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  <history>
    <transcribed>1994-11-08</transcribed>
  <edit user="jgoldman" date="2012-04-08T20:31:42" startTime="917.291" oldSpeaker="david_h_souter" newSpeaker="antonin_scalia"/></history>
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    <audioFile leader="0" size="13075372">/audio/cases/1994/93-1260_19941108-argument.mp3</audioFile>
    <sourceFile>/source/oyez/transcripts/trs/1994/93-1260_19941108-argument.trs</sourceFile>
    <speaker id="stephen_g_breyer" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/stephen_g_breyer" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/stephen_g_breyer">Stephen G. Breyer</speaker>
    <speaker id="sandra_day_oconnor" type="justice" gender="female" path="/justices/sandra_day_oconnor" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/sandra_day_oconnor">Sandra Day O'Connor</speaker>
    <speaker id="ruth_bader_ginsburg" type="justice" gender="female" path="/justices/ruth_bader_ginsburg" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/ruth_bader_ginsburg">Ruth Bader Ginsburg</speaker>
    <speaker id="anthony_kennedy" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/anthony_kennedy" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/anthony_kennedy">Anthony M. Kennedy</speaker>
    <speaker id="william_h_rehnquist" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/william_h_rehnquist" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/william_h_rehnquist">William H. Rehnquist</speaker>
    <speaker id="antonin_scalia" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/antonin_scalia" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/antonin_scalia">Antonin Scalia</speaker>
    <speaker id="david_h_souter" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/david_h_souter" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/david_h_souter">David H. Souter</speaker>
    <speaker id="john_paul_stevens" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/john_paul_stevens" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/john_paul_stevens">John Paul Stevens</speaker>
    <speaker id="clarence_thomas" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/clarence_thomas" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/clarence_thomas">Clarence Thomas</speaker>
    <speaker id="unknown" type="other" gender="male" path="/others/default" image="/others/default/default-60.jpg">Unknown Speaker</speaker>
    <speaker id="drew_s_days_iii" type="advocate" gender="male" path="/advocates/d/d/drew_s_days_iii" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/advocates/d/d/drew_s_days_iii">Drew S. Days, III</speaker>
    <speaker id="john_r_carter" type="advocate" gender="male" path="/advocates/c/j/john_r_carter" image="/others/male4/male4-60.jpg">John R. Carter</speaker>
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  <episode startTime="0.000" stopTime="3249.110">
    <title>United States v. Lopez (No. 93-1260) - Oral Argument</title>
    <section startTime="0.000" stopTime="1625.365">
      <heading>Argument of Drew S. Days, III</heading>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="0.000" stopTime="28.000">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="0.000">We'll hear argument next in Number 93-1260, United States v. Alfonso Lopez, Jr.--</text>
        <text syncTime="9.606">General Days.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="28.000" stopTime="121.093">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="28.000">Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court:</text>
        <text syncTime="32.368">In this case, the court of appeals has taken the extraordinary step of invalidating an act of Congress as being beyond its power under the Commerce Clause.</text>
        <text syncTime="42.141">The act in question, known as the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990, makes it unlawful for any individual knowingly to possess a firearm within a distance of 1,000 feet from the grounds of an elementary or secondary school.</text>
        <text syncTime="57.233">The court of appeals held the statute unconstitutional because neither the statute nor its legislative history contained express congressional findings identifying the nexus between interstate commerce and gun possession in schoolyards.</text>
        <text syncTime="73.362">The court of appeals reached its erroneous result, in our estimation, through a fundamental misreading and misapplication of the precedents of this Court.</text>
        <text syncTime="85.337">First, the court imposed on Congress a requirement that it make judicial... make legislative findings as to the nexus between the activity it was regulating here and interstate commerce to satisfy the court that it was exercising that power in a constitutional manner.</text>
        <text syncTime="104.564">In doing so, the court of appeals essentially treated Congress as though it was subject to procedural rules that would be appropriate in the context of a judicial or administrative proceeding, but not where Congress was legislating for the entire Nation pursuant to its plenary powers under the Constitution.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="121.093" stopTime="142.923">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="121.093">Well, if we were concerned that the original understandings and structural theories that underlay the Federal system have been so eroded that that whole system is in danger, I take it that it would be appropriate for us to consider some procedural guarantees.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="142.923" stopTime="215.554">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="142.923">Yes, and this Court has considered and imposed certain procedural guarantees where, for example, it felt that Congress was legislating in a way that encroached upon the operations of State governments, as in the case of New York v. United States, where this Court held that Congress could not legislate to the extent it did to require that the States take title to certain nuclear waste.</text>
        <text syncTime="174.744">It's done so under what has been referred to in the court of appeals decision as the clear statement rule, or the plain statement rule, that where there are incursions upon Government operations, that Congress has to make its intent to exercise its authority to the fullest extent clear in the legislation, and there cannot be any ambiguity in that respect.</text>
        <text syncTime="199.962">But what this Court has been doing is looking at, as it properly should, limitations on the exercise of the Commerce Clause found within the Constitution itself, and not based upon some generalized concern that Congress was going too far in carrying out that responsibility.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="215.554" stopTime="228.195">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="215.554">Well, let's do exactly that, and ask whether the simple possession of something at or near a school is commerce at all.</text>
        <text syncTime="227.112">Is it?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="228.195" stopTime="232.933">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="228.195">I think the answer to that is that it is, yes, Your Honor.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="232.933" stopTime="239.003">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="232.933">I would have thought that it wasn't, and I would have thought that it, moreover, is not interstate.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="239.003" stopTime="241.039">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="239.003">Justice O'Connor--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="241.039" stopTime="253.346">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="241.039">If this is covered, what's left of enumerated powers?</text>
        <text syncTime="246.609">What is there that Congress could not do, under this rubric, if you are correct?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="253.346" stopTime="274.676">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="253.346">--Justice O'Connor, that certainly is a question that one might ask, but this Court has asked that question in a number of other circumstances, and rather than starting from the assumption that something was inherently local, it's looked at the degree to which Congress had a reasonable basis for extending its authority under the commerce power to regulate that particular activity.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="274.676" stopTime="281.680">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="274.676">But in some of those very cases, General Days, the statement is found that the power is not limitless.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="281.680" stopTime="292.555">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="281.680">Well, that is certainly the case, Chief Justice Rehnquist.</text>
        <text syncTime="285.068">That's an understanding from the Constitution, but one has to look at where the limitations are that are imposed by the Constitution itself.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="292.555" stopTime="302.695">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="292.555">Well, what would be... if this case is... Congress can reach under the interstate commerce power, what would be an example of a case which you couldn't reach?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="302.695" stopTime="319.789">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="302.695">Well, Your Honor, I'm not prepared to speculate generally, but this Court has found that Congress, for example, in New York v. United States could not regulate... could not require New York State to carry out certain responsibilities, because it was commandeering the instrumentalities of the State.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="319.789" stopTime="336.416">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="319.789">Well, the objection there was that it was objecting the State governmental machinery to operate in a certain way.</text>
        <text syncTime="327.161">The question here, it seems to me, is quite different.</text>
        <text syncTime="330.430">The question here is the universe of transactions that the Congress may reach.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="336.416" stopTime="336.950">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="336.416">Yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="336.950" stopTime="348.791">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="336.950">Can you tell me, Mr. Days, has there been anything in our recent history in the last 20 years where it appears that Congress made a considered judgment that it could not reach a particular subject?</text>
        <text syncTime="347.974">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="348.791" stopTime="371.440">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="348.791">I don't know whether there's been a conscious effort to do that, but I think as this Court has said in its Tenth Amendment jurisprudence that Congress reflects the will of the people, and it has built into it, and into its operations, a concern about the extent to which its regulations and its legislation would encroach on matters that have been traditionally left to the State.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="371.440" stopTime="423.724">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="371.440">Mr. Days, we have really not been too... what should I say, too strict about, you know, what the farthest reach of the Commerce Clause may be.</text>
        <text syncTime="382.029">But as I read our cases, the ones that are most often cited, indeed, I think all of them, involve the issue of whether some commercial activity of some sort... renting a hotel room, growing a commodity that is used in commerce... whether some commercial activity is interstate commerce or not, and one can say we're prepared to be very broadminded about that.</text>
        <text syncTime="408.697">If Congress says some commercial activity is interstate commerce, or affects interstate commerce, that's okay.</text>
        <text syncTime="415.452">But here you have regulation of something that is not commercial activity in any sense of the word, merely the possession of an item.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="423.724" stopTime="425.224">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="423.724">Your Honor, two--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="425.224" stopTime="437.116">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="425.224">Might we not apply a different rule in that case than we do... I mean, give up the whole realm of commerce to the Federal Government.</text>
        <text syncTime="431.212">Say, anything that relates to commerce, the Federal Government can control, securities regulation, all sorts of things.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="437.116" stopTime="438.149">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="437.116">--Well, I have two--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="438.149" stopTime="440.734">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="438.149">But it has to relate to commerce.</text>
        <text syncTime="439.101">This doesn't relate to commerce, even.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="440.734" stopTime="485.595">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="440.734">--I have two responses.</text>
        <text syncTime="441.770">One, this Court did decide, in a case called Preseault v. ICC, that Congress could use its commerce powers to convert rights of ways to recreational uses for hiking trails, and there was no indication that that particular objective by Congress was a commercial objective.</text>
        <text syncTime="460.564">But I think we have to keep in mind that the Commerce Clause... the Commerce Clause has been viewed as dealing with three areas, the channels of commerce itself, instrumentalities of commerce, but in recent years, in fact for many of the past couple of decades, what this Court has found is that activities that affect commerce are also reachable by Congress under the Commerce--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="485.595" stopTime="490.833">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="485.595">Noncommercial activities that affect commerce.</text>
        <text syncTime="488.131">What cases do you have that involve that?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="490.833" stopTime="491.566">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="490.833">--Well, it's not--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="491.566" stopTime="493.368">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="491.566">Noncommercial activities that affect commerce.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="493.368" stopTime="530.558">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="493.368">--If one looks, Justice Scalia, for example, at the regulation of firearms, certainly Congress was concerned about the degree to which transfer or possession in some instances affected interstate commerce, but I think it also recognized that having a gun in and of itself is not interstate commerce, it's the impact of certain activity on interstate commerce.</text>
        <text syncTime="520.686">For example, the rules that limit the types of persons who can possess firearms, it's not suggesting that that particular regulation--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="530.558" stopTime="530.891">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="530.558">I understand--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="530.891" stopTime="531.910">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="530.891">--has to do with interstate commerce.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="531.910" stopTime="545.851">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="531.910">--but have we ever held... I'm talking about cases of ours.</text>
        <text syncTime="533.010">What cases of ours would stand in the way of a stricter... of a stricter Commerce Clause jurisprudence where the activity in question is not commercial activity?</text>
        <text syncTime="545.234">What cases--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="545.851" stopTime="568.416">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="545.851">I don't believe that the issue has been clearly presented, Justice Scalia, but I think that what this Court has operated upon as an initial assumption is that Congress was given the power under the Constitution to legislate directly upon private individuals, and that there are no built-in limitations on the Constitution.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="568.416" stopTime="575.403">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="568.416">--General Days, just to understand what we're talking about, do I correctly understand your position to be, your rationale for this--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="575.403" stopTime="575.939">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="575.403">Yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="575.939" stopTime="593.734">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="575.939">--that all violent crime, if Congress so desired, could be placed under a Federal wing, could be placed in the Federal court for prosecution, all violent crime, or is there any stopping point?</text>
        <text syncTime="589.413">Is there any violent crime that doesn't affect interstate commerce on you rationale?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="593.734" stopTime="681.423">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="593.734">Well, Your Honor, I think that the answer is that it may be possible for Congress to do that under the commerce power.</text>
        <text syncTime="601.138">Again, one would have to look at was Congress legislating rationally, with a rational basis for thinking that regulating violence would have an impact on interstate commerce, would have... would be the type of activity that affected instate commerce?</text>
        <text syncTime="616.830">But what we have in this particular act is not that bold assertion by Congress.</text>
        <text syncTime="622.234">What we have is, first of all, enough evidence to meet the test that this Court has set that Congress had a rational basis for thinking that gun possession on or near school grounds affected interstate commerce.</text>
        <text syncTime="638.263">One was the relationship between violence itself and the economic activity of the country.</text>
        <text syncTime="646.249">To the extent that there is violence in certain parts of the country, it makes it difficult for institutions to function.</text>
        <text syncTime="653.189">There is the insurance consequence.</text>
        <text syncTime="655.391">Where violence occurs, insurance burdens are shared by the entire country, not just by the locale where this particular violence occurs.</text>
        <text syncTime="665.163">It interferes in the same way that this Court found in Heart of Atlanta Motel with respect to the travel of persons in the face of segregation in places of public accommodations.</text>
        <text syncTime="676.805">It interferes with the willingness of people to travel to certain parts of the country--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="unknown" startTime="681.423" stopTime="682.125">
        <label>Unknown Speaker</label>
        <text syncTime="681.423">General Days--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="682.125" stopTime="684.392">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="682.125">--where there is violence present.</text>
        <text syncTime="683.675">Yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="684.392" stopTime="730.355">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="684.392">--May I test a different way of reading the congressional rationale?</text>
        <text syncTime="687.862">What if Congress had said, as part of its thought process expressed in the amendment, that the States, for whatever reason, violence, or whatever reason, had simply proven incapable of providing sufficient education in math and technology, that in the long run was a threat to commercial activity, and as a response to that, Congress was, in fact, going to nationalize the schools, and it in effect would provide a Federal public school education for every child from kindergarten on up?</text>
        <text syncTime="727.153">Would that be justifiable under the Commerce Clause?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="730.355" stopTime="751.951">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="730.355">Well, that's certainly one of the concerns that's been expressed, but I think that this Court has readily available to it a way of analyzing that, and that in reading New York v. United States, one would have to be concerned whether this particular activity was imposing statutory requirements on the State, or--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="751.951" stopTime="753.234">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="751.951">It's relieving the State--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="753.234" stopTime="754.303">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="753.234">--making local governments assume responsibility.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="754.303" stopTime="758.322">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="754.303">--It's relieving the State of a burden, saying you don't have to pay for this any more.</text>
        <text syncTime="757.255">We'll take care of it.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="758.322" stopTime="759.038">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="758.322">Well, certainly--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="759.038" stopTime="762.224">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="759.038">Federal schools with Federal teachers, all Federal money--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="762.224" stopTime="781.788">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="762.224">--Certainly, pursuant to the spending power, Congress could provide that type of support, but I think it would raise questions in this Court's jurisprudence as to whether Congress was in fact taking over something that was clearly part of the State responsibility.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="781.788" stopTime="786.941">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="781.788">--But there is no question that Congress has the power, in effect, to take over crime, because I--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="786.941" stopTime="787.408">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="786.941">I do not--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="787.408" stopTime="799.582">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="787.408">--presume there's no limitation on your rationale, or on Congress' rationale, that would preclude it from reaching any traditional criminal activity.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="799.582" stopTime="805.586">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="799.582">--That's correct.</text>
        <text syncTime="800.382">As long as Congress is dealing with the conduct of individuals--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="805.586" stopTime="806.219">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="805.586">Well--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="806.219" stopTime="814.425">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="806.219">--and where there is this affecting interstate commerce nexus, then Congress should be permitted to do that, allowed to do that under the Constitution.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="814.425" stopTime="839.873">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="814.425">--General Days, if Congress proscribes the possession of guns in schoolyards all across the country, it ought to have an even effect.</text>
        <text syncTime="823.797">It isn't going to improve people's reasons for traveling, is it, because everyone is equally affected.</text>
        <text syncTime="831.518">You're not going to... unless you're... are you saying that violence as a whole will be cut down and therefore people will feel freer to travel in interstate commerce?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="839.873" stopTime="847.979">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="839.873">Yes, I think that's a reasonable assumption to think that Congress could have held or relied upon in enacting this statute.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="847.979" stopTime="853.316">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="847.979">That possession of a gun in a schoolyard contributes to that sort of violence?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="853.316" stopTime="917.291">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="853.316">Well, I think, Chief Justice Rehnquist, that it is an easy step from possession to use and, therefore, the fact that Congress might be concerned with possession doesn't mean that it wasn't concerned about use.</text>
        <text syncTime="865.458">And there also is sufficient evidence in the consideration of even the Gun-Free School Zones Act that there was heightened violence on school property by juveniles, and if one looks at the findings and records with respect to earlier legislation... for example, the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968... Congress makes specific findings between the easy availability of firearms and the level of juvenile and youthful violence and criminality.</text>
        <text syncTime="900.031">So that the connection between possession of firearms on or near schoolyards and violence and the regulation of that possession are relationships that Congress has considered in the past, and in our estimation made perfectly good sense under the Gun-Free School Zones Act.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="917.291" stopTime="955.716">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="917.291">General Days, I think it's well-established that a factor in both the education of children and in the law-abiding nature of children, a major factor is the stability of families.</text>
        <text syncTime="934.002">I suppose, under your reasoning, Congress could enact a Federal domestic relations law providing a Federal marriage, Federal divorce procedures, and what-not.</text>
        <text syncTime="947.762">I mean, there's nothing that affects levels of crime and levels of education as much as that.</text>
        <text syncTime="954.582">Why not?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="955.716" stopTime="961.252">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="955.716">Justice Scalia, Congress has legislated, for example, with respect to problems of--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="961.252" stopTime="962.771">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="961.252">Domestic violence, I'm aware.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="962.771" stopTime="965.639">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="962.771">--domestic violence, or the disappearance of children--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="965.639" stopTime="966.256">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="965.639">That doesn't--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="966.256" stopTime="972.877">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="966.256">--or interstate divorce problems, so it's not that Congress hasn't dealt with those issues, but I think we would look to the--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="972.877" stopTime="976.079">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="972.877">--The question is whether it has dealt with them constitutionally.</text>
        <text syncTime="975.412">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="976.079" stopTime="986.387">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="976.079">--Justice Scalia, that is really your department, but let me say that--</text>
        <text syncTime="981.983">[Laughter]</text>
        <text syncTime="982.483">That one would look to--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="986.387" stopTime="990.255">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="986.387">I'm not sure what your answer is.</text>
        <text syncTime="987.553">Is it... would a Federal marriage and divorce law be okay?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="990.255" stopTime="995.659">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="990.255">--The answer is that one would have to look to the Constitution itself, and try to identify where there are any limitations--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="995.659" stopTime="996.009">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="995.659">General Days--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="996.009" stopTime="999.544">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="996.009">--and one would assume, for example, that privacy would be one of the considerations.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="999.544" stopTime="1022.123">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="999.544">--I thought by repeatedly bringing up the nuclear waste case you were making the distinction... perhaps you weren't... between Federal regulations concurrent with State regulation, as it would be in this case, and Federal regulations displacing State regulation, taking over the field.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1022.123" stopTime="1022.773">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1022.123">Yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="1022.773" stopTime="1024.909">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1022.773">Are you making that distinction, and is it--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1024.909" stopTime="1031.746">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1024.909">No, I'm not intending to make that distinction as a major point.</text>
        <text syncTime="1028.711">Certainly, there's a difference between the two approaches, and--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="1031.746" stopTime="1033.265">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="1031.746">--Well, wouldn't you say, just... I don't mean to interrupt--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1033.265" stopTime="1033.580">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1033.265">--Yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="1033.580" stopTime="1047.191">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="1033.580">--but it relates to her question.</text>
        <text syncTime="1034.330">Supposing a State had a law saying, it is permissible for children to bring weapons to school to defend themselves against the risk of violence.</text>
        <text syncTime="1043.371">Do you think the Federal Government could preempt that law with a law like this?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1047.191" stopTime="1061.950">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1047.191">Yes, I do.</text>
        <text syncTime="1048.075">I think that, based upon its interstate commerce power, it could determine that what the State had done interfered with the free flow of commerce, affected commerce in a negative way, and therefore had to be dealt with, but getting back to--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="1061.950" stopTime="1088.852">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="1061.950">The only limitation, then, that you're recognizing, is the narrow reading... well, strike narrow, is a reading of U.S. v. New York that Congress could not impose certain affirmative obligations upon the State, but so far as concurrent regulation, and, indeed, even displacement of State regulation, presumably there is no limit, if, in fact, it can reach the case before us?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1088.852" stopTime="1117.135">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1088.852">--Well, I think there are limits, Justice Souter.</text>
        <text syncTime="1093.054">The question is whether there's anything left of the State once the Federal Government gets done.</text>
        <text syncTime="1099.724">If what the Federal Government is doing is essentially destroying the delicate balance between the Federal Government and the States in ways that this Court has not indicated the Constitution contemplated, then that would be difficult.</text>
        <text syncTime="1114.919">I think there would be limitations on that ability.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="1117.135" stopTime="1139.201">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="1117.135">Well, that's my question, and it seems to me you're saying that the only instance in which we can clearly say that the delicate balance would be destroyed is the instance in which the national Government imposes affirmative obligations on the States, e.g., making them the owners of nuclear waste and so on, and that short of that, there apparently isn't any recognizable limit.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1139.201" stopTime="1153.710">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1139.201">Well, I think there is a recognizable limit, but that is the situation where I think this Court has indicated that Congress could not go, but the Gun-Free School Zones Act does not have any preemption.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1153.710" stopTime="1161.631">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1153.710">Are we left with the proposition, then, that it is for Congress, not the Court, to preserve the Federal structure?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1161.631" stopTime="1163.566">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1161.631">I'm not saying that.</text>
        <text syncTime="1162.650">I think that--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1163.566" stopTime="1196.787">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1163.566">But with reference to the commerce point, realistically, that's where we are.</text>
        <text syncTime="1168.054">None of us at least can think of anything under our present case law, or at least under your argument, that Congress can't do if it chooses under the Commerce Clause, so if the Federal system must be preserve by someone, and the Commerce Clause is a means by which the Federal structure can be obliterated, and if we have no tools or analytic techniques to make these distinctions, then it follows that the Federal balance is remitted to the political judgment of the Congress.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1196.787" stopTime="1212.599">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1196.787">--Well, I think, Your Honor, in Garcia what this Court indicated was that the protection of this balance, insofar as the Tenth Amendment is concerned, really does reside with the political process and in Congress.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1212.599" stopTime="1216.285">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1212.599">I think that's the necessary consequence of the argument that you're making here.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1216.285" stopTime="1246.470">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1216.285">It's not an argument that I concocted, Justice Kennedy.</text>
        <text syncTime="1220.237">It's one that I think flows from this Court's decisions, and that one does... as I indicated to Justice O'Connor, one doesn't start the analysis by saying there are things that are clearly local and within local control that Congress cannot reach.</text>
        <text syncTime="1236.781">The analysis has to be whether one can identify a rational basis for Congress' wanting to extend its commerce power into a particular area.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="1246.470" stopTime="1261.230">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="1246.470">But one always can.</text>
        <text syncTime="1248.153">I mean, there is no limit.</text>
        <text syncTime="1251.355">Benjamin Franklin said, it is so wonderful to be a rational animal, that there is a reason for everything that one does.</text>
        <text syncTime="1257.242">[Laughter]</text>
        <text syncTime="1258.109">And if that's the test, it's all over.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1261.230" stopTime="1269.216">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1261.230">Well, I don't believe it is, because as I was indicating, that this Court has identified there are limits within the Constitution.</text>
        <text syncTime="1268.466">There are the--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1269.216" stopTime="1302.205">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1269.216">Well, but there ought to be limits within the Commerce Clause itself.</text>
        <text syncTime="1272.918">These are powers expressly delegated to the Congress under a constitutional scheme that envisions that Congress has certain enumerated powers and that's it, and if the function being regulated is wholly intrastate, and is not commercial, it is very hard for me to understand why it's within the text of the Interstate Commerce Clause power.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1302.205" stopTime="1317.130">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1302.205">--Well, Justice O'Connor, I think we have to remember that the commerce power is one of the heads of authority under the Constitution that transformed our country from an agrarian society to one that--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1317.130" stopTime="1319.166">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1317.130">Well, rightly so, but--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1319.166" stopTime="1320.099">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1319.166">--was a powerful commercial enterprise.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1320.099" stopTime="1326.172">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1320.099">--But it can clearly deal with commercial activity.</text>
        <text syncTime="1323.803">We've been very generous about that--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1326.172" stopTime="1326.622">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1326.172">Your Honor--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1326.622" stopTime="1328.505">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1326.622">--and interstate activity.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1328.505" stopTime="1353.489">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1328.505">--Your Honor, we're talking about commercial activity.</text>
        <text syncTime="1331.207">We are talking about something that affects interstate commerce.</text>
        <text syncTime="1334.759">As we indicate in our brief, Congress has been concerned long before 1990 with the impact of diminished achievement in primary and secondary schools and this country's ability to compete and to have a strong economy.</text>
        <text syncTime="1350.703">This is not about just regulating guns--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="1353.489" stopTime="1354.039">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="1353.489">And it has acted--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1354.039" stopTime="1354.339">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1354.039">--possession.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="1354.339" stopTime="1357.024">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="1354.339">--simply under the spending power up to this point, right?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1357.024" stopTime="1357.891">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1357.024">I beg your pardon?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="1357.891" stopTime="1361.359">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="1357.891">Hasn't it acted simply under the spending power?</text>
        <text syncTime="1359.893">It has given money.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1361.359" stopTime="1380.807">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1361.359">Well, in that regard, yes, it has given money, but it indicates Congress' concern with this impact on the national economy.</text>
        <text syncTime="1369.332">Once, it seems to me, that's identified, it's identified as having an impact on interstate commerce, that, then, opens the way for Congress to regulate directly through the Commerce Clause.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="1380.807" stopTime="1405.588">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1380.807">General Days, it sounds to me like you're making... you're presenting what has sometimes been called a political question argument, that is, that there are some decisions that are committed to another branch to determine the constitutionality.</text>
        <text syncTime="1394.115">It seems to me that you're saying that what is within commerce or not is for Congress to decide, and that the courts don't have an oversight rule.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1405.588" stopTime="1407.457">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1405.588">I am absolutely not saying that.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="1407.457" stopTime="1428.121">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1407.457">What are the limits, then?</text>
        <text syncTime="1408.590">You said it could be all of violent crime could come within it.</text>
        <text syncTime="1413.611">You're not making the distinction between concurrent jurisdiction and displacing the State authority, so what is the check?</text>
        <text syncTime="1423.900">How would you describe the check that the Court has?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1428.121" stopTime="1443.463">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1428.121">Well, I'm perhaps left to repeat myself in some respects.</text>
        <text syncTime="1433.656">This Court has never said that there are absolute limits to the exercise of the commerce power.</text>
        <text syncTime="1439.394">It's looked at individual cases and tried to determine, exercising--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="1443.463" stopTime="1453.169">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1443.463">What would be a case that would fall outside, other than the one that you... the nuclear waste, telling the State, in effect, you serve as Federal official for this purpose?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1453.169" stopTime="1457.188">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1453.169">--I don't have--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1457.188" stopTime="1462.359">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1457.188">Don't give away anything here.</text>
        <text syncTime="1458.407">[Laughter]</text>
        <text syncTime="1458.957">They might want to do it next--</text>
        <text syncTime="1461.842">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1462.359" stopTime="1465.961">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1462.359">--Your Honor, I--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="1465.961" stopTime="1466.929">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="1465.961">General Days, could I ask--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1466.929" stopTime="1474.817">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1466.929">--the Court has never looked at this in the abstract.</text>
        <text syncTime="1469.798">It's not an abstract process.</text>
        <text syncTime="1472.131">It's been viewed by the Court as an empirical process.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1474.817" stopTime="1481.256">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1474.817">--But my point is, Mr. Days, maybe the constitutional system would be better served if we recognize that there are no judicial tools to do this.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1481.256" stopTime="1482.689">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1481.256">There are... excuse me.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1482.689" stopTime="1498.682">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1482.689">There are no judicial tools to put meaningful limits on the Commerce Clause.</text>
        <text syncTime="1486.290">Therefore, it's essentially a political question, therefore, the obligation to protect the Federal system is that of the Congress, and therefore we have to ensure that there's some mechanics or procedures that they mus follow to do so--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1498.682" stopTime="1499.550">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1498.682">Your Honor--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1499.550" stopTime="1504.252">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1499.550">--especially if there is an indication that this is never an explicit subject of concern.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1504.252" stopTime="1539.925">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1504.252">--Well, I'm not arguing that it's a political question.</text>
        <text syncTime="1507.038">Indeed, one of the elements of the political question doctrine is that there are not available judicial tools for evaluating what is at issue.</text>
        <text syncTime="1517.346">I think this Court has identified in a number of cases the fact that there are limits within the Constitution that can be applied by this Court to control the extent to which Congress operates under the commerce power.</text>
        <text syncTime="1529.570">The fact that this Court has not found the need to rein in Congress is simply an indication that Congress is legislating in a way that's consistent and rational--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="1539.925" stopTime="1540.442">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="1539.925">Or an indication--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1540.442" stopTime="1541.627">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1540.442">--in light of the growth of this country.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="1541.627" stopTime="1549.548">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="1541.627">--of what Justice Kennedy said.</text>
        <text syncTime="1542.711">I mean, the cases can be read equally consistently with Justice Kennedy's suggestion that there simply is no judicial way to do this job.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="1549.548" stopTime="1551.400">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="1549.548">May I ask you one question, General Days?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1551.400" stopTime="1553.602">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1551.400">This Court has never suggested that it was abdicating its responsibility in that regard.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="1553.602" stopTime="1559.756">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="1553.602">You filed in a recent submission copies of congressional findings made in the recently enacted Crime Control Act.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1559.756" stopTime="1560.189">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1559.756">Yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="1560.189" stopTime="1563.791">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="1560.189">What relevance do you think those findings have to our problem today?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1563.791" stopTime="1590.442">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1563.791">Justice Stevens, we're not relying on them in the strict sense of the word, but we think that at a very minimum they indicate that reasons can be identified for why Congress wanted to regulate this particular activity, so that it's corroborative of what we were saying our briefs, and what we think this Court should properly find about the bases that Congress relied upon in legislating it as it did, or could rely upon.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="1590.442" stopTime="1596.279">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="1590.442">Do you think the court of appeals would have decided the case the same way if those findings had been in the original statute?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="1596.279" stopTime="1625.365">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="1596.279">I do not believe that the court of appeals, based upon just the reading of the decision, would have come out the same way, but I can't be absolutely certain.</text>
        <text syncTime="1605.904">What the Court did was impose a number of procedural requirements on Congress, and I'm not certain how it would view these particular findings, whether they had been promulgated in a way that touched every base that the court of appeals felt was necessary.</text>
        <text syncTime="1623.329">I'd like to reserve the balance of my time.</text>
      </turn>
    </section>
    <section startTime="1625.365" stopTime="3213.776">
      <heading>Argument of John R. Carter</heading>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="1625.365" stopTime="1630.019">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="1625.365">Very well, General Days.</text>
        <text syncTime="1627.733">Mr. Carter, we'll hear from you.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1630.019" stopTime="1656.134">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1630.019">Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court:</text>
        <text syncTime="1639.541">When the American people established the national Government, if they had then invested it with a general police power, there'd be little problem with laws like the Gun-Free School Zones Act.</text>
        <text syncTime="1650.081">State legislators possess general police powers, and they pass laws like this all the time.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1656.134" stopTime="1673.829">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1656.134">I am aware of at least two schools within 1,000 feet of an interstate highway.</text>
        <text syncTime="1664.423">I am sure there are many schools in the United States that are within 1,000 feet of an interstate highway, or of a heavily traveled artery.</text>
        <text syncTime="1672.529">Don't you think that's correct?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1673.829" stopTime="1674.714">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1673.829">Yes, sir.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1674.714" stopTime="1687.939">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1674.714">Well, if a State tried to pass this identical statute, would that not be, then, an interference with interstate commerce beyond the authority of the States to enact?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1687.939" stopTime="1694.609">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1687.939">It might very well be, if that act were, in fact interfering with interstate commerce.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1694.609" stopTime="1705.150">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1694.609">But if that is so, under the vacuum theory, then the Federal Government necessarily would have the power to enact this same law, lest there be a vacuum.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1705.150" stopTime="1719.493">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1705.150">The... let me back pedal, then, a little bit on my statement regarding preemption.</text>
        <text syncTime="1713.589">I think the preemption would apply at... on the interstate highway.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1719.493" stopTime="1732.801">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1719.493">Is that so, the States cannot prohibit crimes on interstate highways?</text>
        <text syncTime="1725.028">All crimes that occur on interstate highways have to be punished by Federal criminal law and not by State criminal law?</text>
        <text syncTime="1730.349">This is new.</text>
        <text syncTime="1731.301">I just thought it was Federal enclaves.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1732.801" stopTime="1736.168">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1732.801">If the Court found... I believe if the Court found--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1736.168" stopTime="1737.018">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1736.168">This is extraordinary.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1737.018" stopTime="1749.428">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1737.018">--that the State law was burdening interstate commerce, which I don't believe it would find, but assuming that... I was assuming in Justice Kennedy's hypothetical that there would be a finding that it burdened--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1749.428" stopTime="1750.745">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1749.428">That there would be an interference, yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1750.745" stopTime="1759.149">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1750.745">--interstate commerce and in that case, the case law I believe would... that's one of the dangers of preemption of State law by Commerce Clause legislation.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1759.149" stopTime="1768.707">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1759.149">But we would make such a finding of burdening interstate commerce presumably because we believe we have the capacity to figure out what is interstate commerce and, indeed, much beyond that, what burdens it, right?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1768.707" stopTime="1769.873">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1768.707">That's correct.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1769.873" stopTime="1778.728">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1769.873">But of course, the argument made here is that we don't have that capacity, because it's a political question.</text>
        <text syncTime="1776.693">It seems to me we have it or we don't have it.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1778.728" stopTime="1787.434">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1778.728">Well, that's an argument that seems to me to have been raised at argument today.</text>
        <text syncTime="1784.716">It's not something that the Government's argued in its brief.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="1787.434" stopTime="1791.303">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="1787.434">It's an argument that was disclaimed, as I understood the Solicitor General.</text>
        <text syncTime="1789.536">He disclaimed that argument.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1791.303" stopTime="1794.238">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1791.303">Yes, I believe that's correct, and--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1794.238" stopTime="1795.357">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1794.238">You disclaim it, too.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1795.357" stopTime="1824.793">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1795.357">--I'll disclaim it to a... large extent, yes, although I believe that Justice Kennedy's rationale for clear statement principles in Commerce Clause cases is a very good one, and illustrates why you can't simply have laws like the Gun-Free School Zones Act, which on its face appears to be a general police power statute.</text>
        <text syncTime="1817.453">It makes no mention of commerce, what it regulates is not commerce, it's got no legislative history dealing with commerce--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="1824.793" stopTime="1833.732">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1824.793">Suppose it had the findings that have been subsequently added, would that be sufficient--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1833.732" stopTime="1834.365">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1833.732">--That--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="1834.365" stopTime="1835.582">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1834.365">--and if not, why not?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1835.582" stopTime="1850.675">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1835.582">--That would call for a different analysis by this Court under its prior case law.</text>
        <text syncTime="1841.219">This Court has been very deferential to the regulation of activities affecting interstate commerce where Congress has made findings.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1850.675" stopTime="1859.364">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1850.675">Well, what's your position?</text>
        <text syncTime="1851.611">If those findings in the recent findings had been there at the time that this statute was enacted, is it valid or invalid?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1859.364" stopTime="1867.786">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1859.364">Those particular findings are awfully global.</text>
        <text syncTime="1863.834">I have a lot of problem with those--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1867.786" stopTime="1869.922">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1867.786">Could you answer the question, though?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1869.922" stopTime="1871.005">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1869.922">--I would--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1871.005" stopTime="1873.124">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1871.005">Valid or invalid, under your theory?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1873.124" stopTime="1885.765">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1873.124">--Under my theory, shooting from the hip today, I would question their validity.</text>
        <text syncTime="1879.178">They... I do not believe they draw a tight enough nexus with commerce.</text>
        <text syncTime="1883.463">To explain why I back-pedal--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1885.765" stopTime="1895.806">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1885.765">They just have to say more, but so long as they say enough, whether it's true or not, it's okay, is that it, and we would not inquire as to whether it's true or not.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1895.806" stopTime="1902.543">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1895.806">--Under this Court's precedent, if they say enough, then it triggers the deferential standard of review.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1902.543" stopTime="1911.899">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1902.543">Even if it isn't interstate and isn't commercial, that's fine, just so long as they add a string of rationales here?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1911.899" stopTime="1916.053">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1911.899">One can make that argument from this Court's prior case law, yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1916.053" stopTime="1918.303">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1916.053">I just wanted to know what argument you were making.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1918.303" stopTime="1952.607">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1918.303">I... I'm trying to make an argument that comports the Court's prior case law, which, as a practitioner of law, I'm in a position... not in a very good position to question, with what happened here, and how very different this law is even from prior legislation which doesn't appear to regulate the concerns that you've identified but the Court has upheld.</text>
        <text syncTime="1944.101">For example, the loan-sharking case in Perez.</text>
        <text syncTime="1948.072">The Court upheld the law there.</text>
        <text syncTime="1949.472">That law at least had findings.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="1952.607" stopTime="1954.559">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="1952.607">I would have thought that was commercial activity.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="1954.559" stopTime="2009.979">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="1954.559">I would... I would agree with you 100 percent on that.</text>
        <text syncTime="1958.344">The Court, however, did not specifically recognize that as its rationale.</text>
        <text syncTime="1963.582">Believe me, I wish it had, because I think you're absolutely correct that when Congress reaches to regulate intrastate, noncommercial activity without some strong, strong connection, I... and the first cases which expanded into this area talked about a close and substantial connection, and somehow along the way that gets transferred into rational relationship.</text>
        <text syncTime="1990.315">And I would welcome the Court to look at the cases which opened this door and examine more closely how it has continued to erode over the years, in that we have a situation now where the Solicitor General can argue that Congress has almost plenary power over crimes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2009.979" stopTime="2017.467">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2009.979">But basically you have a client you're trying to keep out of jail, and as far as you're concerned it's enough to say they didn't make the findings and let us worry about the rest some other time.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2017.467" stopTime="2019.335">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2017.467">That is my duty as his attorney.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="2019.335" stopTime="2030.976">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2019.335">It is your duty.</text>
        <text syncTime="2019.919">And that's the same reason why you suggested that the... in this very same statute the prohibition on discharging a gun might present a different case.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2030.976" stopTime="2048.188">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2030.976">Yes.</text>
        <text syncTime="2031.626">Yes, there is a, I think a very obvious difference between the simple possession of a gun within 1,000 feet of a school which can be for lawful or unlawful purposes, and the discharge of a gun, even, I think, in cases where the discharge of itself might be lawful.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="2048.188" stopTime="2056.775">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="2048.188">What about a general ban on certain types of assault weapons?</text>
        <text syncTime="2052.473">Just possession--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2056.775" stopTime="2057.043">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2056.775">Simple--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="2057.043" stopTime="2058.393">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="2057.043">--of certain types of weapons.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2058.393" stopTime="2103.988">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2058.393">--types of assault weapons.</text>
        <text syncTime="2059.393">Under my theory, Congress made in 1968 findings about what it called highly destructive weapons.</text>
        <text syncTime="2068.732">Congress has regulated machine guns and what it... what it... it used the term firearm, but statutorily defined to be the more highly destructive weapons in the national firearms from 1934 to the present.</text>
        <text syncTime="2084.627">I believe that would rest on a different constitutional basis, because some of the offsetting considerations... for example, Congress' longstanding recognition of the lawful possession of firearms for sporting purposes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2103.988" stopTime="2115.730">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2103.988">It would be helpful to me if you'd answer the question... whether the explosive device or machine gun, just possession of one or the other within 1,000 feet of a school, could be prohibited by Congress.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2115.730" stopTime="2119.200">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2115.730">If, in an individual instance, it affected interstate commerce--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2119.200" stopTime="2129.223">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2119.200">Well, just the same... you've got exactly the same statute you have here, except you substitute for firearm the word, machine gun, or explosive device.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2129.223" stopTime="2134.477">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2129.223">--Absent some finding by Congress linking it to its commerce power--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2134.477" stopTime="2135.510">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2134.477">It would be the same case.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2135.510" stopTime="2136.912">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2135.510">--I believe it would stand on the same footing.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2136.912" stopTime="2150.653">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2136.912">Now, we have the findings.</text>
        <text syncTime="2137.379">We do have findings now.</text>
        <text syncTime="2139.196">Why can't we take judicial notice of the facts Congress have found?</text>
        <text syncTime="2144.065">Maybe they're not sufficient, but what is the difference whether the... whether it's in the finding, or something that everybody knows?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2150.653" stopTime="2158.325">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2150.653">Because the findings are made by a subsequent Congress.</text>
        <text syncTime="2154.457">This Court has been... has in the past indicated that that's--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2158.325" stopTime="2167.015">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2158.325">But do you think if they had, for example, made a regulation of railroad transportation and didn't make the finding that this involves interstate commerce we couldn't take judicial notice of that?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2167.015" stopTime="2172.502">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2167.015">--This Court could take judicial notice of Congress' prior findings regarding the effect--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2172.502" stopTime="2176.471">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2172.502">But why can't we take judicial notice of what they found today, or just a couple of weeks ago?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2176.471" stopTime="2184.892">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2176.471">--Because we're talking... we're not talking about something that happened today, we're talking about something that happened in 1992, before those findings were made.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2184.892" stopTime="2194.248">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2184.892">Yes, but it's the same statute, and either that does affect commerce or it doesn't, and I don't know why the findings make any difference.</text>
        <text syncTime="2191.713">That's what you have to explain to me, why the findings make a--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2194.248" stopTime="2206.473">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2194.248">--We're making up this procedural requirement, anyway.</text>
        <text syncTime="2196.284">Why can't we say--</text>
        <text syncTime="2197.484">[Laughter]</text>
        <text syncTime="2198.250">--you have to make these findings either at the time you pass it, or later, so long as the case comes up after you've made the findings?</text>
        <text syncTime="2204.438">That's a sensible procedural requirement.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2206.473" stopTime="2220.566">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2206.473">That would retroactively convict Mr. Lopez under a different theory than he was prosecuted under, in that this Court has also considered findings--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2220.566" stopTime="2237.527">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2220.566">I don't think that's right, because he was prosecuted under a statute that was on the books, and the statute is either valid or invalid because it does or does not have an adequate connection with commerce, and I don't know that Congress, when Congress makes the findings has anything to do with that... with whether in fact it has a justifiable connection with commerce.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2237.527" stopTime="2288.294">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2237.527">--Well, Congress in 1990 could have linked gun possession in a school zone with commerce in another way besides findings.</text>
        <text syncTime="2245.967">It could have made it an element of the offense.</text>
        <text syncTime="2248.767">And when you examine congressional regulation of firearm possession, which is mostly in section 922, they more often use the commerce element as part of the offense, and for this Court, or to assume that Congress in 1994, by passing findings, is doing what Congress may have wanted to do in 1990, ignores the very real possibility that Congress could have done the same thing in 1990 by requiring an element, and in that case, it would have had to have been part of the indictment and proof in Mr. Lopez' case.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2288.294" stopTime="2298.566">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2288.294">Why isn't your answer that what Congress finds to have been true in 1994 is not necessarily what Congress would have found to have been true in 1990?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2298.566" stopTime="2299.602">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2298.566">I think--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2299.602" stopTime="2302.054">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2299.602">Why isn't that an adequate answer to keep your client out of jail?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2302.054" stopTime="2305.521">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2302.054">--I think in my own awkward way that's what I was trying to say.</text>
        <text syncTime="2305.005">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2305.521" stopTime="2309.807">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2305.521">Mr. Carter--</text>
        <text syncTime="2306.538">--You're trying to say that some of the facts underlying these findings have changed in the last 2 years.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2309.807" stopTime="2310.357">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2309.807">They very well could have.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2310.357" stopTime="2321.447">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2310.357">Which ones?</text>
        <text syncTime="2310.773">[Laughter]</text>
        <text syncTime="2311.575">I think that's really quite ridiculous.</text>
        <text syncTime="2315.443">If you look at these findings, they're either acceptable or they're not, and maybe they're not, I agree with you, but there's really been no change.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2321.447" stopTime="2325.316">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2321.447">I don't... I would think... I don't see how they can be retroactively acceptable.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2325.316" stopTime="2332.488">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2325.316">I understand that argument, but that's not saying that the facts underlying the findings have changed in the last 2 years.</text>
        <text syncTime="2330.787">I don't think anyone would accept that.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2332.488" stopTime="2344.479">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2332.488">A finding requirement is a finding requirement, isn't it, and if you insist upon a finding by Congress, surely that finding has to be a finding related to 1990, or, you know, whenever the even occurred--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2344.479" stopTime="2345.046">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2344.479">I would... I would--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2345.046" stopTime="2346.446">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2345.046">--and there is no finding relating to that date.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2346.446" stopTime="2359.389">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2346.446">--I would agree 100 percent.</text>
        <text syncTime="2348.098">The Congress can't go back and change time.</text>
        <text syncTime="2351.866">It can judge the facts today, and this is a factual determination.</text>
        <text syncTime="2357.270">It's a jurisdictional prerequisite.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="stephen_g_breyer" startTime="2359.389" stopTime="2402.449">
        <label>Justice Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="2359.389">All right, so what would you say about the obvious argument, the simple argument against your position that this isn't a borderline case?</text>
        <text syncTime="2367.293">The guns move in interstate commerce, likely, the books do, the desks do, the teachers might.</text>
        <text syncTime="2372.863">People will not move to places in this country where children are being killed in schools by guns, and in fact, if the Federal Government can't do something about it, maybe the whole economy will go down the drain in 1,000 obvious ways, all right.</text>
        <text syncTime="2386.039">So that would be the argument in Wickard &amp; Filburn.</text>
        <text syncTime="2388.991">If some homegrown wheat affects interstate commerce, which I guess is a borderline question economically, certainly guns in schools do really, not borderline, affect commerce.</text>
        <text syncTime="2401.216">Now, what's your reply to that?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2402.449" stopTime="2434.537">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2402.449">My first reply to that is this act reaches more than guns in schools.</text>
        <text syncTime="2407.970">It reaches guns near schools, it reaches the lawful possession of guns in schools.</text>
        <text syncTime="2412.857">It reaches beyond Congress' power.</text>
        <text syncTime="2415.642">That's the biggest problem with this act.</text>
        <text syncTime="2418.010">I'm not arguing that Congress has no power to regulate firearms anywhere near schools.</text>
        <text syncTime="2423.629">What I'm arguing is that this act, as you read it, is a general police power type legislation, and that is not the power that Congress has.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="2434.537" stopTime="2462.004">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2434.537">Does it make sense for us to say that the only flaw in this legislation is the one you're pushing, because it's so obviously easy to get up a set of findings.</text>
        <text syncTime="2447.780">It would be diminishing the Constitution, I think, if you impose that kind of, almost school-ma'am requirement on Congress.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2462.004" stopTime="2475.514">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2462.004">I don't believe it would diminish the Constitution.</text>
        <text syncTime="2465.325">If anything, it would formalize procedures for Congress to take.</text>
        <text syncTime="2473.931">It would recognize--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2475.514" stopTime="2510.704">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2475.514">We have no authority under the Constitution to prescribe procedures for Congress.</text>
        <text syncTime="2478.983">Can we tell Congress how it must legislate?</text>
        <text syncTime="2481.768">Where do we get the authority to say that?</text>
        <text syncTime="2483.120">This is not an interpretive rule.</text>
        <text syncTime="2486.239">I mean, we have the power to adopt rules of interpretation.</text>
        <text syncTime="2489.357">Unless something is clear in the statute, we will not assume it to be true.</text>
        <text syncTime="2493.309">But this isn't an interpretive rule you're urging upon us, it's a rule saying that even though it's perfectly clear what Congress intended, we're not going to give effect to it unless Congress has adopted this procedure of legislation, and has set forth a prologue of findings.</text>
        <text syncTime="2507.652">Where do we get the authority to tell Congress how to legislate?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2510.704" stopTime="2554.966">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2510.704">--It... I wouldn't view it as... in quite the same sense as you do, Justice Scalia.</text>
        <text syncTime="2520.560">The requirement of findings ensures that Congress addresses problems that this Court has recognized.</text>
        <text syncTime="2536.171">In the Bass case, the Court speaks of being sure that Congress has indeed addressed the problem and thought about the State-Federal balance.</text>
        <text syncTime="2545.777">Without something like findings, there's no insurance that that has in fact happened, and it's--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2554.966" stopTime="2565.941">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2554.966">We cannot presume that that has happened?</text>
        <text syncTime="2557.768">Don't we usually assume that Congress has acted responsibly and made the necessary judgments, including the judgment of whether the necessary piece of legislation is constitutional?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2565.941" stopTime="2598.578">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2565.941">--In an area of noncommercial activity, and in a statute that reaches as broadly as this one, I think the presumption that Congress undertook all these steps which would be formalized with findings evaporates, because otherwise we're in a situation where, as Justice Souter quoted Benjamin Franklin, you can rationalize regulation of any human activity as affecting commerce.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="2598.578" stopTime="2623.627">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="2598.578">Is that difference in certainty the reason why you draw a line, as I understand that you do, between this statute and a statute in which Congress, presumably without any findings, simply criminalized the discharge of handguns in a school?</text>
        <text syncTime="2611.736">We would know, in the latter case, that Congress had understood and had adverted to the likely effect on interstate commerce, whereas here we don't?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2623.627" stopTime="2644.041">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2623.627">No.</text>
        <text syncTime="2623.927">My argument about the discharge of a firearm was aimed at the rational relation test.</text>
        <text syncTime="2634.168">If this Court finds that this statute is simply subject to the same deferential standard of review as a statute with findings, as--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="2644.041" stopTime="2655.932">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="2644.041">You mean, if Congress simply, without findings, said discharges are criminalized, there would be a patent rational relationship there to interstate commerce, whereas there is not here?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2655.932" stopTime="2665.806">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2655.932">--No.</text>
        <text syncTime="2657.200">The purpose of my illustration of discharge is to show how even more further attenuated this statute is, that there's a closer--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="2665.806" stopTime="2673.710">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="2665.806">Then your answer... if I push you to the wall, is your answer going to be that the discharge statute would also be unconstitutional?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2673.710" stopTime="2681.649">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2673.710">--Without a... having an effect on commerce, yes, that--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="2681.649" stopTime="2682.116">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="2681.649">Well--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2682.116" stopTime="2682.566">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2682.116">--I think--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="2682.566" stopTime="2686.470">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="2682.566">--assume two cases.</text>
        <text syncTime="2683.684">You've got a discharge statute without findings.</text>
        <text syncTime="2685.734">Unconstitutional?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2686.470" stopTime="2691.172">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2686.470">--A discharge statute, simply outlawing all discharges--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="2691.172" stopTime="2692.957">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="2691.172">In... within 1,000 feet of a school.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2692.957" stopTime="2695.409">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2692.957">--I would think that to be unconstitutional.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="2695.409" stopTime="2715.553">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="2695.409">All right.</text>
        <text syncTime="2695.676">Same statute, findings identical to the ones here, discharges within 1,000 feet of the schools threaten the educational mission, the educational mission, the threat to the educational mission will deteriorate education and ultimately that will affect commerce, because we will have a dumb population.</text>
        <text syncTime="2711.918">Is that constitutional?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2715.553" stopTime="2718.589">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2715.553">That would be more rational than what we're facing here.</text>
        <text syncTime="2718.255">I--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="david_h_souter" startTime="2718.589" stopTime="2719.441">
        <label>Justice Souter</label>
        <text syncTime="2718.589">Is it rational enough?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2719.441" stopTime="2720.741">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2719.441">--Not for me.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="2720.741" stopTime="2723.243">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="2720.741">How about for us?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2723.243" stopTime="2731.515">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2723.243">That's--</text>
        <text syncTime="2723.576">[Laughter]</text>
        <text syncTime="2725.261">I don't think so.</text>
        <text syncTime="2730.630">I hope not.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2731.515" stopTime="2736.467">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2731.515">That would depend upon how rational we are, I suppose, and you don't want to press that.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2736.467" stopTime="2759.899">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2736.467">What about a statute that prohibits the conduct of school classes in rooms where there's a lot of asbestos in the wall or the ceiling, just prohibition.</text>
        <text syncTime="2747.424">Just like no guns... one section says, no guns in the schoolroom, another section says, the room cannot have asbestos in it, period.</text>
        <text syncTime="2756.280">No findings at all.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2759.899" stopTime="2767.855">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2759.899">I would think that that, as stated by you, would be of very doubtful constitutionality.</text>
        <text syncTime="2765.570">I can't, on my feet, think of any constitu--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="2767.855" stopTime="2781.514">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="2767.855">Let me go one step further and require them to remove asbestos wherever it is on the school premises, also remove all explosive devices at the same time.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2781.514" stopTime="2796.607">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2781.514">--I think, as stated by you, that would be of doubtful constitutionality where it would also--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2796.607" stopTime="2797.957">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2796.607">I think under your theory it would be.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2797.957" stopTime="2806.047">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2797.957">--Yes, and I think it would raise questions under New York v. U.S. about ordering the schools, what Congress can and cannot order States to do.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="2806.047" stopTime="2825.008">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2806.047">You emphasize in the beginning that you are an advocate for a particular client, and so you're concentrating on the absence of findings.</text>
        <text syncTime="2813.653">As I understand the Fifth Circuit decision, it didn't go beyond the absence of findings.</text>
        <text syncTime="2819.121">Did the Fifth Circuit reach the question of what if there were findings?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2825.008" stopTime="2839.118">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2825.008">I don't believe it did.</text>
        <text syncTime="2826.160">The Fifth Circuit left... for example, the Fifth Circuit left open the question of whether a commerce element could be implied into this statute, which is sort of another alternative to findings.</text>
        <text syncTime="2838.434">Congress--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="2839.118" stopTime="2846.207">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2839.118">So if you're wrong about the necessity for findings, then what happens to this case?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2846.207" stopTime="2847.490">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2846.207">--If I'm--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="2847.490" stopTime="2858.182">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2847.490">That's all that the Fifth Circuit decided, that findings are needed, and if we decide... follow the ordinary presumption that Congress had a reason for what it did--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2858.182" stopTime="2865.668">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2858.182">--Then this Court must address the question of, if Congress had the power to do what it did under the Commerce Clause.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="2865.668" stopTime="2871.255">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2865.668">--Even though that would be taking a first view of that question, because it was not decided below.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2871.255" stopTime="2887.367">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2871.255">Well, the Court could direct it... remand it to the Cong... I mean, to the Fifth Circuit in light of the Court's decision here, of course.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="2887.367" stopTime="2891.403">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2887.367">Because we are ordinarily not a court of first view.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2891.403" stopTime="2896.557">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2891.403">That is correct, and that is an option open to this Court.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="2896.557" stopTime="2903.643">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="2896.557">Could the Congress make it a crime to throw a fire bomb into a schoolhouse?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="2903.643" stopTime="2925.992">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2903.643">You know, if you're going to take the position that the Federal Government is a Government of limited powers, it means a limitation on doing good things, as well as limitations on doing bad things.</text>
        <text syncTime="2925.057">You swallow it.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="2925.992" stopTime="3010.496">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="2925.992">I--</text>
        <text syncTime="2926.609">[Laughter]</text>
        <text syncTime="2927.592">I agree there's... I don't view the decision of the court of appeals and what I'm advocating here as requiring this Court to throw out the concept that Congress can reach activities which have a close and substantial relation to interstate commerce, and then the question, to reach... I'd really be simply restating your question.</text>
        <text syncTime="2954.659">I think there's a more... a much more open and... must more close and substantial relation to an act of violence directed against a school, an occupied classroom, than... than there is in simply possessing a firearm near one, and line-drawing is, you know, is something the Court does, and I don't really wish to be back-pedaling on this, but that's not the issue here.</text>
        <text syncTime="2983.845">The issue is even more broader than that.</text>
        <text syncTime="2986.963">If... if banning simple possession of a firearm near a school is unconstitutional, that doesn't necessarily mean that throwing a firebomb into an occupied classroom is.</text>
        <text syncTime="3000.621">There... under the Court's previous standard, it's... and I believe the Court said that it's a question of degree.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="3010.496" stopTime="3012.779">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="3010.496">What about simple possession of marijuana?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3012.779" stopTime="3024.237">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3012.779">That's been justified under the commerce and the foreign commerce power and the problems of indistinguishability from--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="3024.237" stopTime="3027.672">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="3024.237">But your position is that would be permissible.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3027.672" stopTime="3030.458">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3027.672">--The courts have so held, yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="3030.458" stopTime="3039.396">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="3030.458">On the theory that marijuana is more apt to be moved in commerce... I mean, you can have locally grown marijuana, I suppose... or on the ground that it's more harmful than the guns?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3039.396" stopTime="3051.154">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3039.396">Well, there's findings made by Congress regarding marijuana.</text>
        <text syncTime="3044.383">There's no question of the peaceful, lawful possession of marijuana in any State.</text>
        <text syncTime="3050.121">There's--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="3051.154" stopTime="3060.845">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="3051.154">I'm assuming a State doesn't prohibit the mere possessio, but might the Federal Government nevertheless prohibit mere possession?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3060.845" stopTime="3066.583">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3060.845">--If that were necessary to exercise Congress' commerce powers--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="3066.583" stopTime="3073.236">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="3066.583">It makes precisely the same findings.</text>
        <text syncTime="3068.283">If the kids smoke marijuana, they'll be poor students, and education will suffer, and the economy will suffer.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3073.236" stopTime="3078.473">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3073.236">--I think the prohibition on that basis would have to be limited to students.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="3078.473" stopTime="3079.406">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="3078.473">To students.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3079.406" stopTime="3095.649">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3079.406">Under that rationale, there'd be no rational relation between nonstudents and smoking marijuana and their effect.</text>
        <text syncTime="3086.810">In sum, I'd urge this Court to recognize the Government's argument for what it truly is.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="3095.649" stopTime="3101.969">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="3095.649">To distinguish that, we wouldn't want to get all of these drug possession cases out of the Federal courts.</text>
        <text syncTime="3100.719">It would be--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3101.969" stopTime="3151.452">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3101.969">The Government's arguing that the Commerce Clause gives the Federal Government a general police power that it wasn't given by the Constitution, and this act doesn't regulate commerce, it doesn't regulate interstate activity, and because Congress may possess some powers to regulate guns around schools doesn't mean that it exercised its power in this case, in this act.</text>
        <text syncTime="3129.172">And to uphold the Gun-Free School Zones Act under deferential review on the Government's theory that findings are somehow implicit would allow any limitations on the Congress' Commerce Clause powers to vanish, and the line beyond which its powers would not reach is then the horizon, a line which appears but can never be reached.</text>
        <text syncTime="3150.152">I would yield my further time.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="3151.452" stopTime="3162.310">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="3151.452">--I suppose you could make... there's no doubt under our prior cases that you could make it unlawful to sell or traffic in marijuana.</text>
        <text syncTime="3159.608">That would indeed be a regulation of commerce.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3162.310" stopTime="3163.527">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3162.310">I believe so.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="3163.527" stopTime="3169.281">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="3163.527">And the only issue would be whether it's interstate or intrastate commerce, and we've been very liberal on that, once commerce is involved.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3169.281" stopTime="3171.649">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3169.281">And that is the basis of a lot of regulation of firearms.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="3171.649" stopTime="3176.053">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="3171.649">Or trafficking in guns, or trafficking in machine guns and so forth, all of that would be easily covered.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3176.053" stopTime="3178.503">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3176.053">Yes, and most of it is today.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="sandra_day_oconnor" startTime="3178.503" stopTime="3181.255">
        <label>Justice O'Connor</label>
        <text syncTime="3178.503">Or possess with intent to distribute.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3181.255" stopTime="3188.277">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3181.255">Correct, or to possess with intent to affect interstate commerce I believe may be regulable.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_paul_stevens" startTime="3188.277" stopTime="3193.931">
        <label>Justice Stevens</label>
        <text syncTime="3188.277">Or just possess with intent to use either a gun or marijuana would be beyond the Federal power?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_r_carter" startTime="3193.931" stopTime="3213.776">
        <label>Mr. Carter</label>
        <text syncTime="3193.931">The gun, I believe, yes.</text>
        <text syncTime="3199.585">The marijuana, because there are elements of indistinguishable... indistinguishability from foreign marijuana, which Congress has, I believe, plenary power to regulate, there's... it's a closer question.</text>
        <text syncTime="3212.643">I thank you.</text>
      </turn>
    </section>
    <section startTime="3213.776" stopTime="3249.110">
      <heading>Rebuttal of Drew S. Days, III</heading>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="3213.776" stopTime="3217.464">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="3213.776">Thank you, Mr. Carter.</text>
        <text syncTime="3215.262">General Days, you have 2 minutes remaining.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="drew_s_days_iii" startTime="3217.464" stopTime="3222.265">
        <label>Mr. Days, III</label>
        <text syncTime="3217.464">Mr. Chief Justice, unless the Court has further questions, I'd like to waive my rebuttal.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="william_h_rehnquist" startTime="3222.265" stopTime="3225.033">
        <label>Chief Justice Rehnquist</label>
        <text syncTime="3222.265">Very well.</text>
        <text syncTime="3223.617">The case is submitted.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="unknown" startTime="3225.033" stopTime="3249.110">
        <label>Unknown Speaker</label>
        <text syncTime="3225.033">The honorable court is now adjourned until Monday next at ten o'clock.</text>
      </turn>
    </section>
  </episode>
</transcript>
