To Reinhardt, the mere fact that relatives were present at trial while wearing those buttons somehow managed to deprive Musladin of a fair trial: "The buttons essentially 'argue' that Studer was the innocent party and that the defendant was necessarily guilty . . . . [a] reasonable jurist would be compelled to conclude that the buttons worn by Studer's family members conveyed the message that the defendant was guilty . . . ." Reinhardt also wrote that it was "objectively unreasonable" for the state court of appeals to find that "[t]he simple photograph of Tom Studer was unlikely to have been taken as a sign of anything other than the normal grief occasioned by the loss of a family member."
The article includes a comment from law professor Vikram Amar:
In the Supreme Court, "there is almost a palpable skepticism for what comes out of the 9th Circuit," said Vikram Amar, a professor at UC Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco.Not to go out on a limb here, but I'd bet on reversal.
"They don't have any faith that Reinhardt calls it straight. I don't want to call him a bad judge, but a lot of these decisions are hard to understand," added Amar, who was a clerk for the 9th Circuit and the Supreme Court.
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