Skip to main content
Habeas, History, and Hermeneutics

Abstract

Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch recently proposed a radical shrinking of federal habeas corpus relief for state prisoners who are in custody pursuant to a final judgment of criminal conviction. They called for a return to the supposedly traditional principle that federal courts cannot grant habeas relief to such prisoners unless the state court that sentenced them lacked jurisdiction. This Article explains that (1) this supposedly traditional principle was not, in fact, a traditional principle of habeas, and (2) even if it were, Congress has displaced it by statute. Exploring the errors in the Justices' arguments provides valuable lessons in the proper uses of historical materials and in the hermeneutics of statutory interpretation.

How to Cite

64 Ariz. L. Rev. 505 (2022)

Downloads

Download PDF

39

Views

22

Downloads

Share

Authors

Jonathan R. Siegel (George Washington University)

Downloads

Issue

Publication details

Licence

All rights reserved

File Checksums (MD5)

  • PDF: 24715262c69aa372f4889f03ff3b33c3