Arguing before the US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) is a case challenging the Chevron Doctrine.  This doctrine provides that when unknowns, or ambiguity, exists, matters should be deferred to the professional experience of the government agency involved.  

 

This doctrine enables federal agencies to write rules to implement laws dutifully passed by Congress, but to “fill in the gap” and draft, promote and pass their own rules where these agencies believe Congress wanted. (Chevron v Natural Resources Defense Council)

 

The case being argued (Loper Bright Enterprises v Raimondo) is about fish and fisheries, but one could look back to Gundy v United States to see where this really could matter.  

 

Gundy was a serious SCOTUS review of SORNA’s origin.  Congress passed SORNA in 2006 with few details and actively deferred substantial rulemaking to the US Attorney General, an agency of the Executive branch.  While promulgated properly, the Department of Justice has made several revisions to SORNA without any additional congressional direction, or laws passed by Congress directing them to make those changes.

 

Justice Gorsuch wrote a scathing dissent in Gundy describing the power Congress granted the Attorney General as “vast,” “free to impose his requirements as he wishes,” and “free to change his mind.”  

 

These unconstrained powers are the essence of Chevron and of the major decisions doctrine being rectified by the Roberts Court.  The Gundy dissent is a clear declaration by the new majority in SCOTUS that the Constitution demands Congress write laws and not delegate that authority to the Executive Branch.  

 

Gundy was decided in 2018 exactly when Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg’s seat was vacant  and Justice Kavanaugh not yet confirmed.   While voting affirmatively, Justice Alito wrote a one paragraph statement openly declaring support for the opportunity to review this issue in a new case with a full bench to reverse it.   

 

Justice Gorsuch ended his dissent with:

“In a future case with a full panel, I remain hopeful that the Court may yet recognize that, while Congress can enlist considerable assistance from the executive branch in filling up details and finding facts, it may never hand off to the nation’s chief prosecutor the power to write his own criminal code. That “is delegation running riot.”107 “

A Loper win overturning Chevron would compel the need to revisit Gundy/SORNA with a strong case. 

 

Gundy v United States

SOURCE:  JDSUPRA article

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