Listen "Short Circuit 323 | Poor Behavior"
Episode Synopsis
We’re gonna read you the Riot Act. Again. An old friend of Short Circuit returns, the Anti-Riot Act. Perhaps (?) named in homage to its 18th century predecessor, the Congressional statute received a facial test at the Seventh Circuit, and IJ’s Kirby Thomas West tells us how it fared in the face of a guy who requested that everyone bring their family and a brick to a “riot.” He did not do so well in court, but perhaps the Anti-Riot Act has problems anyway? Then we go for a drive down a Houston freeway where Sam Gedge makes a citizen's arrest of a qualified immunity claim while drinking at a local flea market at 2am. The Fifth Circuit served up a wild ride of a case that is too good to pass up but also holds bigger lessons for how judges perceive “split-second decisions” and premeditated lies.
U.S. v. Betts
Hughes v. Garcia
The Riot Act
Short Circuit 146 (4th Cir. Anti-Riot Act case)
U.S. v. Betts
Hughes v. Garcia
The Riot Act
Short Circuit 146 (4th Cir. Anti-Riot Act case)
More episodes of the podcast Short Circuit
Short Circuit 408 | Get Off My Beach
26/12/2025
Short Circuit 407 | Master Thespians
19/12/2025
Short Circuit 406 | Forfeiture Oopsies
12/12/2025
Short Circuit 405 | Judges as Employers
05/12/2025
Short Circuit 404 | A Permit to Pray?
28/11/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.