No. 20-5307

Rebecca H. Gallogly v. William P. Barr, Attorney General, et al.

Lower Court: Fifth Circuit
Docketed: 2020-08-10
Status: Denied
Type: IFP
Response WaivedIFP
Tags: agency-responsibility civil-rights community-supervision constitutional-deprivation criminal-procedure due-process expungement probation property-rights
Key Terms:
Environmental SocialSecurity DueProcess FifthAmendment Privacy JusticiabilityDoctri
Latest Conference: 2020-10-09
Question Presented (from Petition)

1. Is it a Constitutional deprivation to put a person found not guilty on community supervision or probation for the charge! or, to permit states to abrogate expungement for served or dismissed community supervision or probation terms?

2. If agencies fail to regulate and enforce pervasive safety, peace, privacy, and accessibility issues at multifamily residential properties, are they responsible for Constitutional property, domestic tranquility, implied, and liberty deprivations?

3. Is it a Fifth Amendment deprivation (a) to deny counsel to an indigent in a complex civil case for which there is no other reasonable remedy available! or (b) to deny a non-attorney indigent litigant liberal treatment?

Question Presented (AI Summary)

Is it a Constitutional deprivation to put a person found not guilty on community supervision or probation for the charge; or, to permit states to abrogate expungement for served or dismissed community supervision or probation terms?

Docket Entries

2020-10-13
Petition DENIED.
2020-09-17
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 10/9/2020.
2020-09-08
Waiver of right of respondent Barr, William P. to respond filed.
2020-07-16
Petition for a writ of certiorari and motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis filed. (Response due September 9, 2020)

Attorneys

Barr, William P.
Jeffrey B. WallActing Solicitor General, Respondent
Rebecca H. Gallogly
Rebecca H. Gallogly — Petitioner