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Fact Sheet: A Selection of Judge Samuel A. Alito's Rulings

Document Date: January 9, 2006

As every lawyer knows, there is considerable room to interpret Supreme Court decisions and congressional statutes. Judge Alito has regularly used that opportunity to rule against civil rights and civil liberties claims. For example, Judge Alito:

  • Wrote a dissent in Planned Parenthood v. Casey arguing that a state's spousal notification requirement did not unduly burden a woman's right to privacy, a position later rejected by the Supreme Court;
  • Joined a dissent arguing that a student-led prayer at a high school graduation ceremony did not violate the Establishment Clause;
  • Wrote several dissents arguing for tighter standards for plaintiffs seeking trial on their race, gender and disability discrimination claims;
  • Dissented from a decision ruling that the strip search of a suspect's wife and ten-year-old daughter exceeded the scope of the search warrant and was therefore unconstitutional;
  • Rejected a death row inmate's ineffective assistance of counsel claim where the trial counsel had failed to uncover substantial mitigating evidence — a decision later reversed by the Supreme Court;
  • Dissented from an en banc ruling in a death penalty case arguing that the prosecution had unconstitutionally used its peremptory challenges to exclude all the black prospective jurors;
  • Wrote a dissent arguing that a policy prohibiting all prisoners in long-term segregation from possessing newspapers, magazines or photographs unless they were religious or legal did not violate the First Amendment.