Home
Categories
EXPLORE
Music
Comedy
Society & Culture
Education
Health & Fitness
History
Business
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Loading...
0:00 / 0:00
Podjoint Logo
MW
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/37/db/aa/37dbaaf6-dcd2-ea60-dcb3-eae26cebe1d9/mza_6864859924909012461.png/600x600bb.jpg
Bound By Oath by IJ
Institute for Justice
38 episodes
18 hours ago
Bound by Oath is a podcast series from the Center for Judicial Engagement at the Institute for Justice. It’s where the Constitution’s past catches up with the present. Article VI of the U.S. Constitution requires every judge to be “bound by Oath” to uphold “this Constitution.” But to understand if judges are following that oath, it’s important to ask, “What is in ‘this Constitution’?” Your host John Ross takes a deep dive into the Constitution’s text, history, and characters, and interviews historians, legal scholars, and the real people involved in historic and contemporary cases.
Show more...
Government
RSS
All content for Bound By Oath by IJ is the property of Institute for Justice and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Bound by Oath is a podcast series from the Center for Judicial Engagement at the Institute for Justice. It’s where the Constitution’s past catches up with the present. Article VI of the U.S. Constitution requires every judge to be “bound by Oath” to uphold “this Constitution.” But to understand if judges are following that oath, it’s important to ask, “What is in ‘this Constitution’?” Your host John Ross takes a deep dive into the Constitution’s text, history, and characters, and interviews historians, legal scholars, and the real people involved in historic and contemporary cases.
Show more...
Government
Episodes (20/38)
Bound By Oath by IJ
Neat Takings Tricks | Season 3, Ep. 13
The Fifth Amendment says that the government must pay just compensation when it takes private property for public use, a command that, regrettably, is often treated as a mere suggestion. On this episode, we take a look at a variety of gambits and flim-flammeries that let the government take property without paying for it.



Click here for episode transcript.



Agins v. Tiburon



First English v. County of Los Angeles
Show more...
1 month ago
1 hour 12 minutes 45 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Trust But Verify | Season 3, Ep. 12
In 1973, federal narcotics agents raided a pair of homes in Collinsville, Illinois by mistake. They didn't find any drugs, but they did terrorize two innocent families. The incident sparked nationwide outrage, and in response Congress passed legislation crafting a legal remedy for victims of federal law enforcement abuses. Over the years, however, lower courts have chipped away at the law to the point where it has essentially been repealed: Last year, a federal appeals court rejected claims from an innocent family, the Martin family, who were held at gunpoint after the FBI mistakenly raided their home in Atlanta. Fortunately, next week, on April 29, 2025, the Supreme Court will hold oral argument in Martin v. United States, and IJ will urge the justices to reverse course.  



On this episode, we explore the Federal Tort Claims Act, which was originally enacted in 1946 and then amended in 1974, to create a remedy for wrongful acts by government officials. We feature guests who worked on getting the 1974 amendment, called the law-enforcement proviso, passed into law.



Click here for episode transcript.



Martin v. United States (Eleventh Circuit opinion)
Show more...
3 months ago
46 minutes 10 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Everything You Eat, Drink, and Wear | Season 3, Ep. 11
Government officials must obtain a warrant before forcibly entering a home (absent consent or an emergency). That rule goes back to the Founding. But in a series of cases, culminating in Camara v. San Francisco in 1967, the Supreme Court announced an ahistorical exception, holding that the Fourth Amendment is less protective when it is a health inspector, rather than a police officer, knocking at the door.



On this episode, we hear from Marshall Krause, who argued Camara on behalf of the ACLU of Northern California. And we head to Pottstown, Pennsylvania, where a challenge to the borough's rental inspection program lays bare the cost of ignoring traditional limits on government power.



Click here for episode transcript.



Frank v. Maryland



Camara v. San Francisco
Show more...
5 months ago

Bound By Oath by IJ
Special Weapons and Tactics | Season 3, Ep. 10
In 2020, a police SWAT team blew up Vicki Baker's house after a fugitive barricaded himself inside. On this episode, we ask: who pays the tab when the government damages or destroys private property for the public good — the unlucky owner or the public as a whole?



Click here for episode transcript.



Pumpelly v. Green Bay & Mississippi Canal Company



Armstrong v. United States
Show more...
6 months ago
1 hour 7 minutes 32 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Punishment Without Crime | Season 3, Ep. 9
Civil forfeiture is a civil rights nightmare, allowing police and prosecutors to seize billions of dollars’ worth of property annually—cash, cars, houses, bank accounts, and more—without charging anyone with a crime, let alone obtaining a conviction. On this episode, we trace the rise of the modern forfeiture regime in the 1970s and 80s, and we look at forfeiture's historic roots.



Click here for episode transcript.



Miller v. United States



The Palmyra



Bennis v. Michigan
Show more...
10 months ago
1 hour 14 minutes 8 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Public Purpose | Season 3, Ep. 8
In 2005, in the case of Kelo v. New London, the Supreme Court allowed officials to seize and raze an entire neighborhood of well-maintained homes and businesses in the hopes that someone else could build fancier homes and businesses. According to the dissenters, the majority's opinion effectively deleted the provision of the U.S. Constitution requiring that takings be for a "public use." On this episode, we ask: what, if anything, is left of the prohibition on using eminent domain to take property from Person A merely to give it to Person B? And we look at some current litigation that can restore traditional limits on the government's power of eminent domain.



Click here for transcript.



Kelo v. New London



Hawai'i Housing Authority v. Midkiff
Show more...
1 year ago
1 hour 5 minutes 19 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
The Despotic Power | Season 3, Ep. 7
On this episode: Berman v. Parker, the Supreme Court's decision in 1954 to abandon previous constitutional limits on the government's power to take property from Person A to give it to Person B. The decision greenlit the era of urban renewal, which saw over a thousand cities across the country seize and bulldoze entire neighborhoods en masse.



Click here for episode transcript.



Berman v. Parker



Schneider v. D.C.
Show more...
1 year ago

Bound By Oath by IJ
This is Mine | Season 3, Ep. 6
On this episode, we take a break from case law and go way back to the beginning to examine the origins and justifications of private property.



Click here for episode transcript.



Tyler v. Hennepin County
Show more...
1 year ago
44 minutes 33 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
The Blessings of Quiet Seclusion | Season 3, Ep. 5
On this episode we return to the subject of zoning. With the doors to federal courthouses barred shut, advocates for reforming zoning have turned to state courts and state constitutions. Most famously, in 1975, the New Jersey Supreme Court took a look at a zoning ordinance that made it illegal to build low- and moderate-income housing in the township of Mount Laurel and said in no uncertain terms: enough. But the story of the Mount Laurel doctrine, which calls for municipalities to do their fair share to meet the regional demand for affordable housing, is not all milk and honey. Additionally, we take a look at some current efforts in other states to protect property rights under state constitutions.



Click here for Open Fields Conference



Click here for episode transcript.



Mount Laurel I (1975) and Mount Laurel II (1983)



Warth v. Seldin



Belle Terre v. Boraas
Show more...
1 year ago
1 hour 1 minute 58 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
A Pig in a Parlor | Season 3, Ep. 4
In 1926, in the case of Euclid v. Ambler, the Supreme Court upheld zoning, giving elected officials and city planners vast, new, and largely unchecked power to tell people what they can and cannot do with their own private property. On this episode: the story of the lawsuit that changed everything for American property rights plus the personalities who made it happen.



Click here for episode transcript.



Euclid v. Ambler (Supreme Court opinion)



Ambler v. Euclid (district court opinion)



Nectow v. Cambridge
Show more...
1 year ago
53 minutes 10 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
A Lost World | Season 3, Ep. 3
On Episode 3, we journey back to a lost world: the world before zoning. And we take a look at a trio of historic property rights cases. In In re Lee Sing, San Francisco officials tried to wipe Chinatown off the map. In Buchanan v. Warley, Louisville, Ky. officials mapped out where in the city residents were allowed to live based on their race. And in Hadacheck v. Sebastian, a Los Angeles city councilman sought to use the police power to protect his real estate investments.



Click here for transcript.
Show more...
1 year ago
36 minutes 44 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Groping in a Fog | Season 3, Ep. 2
In 1922, Scranton, Pennsylvania was said to be on the verge of collapsing into the vast coal mines beneath the city; residents, buildings, and streets alike were being swallowed up by “suddenly yawning chasms.” State legislators responded by unanimously passing a law meant to save the region, where about a million people lived, from total desolation. But when the law reached the Supreme Court, the justices struck it down, ruling that it would be an unconstitutional “regulatory taking” to force coal companies to leave their coal in the ground. On this episode, we go to nearby Pittston, Pennsylvania to find out what happened to the house at the center of the case. Did it—or Scranton—fall into the pits? After that, we trace the major developments in regulatory takings doctrine, which protect against regulations that go “too far.” But we wind up in a bit of a fog. Plus! This episode will have an unsolved murder—and some Supreme Court trivia: did you know a future Supreme Court justice argued the case on behalf of Scranton (at least in state court)?



Click here for transcript.



Photos of the desolation of Scranton.



Pennsylvania Coal v. Mahon



Penn Central v. New York City
Show more...
1 year ago
1 hour 12 minutes 6 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Mr. Thornton’s Woods | Season 3, Ep. 1
In 1984, the Supreme Court ruled that the Fourth Amendment's protections against warrantless searches do not apply to "open fields." Which means that government agents can jump over fences, ignore No Trespassing signs, and roam private land at will. There are no limits. On this episode, we talk to Richard and Linda Thornton, whose property in rural Maine was at the center of the case. And we ask: Can the Founders really have thought the Constitution did not protect private woods, fields, farms, and more from warrantless invasions?



Click here for transcript.



Oliver v. United States 



Hester v. United States
Show more...
1 year ago
1 hour 6 minutes 18 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Season 3 Teaser
Season 3 of Bound By Oath is coming soon!



Click here for transcript.
Show more...
1 year ago
3 minutes 28 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
State Remedies | SEASON 2, EP. 11
With the doors to federal court closing on civil rights claims, this final episode of Season 2 heads to new terrain: state court.



Click here for transcript. Click here for Episode 1.
Show more...
3 years ago
1 hour 31 minutes 38 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Prosecutors, Perjurers, and Other Non-Persons — Part 2 | Season 2, Ep. 10
In 1983, in the case of Briscoe v. LaHue, the Supreme Court ruled that government employees who commit perjury at trial are absolutely immune from civil liability. On Part 2 of Episode 10, we dig into the Court’s reasoning and the backstory behind Briscoe. We also discuss a special category of officials whom the Supreme…
Show more...
3 years ago
45 minutes 49 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Prosecutors, Perjurers, and Other Non-Persons — Part 1 | Season 2, Ep. 10
In 2005, Charles Rehberg annoyed some politically powerful people in his community of Albany, Georgia, and found himself facing serious criminal charges—charges that were completely made up by a rogue prosecutor and could only be sustained because an investigator committed perjury. In Episode 10, we explore the case of Rehberg v. Paulk, which reached the…
Show more...
3 years ago
58 minutes 45 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Closing the Courthouse Doors | Season 2, Ep. 9
On this episode, we take stock of developments in the courts and in Congress since this season began. There's an update on the first case we talked about this season, Brownback v. King. We talk about exciting new cases that the Supreme Court is being asked to take up. Plus, some recent decisions in the lower courts that mean that federal officials are functionally—if not by name—entitled to absolute immunity from constitutional claims in D.C., Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Iowa, North Dakota, and South Dakota.

Click here for transcript. Click here for Episode 1.

Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, TuneIn, Stitcher, and Amazon Music.
Show more...
3 years ago
56 minutes 51 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Persons Who Are Not “Persons” | Season 2, Ep. 8
Section 1983 says that "every person" acting under color of state law shall be liable for violating the Constitution. But in 1951, the Supreme Court began to rule that some officials weren't "persons" within the meaning of Section 1983 and that those officials thus enjoy absolute immunity—no matter how malicious, corrupt, or unconstitutional their conduct may be. On Episode 8, we examine absolute immunity for legislators and judges.

Click here for transcript. Click here for Episode 1.

Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, TuneIn, and Stitcher.
Show more...
3 years ago
1 hour 2 minutes 25 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
The Shooting of Bobby Moore — Part 2 | Season 2, Ep. 7
In 1978, the Supreme Court held that individuals can sue local governments for constitutional violations in federal court. Indeed, the Court held that Congress had always intended for such suits to be available — ever since it passed the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871. However, the standard that the Court says plaintiffs must meet to get their municipal liability claims before a jury is exceedingly high, and getting higher.

On Part 2 of our episode on municipal liability under Section 1983, we find out if Sylvia Perkins mustered enough evidence of dysfunction at the Little Rock Police Department to get her day in court against the city.

Click here for transcript.

Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, TuneIn, and Stitcher.

Please click here to learn more about friend-of-the-podcast Coleman Watson's stroke and recovery.
Show more...
4 years ago
1 hour 1 minute 34 seconds

Bound By Oath by IJ
Bound by Oath is a podcast series from the Center for Judicial Engagement at the Institute for Justice. It’s where the Constitution’s past catches up with the present. Article VI of the U.S. Constitution requires every judge to be “bound by Oath” to uphold “this Constitution.” But to understand if judges are following that oath, it’s important to ask, “What is in ‘this Constitution’?” Your host John Ross takes a deep dive into the Constitution’s text, history, and characters, and interviews historians, legal scholars, and the real people involved in historic and contemporary cases.