WASHINGTON (MCT) — The Supreme Court issued several surprising opinions and unexpected rulings this year beyond the Obama administration’s victories in health-care and immigration cases.
The justices ruled for the criminal defendants in this term’s most important cases on crime and punishment. That is a rarity for a court that more often leans to the right.
Overall, however, the decisions this year did not reflect a true ideological shift at the court. Instead, they arose from shifting coalitions, sometimes the result of one justice taking an unexpected stand.
In the last week of the term, the Roberts court was truly born, even though Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. was finishing his seventh year. Until this year, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy’s was the decisive vote in cases where the conservatives and liberals were evenly split.
But in the health-care case, Roberts split with the conservatives and joined with the court’s four liberals to uphold President Barack Obama’s signature law.
There were other examples throughout the term.
In one case, conservative Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., joined by the four liberals, said the right to privacy protects Americans from having all of their movements tracked by cellphones or other electronic devices. The government previously maintained that the Constitution’s protection against “unreasonable searches” did not extend to surveillance on public streets and sidewalks.
The court also gave defendants new rights during plea bargains. About 95 percent of criminal cases end not with a verdicts from juries, but in deals between prosecutors and defendants. Prosecutors had maintained that because no one had a right to a plea deal, no one’s rights were violated if a defendant passed up a good deal because of a gross mistake by his lawyer.
But in March, the court announced a new rule in two 5-4 opinions by Kennedy. The right to an “effective” lawyer includes the right to minimally competent advice during a plea deal, he said.
For the third time in eight years, the court by a 5-4 vote put new limits on the punishment of juvenile offenders. Kennedy was the leader here as well.
The court declared mandatory sentencing laws requiring life prison terms without parole for murderers to be unconstitutional for defendants who are under age 18 at the time of their crimes, giving hope to about 2,000 prisoners. These inmates do not have a right to go free, the justices said, but they do have a right to hearing so a judge or jury can decide whether life in prison is the proper punishment for a defendant who is as young as 14.
The justices also ruled that crack cocaine defendants could be sentenced under a new, more lenient measure passed in 2010, even if their crimes took place before it became law.
Even corporations facing criminal fines won new legal protections. In the past, the court said defendants had a right to have the jury decide the key facts that called for a harsher punishment. A 6-3 opinion in June by Justice Sonia Sotomayor said the same was true for corporations.
In one major setback for defendants, the court in a 5-4 decision refused to bar strip searches of new inmates entering a county jail, even if the inmates were not considered dangerous. The majority said guards cannot know for sure who might try to sneak weapons or drugs into a jail.
It was certainly “a better-than-expected year for criminal defendants,” said Steven Shapiro, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union.
Conservatives had victories too. The justices on the right served notice that they would make it harder for public-sector unions to collect fees from employees to pay for special political drives. The union would first need the “affirmative consent” of a nonmember, Alito said in a 5-4 opinion.
The court also said the Constitution demanded “special solicitude” for churches in dealing with their employees, an opinion that could figure in the flap between the Obama administration and Catholic bishops over contraceptive coverage.
But the most surprising development was the role played by Roberts.
In the health-care and immigration cases, the chief justice surprised both sides by joining with the liberal bloc. Kennedy, left in dissent, would have struck down the entire health-care law.
The ruling left a residue of anger on the right, and leaks from the right side of the court accused Roberts of having switched his position during the deliberations.
What is unclear is whether Roberts’ search for a middle ground on health care — and the harsh retribution from the right — will have a lasting effect.
In the fall, the court is set to revisit the constitutionality of race-based affirmative action in a case from the University of Texas. The justices also will decide the fate of the Defense of Marriage Act and are likely to reconsider part of the Voting Rights Act that authorizes special oversight for much of the South.
Conservatives hope the Roberts court will strike down affirmative action and limit the Voting Rights Act but uphold the marriage act, which defines marriage as between one man and one woman. To win all three, however, they will need steady support from Roberts.









