Constitutional Law - Levels of Scrutiny and Procedural Due Process Flashcards

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1
Q

Congress can apply Constitutional norms to private conduct through

A

(1) the 13th amendment for prohibiting private race discrimination
(2) Commerce power

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2
Q

Ordinarily, the Constitution’s protections only apply when there is

A

government/state action.

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3
Q

The two exceptions where private conduct must comply with the Constitution are the

A

(1) public function exception

(2) entanglement exception

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4
Q

Under the public function exception, the Constitution applies if

A

a private entity is performing a task traditionally, exclusively, done by the government (i.e. a company-owned town must comply with Free Speech rules)

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5
Q

Under the entanglement exception, the Constitution applies if

A

the government affirmatively authorizes, encourages, or facilitates unconstitutional activity.

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6
Q

Plaintiffs ask a court to enforce a racially restrictive covenant. State action?

A

Yes, state action.

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7
Q

The government leases premises to a restaurant that racially discriminates. State action?

A

Yes, state action.

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8
Q

Government provides books to schools that racially discriminate. State action?

A

Yes, state action.

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9
Q

A private school that is over 99% funded by the government fires a teacher because of her speech. State action?

A

No, no state action.

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10
Q

NCAA orders the suspension of a basketball coach at a state university. State action?

A

No, no state action.

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11
Q

A private entity regulates interscholastic (high school) sports within a state.

A

Yes, state action.

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12
Q

A private club with a liquor license from the state racially discriminates.

A

No, no state action.

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13
Q

The Bill of Rights applies directly only to the

A

federal government.

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14
Q

The Bill of Rights applies to the state and local governments through

A

the due process clause of the 14th Amendment.

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15
Q

The four rights in the Bill of Rights that have not been applied to state and local governments are

A

(1) 3rd amendment right against soldier quartering in a person’s home
(2) 4th amendment right to a grand jury indictment in criminal cases
(3) 7th amendment right to a jury trial in CIVIL cases
(4) 8th amendment right against excessive fines

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16
Q

The three levels of scrutiny are

A

(1) rational basis
(2) intermediate scrutiny
(3) strict scrutiny

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17
Q

The rational basis test requires that the law be

A

RATIONALLY related to a LEGITIMATE/permissible government purpose.

**Government almost always wins under this test.

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18
Q

Under the rational basis test, the government’s purpose can be

A

any conceivable purpose. The actual purpose is not relevant (except if its discriminatory under the disparate impact test).

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19
Q

Under the rational basis test, the _____ has the burden of proof.

A

challenger

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20
Q

In order to survive intermediate scrutiny, the law must be

A

SUBSTANTIALLY related to an IMPORTANT government purpose. The law must be narrowly tailored.

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21
Q

Under intermediate scrutiny, the court looks at the government’s _____ purpose.

A

actual

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22
Q

Under intermediate scrutiny, _____ has the burden of proof.

A

the government

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23
Q

In order to survive strict scrutiny, the law must be

A

NECESSARY to achieve a COMPELLING government purpose and must be the LEAST RESTRICTIVE means of achieving that purpose.

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24
Q

Under strict scrutiny, courts look at the government’s _____ purpose.

A

actual

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25
Q

Under strict scrutiny, _____ has the burden of proof.

A

the government

26
Q

Strict scrutiny applies to laws regarding

A

(1) fundamental rights (interstate travel, privacy, voting, 1st Amendment)
(2) suspect classifications (race, national origin, sometimes alienage)

27
Q

Intermediate scrutiny applies to laws regarding

A

quasi suspect classifications (gender, legitimacy, undocumented alien children)

28
Q

Rational basis applies to laws

A

that do not fall under strict scrutiny or intermediate scrutiny.

29
Q

The three sources of individual rights under the 14th Amendment are

A

(1) procedural due process
(2) substantive due process
(3) Equal protection

30
Q

Procedural due process applies when there has been

A

a deprivation of life, liberty, or property.

31
Q

A deprivation of liberty occurs if there is

A

the loss of a significant freedom provided by the Constitution or statute

32
Q

Under procedural due process, institutionalization of an adult absent an emergency requires

A

notice and a hearing

33
Q

Under procedural due process, institutionalization of a child requires

A

screening by a neutral fact finder

34
Q

Under procedural due process, harm to reputation itself

A

is not a loss of liberty

35
Q

Under procedural due process, prisoners

A

rarely have liberty rights

36
Q

A deprivation of property occurs if

A

there is an entitlement and that entitlement is not fulfilled

37
Q

Under procedural due process, the rights/privileges distinction

A

has been abandoned. This is the WRONG answer choice.

38
Q

For a deprivation of due process, the government action must be

A

intentional or at least reckless. Negligence is not sufficient.

39
Q

In emergency situations, the government is liable under due process only if its conduct

A

“shocks the conscience”

40
Q

Generally, the government only has a duty to protect people from privately inflicted harms if it

A

created the situation leading to the harm. (e.g, failing to remove a child from an abusive situation is NOT a DP violation)

41
Q

The procedural due process test requires the court to balance

A

(1) the importance of the interest to the individual
(2) the ability of additional procedures to increase the accuracy of fact-finding
(3) the government’s interest

42
Q

Under procedural due process, termination of welfare benefits requires

A

notice and a hearing.

43
Q

Under procedural due process, termination of Social Security disability benefits requires

A

a post-termination hearing

44
Q

Under procedural due process, student discipline in public schools requires

A

notice of charges plus an opportunity to explain. Corporal punishment does not require DP.

45
Q

Under procedural due process, parental custody termination requires

A

notice and a hearing.

46
Q

Under procedural due process, punitive damage awards require

A

instruction to the jury plus judicial review. Grossly excessive awards violate DP.

47
Q

Under procedural due process, classification of an American as an enemy combatant requires

A

full DP: notice, meaningful factual hearing, represented by counsel

48
Q

Under procedural due process, prejudgment attachment or government seizure of assets requires

A

notice and a hearing, except in exigent circumstances (i.e. the person is likely to get rid of the property if we wait).

49
Q

Under procedural due process, the government ____ seize property used for illegal activity, even if ________.

A

can; the owner is innocent.

50
Q

Government may take private property

A

for public use if it provides just compensation

51
Q

The two types of governmental takings are

A

(1) possessory - requires confiscation or physical invasion (no matter how slight)
(2) regulatory - regulation leaves no reasonable economically viable use

52
Q

Government conditions on development of property (i.e. permits) must be justified by

A

a benefit that is roughly proportionate to the burden imposed, otherwise it’s a taking.

53
Q

A property owner may bring a takings challenge to regulations even if those regulations existed

A

at the time the property was acquired.

54
Q

Temporarily denying an owner use of property is not a taking so long as

A

the government’s action was reasonable.

55
Q

A taking is for public use if the government

A

acts out of a reasonable belief that its action will benefit the public

56
Q

Just compensation is measured by

A

the FMV or loss to the owner. Gain by the taker is irrelevant.

57
Q

Under the Contracts Clause, no state shall

A

impair the obligations of existing contracts. Applies only to state or local interference with EXISTING contracts, feds can interfere.

58
Q

State or local government interference with private contracts must meet

A

intermediate scrutiny: (1) does the legislation substantially impair a party’s rights under an existing contract?
(2) if so, is the law a reasonably and narrowly tailored means of promoting an important and legitimate government interest?

59
Q

State or local government interference with federal government contracts must meet

A

strict scrutiny

60
Q

The ex post facto clause does NOT apply in

A

civil cases. Retroactive civil liability need only meet rational basis.