Justices take up “false statement” dispute and rare capital case

The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments early next year in a case involving a member of one of Chicago’s most prominent political dynasties, a relatively rare capital case, and Mexico’s lawsuit against U.S. gun manufacturers. In a short list of orders, the justices on Friday added 15 new cases to their docket for the 2024-25 term, which starts on Monday.

The order granting the new cases came from the justices’ “long conference” on Sept. 30 – the first conference since early July in which they have met to consider petitions for review. Another list of orders from that conference (among other things, denying review of hundreds of petitions that have accumulated since July) is expected on Monday, Oct. 7.

The justices agreed to hear the case of Patrick Daley Thompson, the grandson of Richard J. Daley, who served as the mayor of Chicago from 1955 to 1976, and the nephew of Richard M. Daley, who served as mayor from 1989 to 2011. Thompson himself was elected as a member of Chicago’s city council in 2015.

In 2011, Thompson borrowed $110,000 from Washington Federal Bank for Savings, a small bank in Chicago’s Bridgeport neighborhood, where the Daley family made its name. Thompson later took out two additional loans, totaling just under $100,000, for which he did not sign any paperwork. Thompson made only one payment on any of his loans, paying $389.58 in 2012; the bank did not ask him to pay anything else.

Washington Federal Bank for Savings shut down in 2017 in the wake of an embezzlement scheme by the bank’s executives, and a few days after the bank’s president died by suicide.

When Thompson spoke with a firm hired by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to collect the money that he owed the bank, Thompson disputed that he owed $219,000 plus interest. Instead, he said, he had borrowed $110,000.

Thompson eventually agreed to repay $219,000 – the amount that he had borrowed, but without interest. He was later charged with (as relevant here) violating a federal law that makes it a crime to make a false statement to influence financial institutions and federal agencies. Arguing that he had received special treatment with the loans because of “his status in the community and his role as an elected official,” prosecutors pointed to Thompson’s statements that he had only owed $110,000.

Thompson was convicted and served four months in prison. On appeal, he argued that the federal law under which he was convicted does not bar statements that are misleading but not false – such as his assertion that he had borrowed $110,000, which left out the “important contextual information” that he had later borrowed nearly $100,000 more. A federal appeals court in Chicago rejected that contention, prompting him to go to the Supreme Court.

In his petition for review in the Supreme Court, Thompson asserted that the federal courts of appeals are divided over whether the ban on making a “false statement” also prohibits statements that are misleading but true. Three courts of appeals have adopted a literal interpretation of the law, he said, “to criminalize only the making of statements that are false,” while four others (including the one in which he was convicted) “interpret the statute more broadly” to apply also to misleading statements. The latter interpretation, he suggested, “also threatens to criminalize a vast and ill-defined range of statements,” such as those made during mortgage negotiations.

The federal government urged the justices to allow Thompson’s conviction to stand. Thompson, U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote, was convicted not only for saying that he borrowed $110,000 but also because he said that “any higher amount was incorrect” and for misrepresenting the purposes for which he had borrowed the money – both of which were unquestionably false, not merely misleading. The government also disputed Thompson’s contention that the federal courts of appeals are divided on the central question in his case. 

In July, the justices agreed to put the execution of Ruben Gutierrez on hold to give them time to consider his appeal. On Friday the court granted that appeal.

Gutierrez was sentenced to die for the 1998 stabbing death of 85-year-old Escolastica Harrison in Brownsville, Tex. But Gutierrez has long insisted that he did not go into Harrison’s home on the night of the murder, and he has sought access to the physical evidence in the case so that he can test it for DNA evidence that might help to clear him.

In 2021, a federal district court in Texas ruled that the state law governing postconviction DNA testing violates an inmate’s constitutional right to due process. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit reversed that ruling, however, holding that Gutierrez does not have a legal right to sue, known as standing, to bring his challenge.

Gutierrez contended that his case was “indistinguishable” from another Texas man, Rodney Reed, who sought DNA evidence that he maintained would exonerate him. In his case, Gutierrez argued, the court of appeals imposed an additional requirement for standing by suggesting that state officials would not allow him to obtain DNA testing because a state court in Texas had suggested that the DNA test results could not help Gutierrez anyway.

Texas urged the justices to allow the 5th Circuit’s decision to stand, arguing that Gutierrez’s argument rested on an “overwrought application” of the “Fifth Circuit’s straightforward application of this Court’s holding” in Rodney Reed’s case. But the justices agreed to take up his case, which – along with the others granted on Friday – likely will be argued sometime next year.

The other cases granted on Friday are:

This article was originally published at Howe on the Court

Posted in: Featured, Merits Cases

CLICK HERE FOR FULL VERSION OF THIS STORY