially weights the preponderance of capital cases on the court's docket.[11][clarification needed]
  • Lyle Denniston of SCOTUSblog has argued that the cert pool is partially responsible for the Court's shrunken (by historical standards) docket.[12]

Further reading [link]

Footnotes [link]

  1. ^ Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, Remarks at University of Guanajuato, Mexico, 2001-9-27; see also, Booknotes, 1998-6-14 (transcript).
  2. ^ Caperton v. Massey Coal, 556 U.S. __, __ (Roberts, C.J., dissenting) (slip op. at 11).
  3. ^ See Procedures of the Supreme Court of the United States#Selection of cases.
  4. ^ It is possible that Burger took inspiration for the cert pool from the manner in which the Court had been handling in forma pauperis petitions. From the tenure of Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes until at least Burger's arrival, IFP petitions would go not to all chambers, but to the Chief Justice's chambers only, where the Chief's clerks would prepare a memo circulated to all other chambers, in a very similar manner to the cert pool's operation. [13]
  5. ^ A. Liptak, [14], New York Times, 09/25/08; T. Mauro, Roberts Dips Toe Into Cert Pool, Law.com, 2005-10-21; T. Mauro via The Standdown Texas Project [15], The Standdown Texas Project, 2009-09-22.
  6. ^ Liptak, Adam (2008-09-25). "A Second Justice Opts Out of a Longtime Custom: The ‘Cert. Pool’". The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/26/washington/26memo.html?ex=1380168000&en=d58acbfb583fd4f2&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink. Retrieved 2008-09-29. 
  7. ^ Thompson, David C.; Wachtell, Melanie F. (2009), "An Empirical Analysis of Supreme Court Certiorari Petition Procedures", George Mason University Law Review 16 (2): 237, 241, https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1377522, retrieved 2009-04-07 
  8. ^ T. Mauro, Rehnquist's Olive Branch Too Late?, Law.com, 6/1/2004
  9. ^ L. Greenhouse, How Not to be Chief Justice, 154 U. Penn. L. Rev 1365 at 1370
  10. ^ Eduardo Penalver (Clerk to Justice Stevens, OT 2000, thus working at the Supreme Court during a term where the pool operated, but for a chambers not participating in the pool), Roberts’ Cert Pool Memos; Think Progress, 2005-8-2.
  11. ^ Berman, Douglas A. (2005-08-11). "Commentary: The Court's caseload". Sentencing Law and Policy. Archived from the original on 2008-07-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20080714030146/https://www.scotusblog.com/wp/commentary-the-courts-caseload/. Retrieved 2008-10-30. 
  12. ^ Denniston, Lyle (2005-10-21). "Roberts, the cert pool, and sentencing jurisprudence". SCOTUSblog. https://sentencing.typepad.com/sentencing_law_and_policy/2005/08/roberts_the_cer.html. Retrieved 2008-10-30. 

https://wn.com/Cert_pool

Cert

Cert is most commonly short for certificate or certification, see Certificate (disambiguation).

Cert or CERT may also refer to:

  • Certiorari, a Latin legal term for a court order requiring judicial review of a case
    • Certiorari before judgment, a specific form of a writ of certiorari
    • Cert pool, shorthand term for the pool of applicants for a writ of certiorari from the United States Supreme Court
  • Certiorari before judgment, a specific form of a writ of certiorari
  • Cert pool, shorthand term for the pool of applicants for a writ of certiorari from the United States Supreme Court
  • Carbon Emission Reduction Target, a United Kingdom government initiative
  • Correctional Emergency Response Team, a team of correction officers
  • Council of Energy Resource Tribes, a consortium of tribes to establish tribal control over natural resources
  • Council of Education, Recruitment and Training Irish hospitality training authority 1963–2003
  • Computer emergency response team, an expert group that handles computer security incidents
  • Ceirt

    Ceirt (queirt) is a letter of the Ogham alphabet, transcribed as Q. It expresses the Primitive Irish labiovelar phoneme. The 14th century Auraicept na n-Éces glosses the name as aball, meaning "apple tree". Its phonetic value is [kʷ].

    The Bríatharogam (kennings) for the letter are:

  • Morainn mac Moín: Clithar baiscill ‘the shelter of a lunatic’
  • Maic ind Óc: Bríg anduini ‘substance of an insignificant person’
  • Con Culainn: Dígu fethail ‘dregs of clothing’
  • McManus (1991:37) compares it to Welsh pert ‘bush’, Latin quercus ‘oak’ (PIE *perkwos). The name was confused with Old Irish ceirt ‘rag’, reflected in the kennings.

    In the framework of a runic origin of the Ogham, the name has also been compared to the name of the Anglo Saxon Futhorc p-rune, Peorð: This name is itself unclear, but most often identified as ‘pear’, a meaning not unrelated to ‘apple’. The p letter of the Gothic alphabet has a cognate name, pairþra, alongside the clearly related qairþra, the name for the Gothic labiovelar. Since an influence of Ogham letter names on Gothic letter names is eminently unlikely, it seems most probable that the Proto-Germanic p rune had a meaning of ‘pear tree’ (*pera-trewô?), continued in the Anglo-Saxon peorð rune (with the meaning of the name forgotten), and was introduced into 4th century Ireland as the name of a rune named after a pear or apple tree. As p was nonexistent as a phoneme in Primitive Irish, the p and q runes would have been considered equivalent.

    CERT Group of Companies

    The CERT (Centre of Excellence for Applied Research and Training) Group of Companies began as the commercial arm of the Higher Colleges of Technology in the United Arab Emirates, and has grown to be the largest private education provider in the Middle East. CERT is also the largest MENA (Middle East North Africa) investor in the discovery and commercialization of technology, investing USD 35 million in 2006.

    In 2005, CERT signed Telematics with IBM, that has led to the development of Telematics technology in the United Arab Emirates. CERT provides the only super computing center in the South Asia, Middle East, North Africa region. The CERT Blue Gene supercomputer offers 5.7 teraflops calculating speed to corporate clients for use in biotechnology, nanotechnology, and genetics research as well as oil and gas simulation.

    CERT Technology Park in the UAE is home to international companies such as Intel, Honeywell and Lucent Technologies.

    See also

  • Higher Colleges of Technology
  • +POOL

    +POOL (or +Pool) is an initiative to bring a floating swimming pool to the East River, on the Manhattan and/or Brooklyn banks, in New York City; a permanent location has yet to been determined. The 9,300 square feet (860 m2) pool would be filled with water filtered from the river it floats in. The two companies behind it, Family New York and PlayLab, have been using the crowdfunding website Kickstarter to raise money for the project.

    Concept

    The planned cross-shaped, Olympic-sized pool would be used to clean the waters of the East River while providing a public space for water-based recreation. With its current design, the pool would flush out up to half a million gallons of river water daily through a layered filtration system. Over a quarter of a million gallons of filtered river water would be used to fill the pool itself. The planned long-term goal is to raise a total of $15 million to fund the entire pool by 2016.

    History

    In July 2011, the team raised over $41,000 on Kickstarter to test filtration materials using water from the East River. With the help of researchers at Columbia University, the tests yielded feasibility, and in July 2013 over a quarter million dollars was raised to build a 35 square foot miniature version of the floating pool. The "test lab" is to be a working prototype to analyze its effectiveness in river conditions.

    Pot (poker)

    The pot in poker refers to the sum of money that players wager during a single hand or game, according to the betting rules of the variant being played. It is likely that the word "pot" is related to or derived from the word "jackpot."

    At the conclusion of a hand, either by all but one player folding, or by showdown, the pot is won or shared by the player or players holding the winning cards. Sometimes a pot can be split between many players. This is particularly true in high-low games where not only the highest hand can win, but under appropriate conditions, the lowest hand will win a share of the pot.

    See "all in" for more information about side pots.

    See also

  • Glossary of poker terms
  • Pool (surname)

    Pool is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Albert-Jan Pool (born 1960), Dutch type designer
  • Andre Pool, member of the National Assembly of Seychelles
  • Cord Pool, guitarist for American red dirt metal band Texas Hippie Coalition
  • David de Sola Pool (18851970), spiritual leader of the Sephardic Congregation Shearith Israel in New York City; father of Ithiel
  • E. Ion Pool (18581939), British marathon runner and Olympics critic
  • Ithiel de Sola Pool (19171984), pioneer in the development of social science; son of David
  • Hamp Pool (19152000), US player of American football
  • Hugh Pool (born 1964), New York guitarist
  • Joe R. Pool (19111968), US Representative from Texas
  • John Pool (18261884), US Senator from North Carolina
  • Jonathan Pool (born 1942), US political scientist
  • Judith Graham Pool (1919–1975), American scientist, discoverer of cryoprecipitation
  • Léa Pool (born 1950), Swiss filmmaker, and film instructor in Quebec, Canada
  • Malcolm Pool (born 1943), British bass player with The Artwoods and other bands
  • Podcasts:

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