The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and District Federal Judges Catholic Faith and Ochlocracy Ensures Catholic Sexual Predators Obtain Immunity Whilst Whistleblowers are Targeted and Sanctioned
MAY 18, 2024
In a stark revelation, the concept of ‘immunity’ has devolved into a shield for heinous acts perpetuated by both the judiciary and the entities it upholds. This case stands as a glaring testament to the mockery that our judicial system has become—a stage where the outcome is dictated by the unholy trinity of religion, greed, and politics.
May 16, 2024
Faith in Motion
Dear Prayer Warrior,
It’s been two weeks since the National Day of Prayer.
As I began praying along with others in the National Prayer Room, I felt rejuvenated in my zeal for pursuing God’s Will for my life.
We streamed 426 hours of member prayers as all 50 states tuned in.
Over a quarter of a million people joined us online that day, and countless more in churches and events across the nation.
Seeing so many lifting their voices to our Heavenly Father was a good reminder that God is in control of our country and future.
God is good and we are truly blessed!
If you were one of the many who participated, we invite you to take our short survey on our National Day of Prayer guides.
Please let us know your thoughts so that we can provide the best resources to you each year.
“This God—his way is perfect; the word of the Lord proves true; he is a shield for all those who take refuge in him.” 2 Samuel 22:31
We are officially less than six months away from the national election and we are turning our full attention toward Pray the Vote.
The staff has already been preparing as we will be guiding on important issues and key needs for the 2024 elections.
If you have not given before, or maybe it has been a while, now is a great time because the month of May is historically a slower month for donations.
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But pause now and prayerfully consider helping us with a gift as we continue our work serving you and this country for prayer and help us prepare our nation for Pray the Vote!
Thank you for your continued prayers and encouragement. God bless.
Jim Bolthouse
President
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A New Orleans attorney facing a $400,000 court penalty for warning a school principal and a reporter about a high school chaplain who was suspected of being a sexual predator took his case to a federal appeals court Wednesday.
Richard Trahant, who represents victims of clergy abuse, acknowledges having told a reporter to keep the chaplain “on your radar,” and that he asked the principal whether the person was still at the school.
But, he said in a Tuesday interview, he gave no specific information about accusations against the man, and did not violate a federal bankruptcy court’s protective order requiring confidentiality.
It’s a position echoed by Trahant’s lawyer, Paul Sterbcow, under questioning from members of a three-judge panel at the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
“Here’s my problem. I think I have a moral obligation to disclose something I find out about someone to protect them,”
said Judge Priscilla Richman.
“But the court has said unequivocally, ‘You are under a protective order. You cannot violate that protective order.’ I do it knowingly. I may have good intentions, but I do it knowingly. To me, that’s an intentional, knowing violation of the order.”
“Our position is that there was no protective order violation,”
Sterbcow told Richman, emphasizing that Trahant was cautious, limiting what he said.
“He’s very careful when he communicates to say, I’m constrained by a protective order. I can’t do this. I can’t do that, I can’t reveal this, I can’t reveal that.”
Outside court, Sterbcow stressed that it has been established that Trahant was not the source for a Jan. 18, 2022, news story about the chaplain, who had by then resigned.
Sterbcow also said there were “multiple potential violators” of the protective order.
The sanctions against Trahant stem from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans’ filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2020 amid growing legal costs related to sexual abuse by priests.
The bankruptcy court issued a protective order keeping vast amounts of information under wraps.
In June 2022, U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Meredith Grabill ruled that Trahant had violated the order.
In October of that year she assessed the $400,000 penalty — estimated to be about half the cost of investigating the allegations of the alleged protective order violation.
The appeal of the bankruptcy court order first went to U.S. District Judge Greg Guidry, who upheld the sanctions.
But Guidry later recused himself from handling matters involving the bankruptcy case after an Associated Press report showed he donated tens of thousands of dollars to the archdiocese and consistently ruled in favor of the church in the case involving nearly 500 clergy sex abuse victims.
The bankruptcy case eventually was assigned to U.S. District Judge Barry Ashe, who last year denied Trahan’s motion to vacate the sanctions.
Richman at one point in Wednesday’s arguments, suggested that Trahant should have asked Grabill for an exemption from the protective order rather if he thought information needed to get out.
It was a point Attorney Mark Mintz, representing the archdiocese, echoed in his argument.
“If we really thought there was a problem and that the debtor and the court needed to act, all you have to do is pick up the phone and call,” Mintz said.
Sterbcow said Trahant was concerned at the time that the court would not act quickly enough.
“Mr. Trahant did not believe and still doesn’t believe — and now, having reviewed all of this and how this process worked, I don’t believe — that going to the judge was going to provide the children with the protection that they needed, the immediate protection that they needed,”
Sterbcow said told Richman.
The panel did not indicate when it would rule.
And the decision may not hinge so much on whether Trahant violated the protective order as on legal technicalities — such as whether Grabill’s initial finding in June 2023 constituted an “appealable order” and whether Trahant was given proper opportunities to make his case before the sanction was issued.
Richman, nominated to the 5th Circuit by former President George W. Bush, was on the panel with judges Andrew Oldham, nominated by former President Donald Trump, and Irma Ramirez, nominated by President Joe Biden.
Archbishop Gregory Michael Aymond now serves as the 14th Archbishop of New Orleans.
Archbishop Aymond holds the unique distinction of being the first New Orleans native to serve as Archbishop of New Orleans in the 216-year history of the local church.
Archbishop Aymond was born in New Orleans on November 12, 1949.
After attending St. James Major Elementary School and Cor Jesu High School, in the Gentilly neighborhood, he went to St. Joseph Seminary College in St. Benedict, La. and graduated in 1971.
He earned a master’s degree in divinity from Notre Dame Seminary in New Orleans in 1975 and was ordained as a priest of the New Orleans Archdiocese the same year.
From 1973 to 1981, he was a professor, business administrator and then Rector of St. John Vianney Preparatory Seminary in New Orleans.
From 1981 to 1986, he was professor of pastoral theology and homiletics and Director of Education at Notre Dame Seminary.
The archbishop served as President-Rector of Notre Dame Seminary from 1986 until the end of the 1999-2000 academic year, longer than any rector in the seminary’s history.
He also was a member of the seminary faculty for 18 years.
During his tenure, Notre Dame Seminary grew to become the third-largest seminary in the country. Archbishop Aymond was ordained an Auxiliary Bishop of New Orleans in 1997.
Archbishop Aymond also served as the executive director of the archdiocesan Department of Christian Formation, with responsibility for Catholic schools and religious education, and as the Archdiocesan Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith.
He has made mission work a strong emphasis of his ministry.
In the 1980s, Archbishop Aymond and groups of seminarians from Notre Dame Seminary began to visit Sotuto, Mexico, where they built housing and offered religious training.
In 1994, he began a medical mission program in Nicaragua called ‘Christ the Healer,’ taking volunteer teams of health care professionals to the town of Granada to offer medical help at San Juan de Dios Hospital.
Archbishop Aymond was named Bishop of Austin in 2000.
Under his tenure, the Diocese of Austin experienced unprecedented expansion, including a threefold increase in the number of seminarians.
He established the Institute for Spiritual Direction, opened San Juan Diego Catholic High School for students from low-income families, opened St. Dominic Savio Catholic High School and initiated a distance learning program with St. Mary’s University in San Antonio that allows lay people in the Austin Diocese to obtain master’s degrees in theology.
Archbishop Aymond has served as chairman of the U.S. Bishops’ Committee on the Protection of Children and Young People. He also was chairman of the Board of Directors of the National Catholic Educational Association from 2000-04.
Archbishop Aymond was installed as Archbishop of New Orleans on August 20, 2009.
Doe v. Career Tech. Ctr., CIVIL ACTION No. 3:20-0088, at *21 (M.D. Pa. Mar. 11, 2020)
(“The court finds that plaintiffs’ well-pleaded facts allege the existence of continuous sexual harassment and abuse by Humphrey at CTC towards C.D. and the other male students, and that plaintiff has pled the essential elements of his Title IX claim in Count I against SSD.”)
Lucente v. Cnty. of Suffolk, 980 F.3d 284, 308 (2d Cir. 2020)
(“As in Matusick , plaintiffs here have presented evidence that raises genuine issues of material fact as to whether Suffolk County supervisory officials had knowledge of Foti’s alleged widespread unconstitutional conduct sufficient to create an official policy or custom of inaction through actual or constructive notice of (and constructive acquiescence to) that conduct. The district court erred in concluding otherwise.”)
LIT Note: The Author of this article, Josh Blackman, a Texas Law Professor is pro-judiciary as his supplemental income is derived from books and merchandise he spins and promotes at the Federalist Society where he lives part-time.
Today, Justice Kavanaugh spoke at the Fifth Circuit Judicial Conference in Austin.
I was pleased this session was open to the press, and saw several reporters in the room. The Washington Post has an early report.
Chief Judge Richman interviewed Justice Kavanaugh. It was a very engaging exchange. I thought Richman ably showed off the Justice’s personal side.
There were many questions about Justice Kavanaugh’s daughters, and we learned that he took them to both a Taylor Swift concert and a Caitlin Clark basketball game.
Generally, these sorts of presentations repeat the same bromides, but Justice Kavanaugh made some points that (I don’t recall that) he had made before.
First, Justice Kavanaugh addressed the declining number of cert grants. This term there will be about 60 merits decisions.
Kavanaugh said that his ideal number would be about 75, and he observed that he has been pointing out cases that he would grant.
I’ve praised this practice.
Most of these cases are not high-profile, but they signal that Kavanaugh is closely monitoring the petitions, and flags to litigants what cases may get a grant in the future.
Kavanaugh also said it is somewhat unfair to compare the present-day Court with the Court in the early 1990s when there were ~150 cert grants per year. Kavanaugh reminded us that when Justices Brennan and Marshall were on the Court, there were far more cert grants in death penalty and CrimPro cases.
AI Going the Extra Mile
One point that Kavanaugh did not address, that I have thought a lot about recently, is the “join three.”
With that tradition, if three justices were willing to grant cert, a fourth would provide a courtesy fourth vote–the so-called “join three.”
Justice O’Connor, as I recall, would frequently provide a “join three.”
This was how many death penalty cases were granted: Justices Brennan, Blackmun, and Marshall would vote for cert, and they would get a join-three.
On the present Court, we routinely see cases with three dissents from denial, suggesting that there is no courtesy fourth vote.
By my count, Justice Barrett had only one dissent from denial–she seems the Justice most hesitant to grant cert. I don’t know if the “join three” is dead and buried, but it may be a vestige of a prior time.
Second, Justice Kavanaugh addressed the emergency docket–giving a shout-out to Professor Vladeck, who was at the conference.
Kavanaugh spoke at some length about his opinion in Labrador v. Poe, which I have written about before.
In particular, Kavanaugh explained that the predominating factor for these emergency cases is likelihood of success on the merits, rather than the balance of the harms, which generally even out.
He mentioned that he had joined Justice Barrett’s opinion in Does v. Mills, which focused on cert-worthiness, but Kavanaugh downplayed that factor, as he did in Labrador.
I think Kavanaugh is exactly right. And that message was heard loud and clear by all the Fifth Circuit judges in the room.
Third, Justice Kavanaugh spoke about the process of drafting opinions.
Kavanaugh explained that at conference, one of the hardest tasks is figuring out if there are five votes for a majority opinion–though he always favors unanimous opinions.
As is well known, at conference each Justice gets to speak at least once before anyone speaks twice, starting with the Chief Justice.
But after everyone speaks once, Kavanaugh said, it becomes something of a free-for-all.
The Chief will call on people, like in school, Kavanaugh mentioned.
Next comes the opinion writing process.
Kavanaugh explained that when you see adverbs like “ordinarily” or “generally” in an opinion, those words were necessary to hold a majority opinion.
Ditto for a footnote that seems to undermine everything the majority opinion said.
Sometimes, Kavanaugh said, providing clearer resolution will have to wait for another case.
Fourth, Justice Kavanaugh addressed oral argument at the Court.
For his first two terms, the Court followed the traditional one-hour limit. Kavanaugh said it felt frustrating when he would ask one question in a line of questions, and then get cut off by another Justice.
Kavanaugh said he very much likes the new format, including the round-robin seriatim round.
It lets him follow through on a line of questions from start to finish.
He was also happy that Justice Thomas now has an opportunity to ask questions.
Kavanaugh mentioned that not everyone is happy with the new format.
He called out Paul Clement as one such skeptic; by contrast, Kavanaugh said, Lisa Blatt likes the format.
(Clement & Blatt will give the SCOTUS roundup at the conference on Saturday morning).
Justice Kavanaugh also seemed quite relaxed and open.
He was enjoying himself.
The first five years of his tenure were remarkably chaotic.
From the confirmation hearings to COVID to the assassination attempt, and everything in between.
But he looked at ease now, and stayed afterwards to shake hands and take pictures with everyone.
It is sometimes said that it takes a new Justice five years to find his or her rhythm.
I think Kavanaugh is now hitting his stride.
I’ve praised several of his opinions this year.
I will, of course, reserve judgment till the end of June, but so far, this has been his most effective term on the Court.
TEXAS: THE CATHOLIC BANDIT IS NO CHRISTIAN
Interviewed by Italian mag Scarp de’ Tenis, Pope Francis says giving money to someone begging on the street is always right. Even if the recipient uses the money to buy a glass of wine instead of food, the pope’s response is: that’s OK. pic.twitter.com/DclwVvqdic— lawsinusa (@lawsinusa) May 17, 2024
Adams v. Roman Catholic Church of the Archdiocese of New Orleans (In re Roman Catholic Church of the Archdiocese of New Orleans)
No. 22-30539 (5th Cir. May 13, 2024)
“Judge Jones argues that a child has no constitutionally protected interest in being free from physical sexual abuse by a teacher who uses his position of authority to seduce her. I respectfully disagree with that result and the methodology behind it.”
Doe v. Taylor Independent School Dist, 15 F.3d 443, 460 (5th Cir. 1994)
Before King, Jones, and Oldham, Circuit Judges. Edith H. Jones, Circuit Judge:
Appellants are former members of the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (“Committee”), appointed as part of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings initiated by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans (“Archdiocese”).
Appellants contend that their removal from the Committee by the bankruptcy court was unlawful, and that the district court erred in denying their motion to vacate the judgment because the district judge who was originally assigned their appeal should have recused himself earlier.
We conclude that the district court did not err in declining to vacate the judgment, and the Appellants lack standing under Article III to prosecute this appeal. AFFIRMED.
BACKGROUND
The Archdiocese sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy relief on May 1, 2020, “largely in response to numerous lawsuits brought against it in state court alleging sexual abuse by priests or lay persons employed or supervised by the Archdiocese and complicity of the Archdiocese in that abuse.”1
About three weeks afterward, the United States Trustee (“Trustee”) appointed the Committee.
Id. at 805.
At the time of the relevant events in this case, the Committee was composed of six of the more than 450 abuse claimants.
Id.
The Committee, as a single unit and with the bankruptcy court’s approval, is represented by the law firms of Locke Lord LLP and Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP.
Id.
But individual members of the committee retained their respective state-court counsel to advise them on their individual claims against the Archdiocese and its bankruptcy estate and to assist them in
1 In re Roman Cath. Church of Archdiocese of New Orleans, 678 F. Supp. 3d 797, 804 (E.D. La. 2023) (footnote omitted) [hereinafter “Trahant Ashe Opinion”].
This opinion, which is integrally related to this case but is not the subject of this appeal, involves the motions for rehearing and motions to vacate filed by the Appellants’ attorney, Mr. Trahant, as they relate to the bankruptcy court’s sanction against him.
In that opinion, Judge Ashe denied Trahant’s motions for rehearing and motion to vacate, but withdrew Judge Guidry’s March 27, 2023, opinion that affirmed the bankruptcy court.
fulfilling their duties as Committee members.
Id.
Until June 7, 2022, Richard C. Trahant served as counsel or co-counsel to four of the six individual members of the Committee—the four Appellants in this case.
In re Roman Cath. Church of Archdiocese of New Orleans, 652 B.R. 138, 145–46 (E.D. La. 2023) [hereinafter “Adams Ashe Opinion”].
Because of the sensitive nature of the tort claims at the heart of the Archdiocese’s bankruptcy, in August 2020,2 the bankruptcy court adopted a protective order negotiated by the Archdiocese and the Committee governing the use and disclosure of confidential materials.
Trahant Ashe Opinion, 678 F. Supp 3d. at 806.
In December 2021, the Archdiocese produced certain materials it designated as confidential.
These included documents related to the Archdiocese’s Internal Review Board’s evaluation of decades-old abuse allegations against a specific priest who had neither been included on the Archdiocese’s previously published “Credibly Accused List” nor named in a proof of claim filed in the bankruptcy case.
Adams Ashe Opinion, 652 B.R. at 143.
Within days of receiving this information, Trahant, who specializes in litigating clergy sexual abuse cases, sent a text message to his cousin, the principal of a high school where the priest worked.
Trahant Ashe Opinion, 678 F. Supp 3d. at 807–08.
Trahant’s text message mentioned the priest’s name.
Trahant later admitted that he did so to ensure that his cousin would infer that the priest had been accused of sexual abuse, and to ensure that the priest would not be allowed to return to work at the high school.
Id. at 808.
Trahant had further conversations with his cousin in January 2022, during which he disclosed the nature of the allegations against the priest, which he had learned about through the confidential documents produced by the Archdiocese.
Id.
Thus, Trahant’s awareness of the
2 The protective order has been amended as needed but remained in place as of June 2023. Trahant Ashe Opinion, 678 F. Supp 3d. at 806.
allegations against the priest was entirely a product of his representation of the Appellants—a status that gave him access to confidential documents in a sensitive legal proceeding.
The day after Trahant first texted his cousin, Trahant emailed a journalist, listing the priest’s name in the subject line, identifying the priest’s place of employment in the body, and urging the journalist to “keep him on your radar.”
Id. at 808.
Less than three weeks after Trahant reached out to the journalist, the journalist published an online newspaper article disclosing the priest’s name and details about the allegations against him.
The article also disclosed information about the Archdiocese’s Internal Review Board investigation and disposition of clergy abuse claims.
All of this information was previously non-public.
Id.
The Archdiocese responded to the leak by filing a sealed motion to compel the Committee to investigate the source of the breach.
Adams Ashe Opinion, 652 B.R. at 143.
The Archdiocese also asked the bankruptcy court to conduct an evidentiary hearing to consider imposing sanctions for the apparent violation of the protective order.
Id.
In April 2022, a series of status conferences and informal discovery between the Archdiocese and the Committee identified Trahant as the leaker.
Id.
This included discovery responses from the high school confirming that Trahant had contacted his cousin, and a declaration from Trahant in which he admitted revealing the information to his cousin and the journalist.
Trahant Ashe Opinion, 678 F. Supp 3d. at 809.
In his declaration, Trahant asserted his belief that protecting minors was a legitimate compelling reason that justified the disclosure.3
Id.
The bankruptcy court, now aware of these additional facts,
3 Counsel for the Committee reached out to the Archdiocese’s counsel on January 4, 2022, with concerns about the continued service of the priest as a chaplain at a local high school. In response, the Archdiocese’s counsel contacted the Archdiocese and
appointed the Trustee to perform an independent investigation into the wrongful disclosure of the protected material.
Adams Ashe Opinion, 652 B.R. at 143.
As Judge Ashe’s district court opinion in this case noted, [t]he bankruptcy court was concerned not only with enforcing its own Orders, but with the timing of such breach and the negative impact that violation would have on the functioning of the Committee, the rights of parties in interest in the bankruptcy process, and the ability of the parties in this case to proceed in good faith in the upcoming mediation of claims asserted against the estate.
Id. at 143–44 (internal quotation omitted).
On June 3, 2022, after a nearly six-month long investigation, the Trustee filed its statement of position under seal, attaching 78 sworn declarations, 18 transcripts of sworn Rule 2004 examinations, and various other documents.
Id. at 144.
Judge Ashe’s district court opinion described Trahant’s deposition by the Trustee as follows:
Trahant was adamant in his deposition that he did not believe his actions violated the protective order, but he also testified contradictorily that he felt restricted by it.
He admitted, however, that he did not move for relief from the protective order to report what he claims were potential crimes, nor did he use the protective order’s mechanism for challenging the Archdiocese’s “confidential” designation of the documents it produced.
Id. at 144–45.
Four days after receiving the Trustee’s Report, the bankruptcy court issued its June 7, 2022, order finding that Trahant knowingly and willfully violated the protective order he was bound by and aware of.
Id. at 145.
learned that the priest was on extended medical leave and consequently had no contact with minors at the school. Trahant Ashe Opinion, 678 F. Supp 3d. at 806.
The bankruptcy court’s order noted its “duty to protect the integrity of the bankruptcy process and enforce its own Orders,” and found that Trahant’s willful breach of the protective order “clearly disqualifies him from further receiving Protected Material in this case and participating in any confidential Committee proceedings, including meetings, deliberations, and mediation.”
Id.
The bankruptcy court’s June 7 order went on to discuss the Committee members’ position in light of their attorney’s misbehavior:
[A]s personal counsel to individual Committee members, Trahant and his team of co-counsel received confidential information from the Debtor.
The Court acknowledges that individual Committee members may retain the attorney of their choosing to represent their personal interests in this chapter 11 case and have chosen Trahant and his group.
This Court certainly has no intention of invading the attorney-client privilege to modulate the communications between those Committee members and their attorneys; indeed, any attempt to regulate or stop the flow of information or candor that must exist between a client and her attorney is not only a futile endeavor, but would offend a fundamental facet of effective legal representation.
Thus, an impasse has been reached.
This Court must nevertheless act to protect against disruption of the bankruptcy process, to guard the rights of all parties in interest, and, most immediately in light of the current posture of this case, to preserve the trust in the confidentiality of mediation.
Given Trahant’s willful breach and disregard of this Court’s Protective Order and the dynamics present on the Committee, the Court is forced to impute Trahant’s actions to those of his clients on the Committee and finds cause for their removal from the Committee.
Thus, the bankruptcy court ordered the Trustee to remove Trahant’s four clients, the Appellants here, from the Committee “to prevent an abuse of process and to ensure adequate representation of creditors.”
The court rested its authority on Sections 105(a) and 1102(a)(4) of the Bankruptcy Code.
See 11 U.S.C. §§ 105(a), 1102(a)(4).
The June 7 order went on to state that the bankruptcy court would “issue a separate Order to Show Cause to determine appropriate sanctions for Trahant’s disclosure of confidential information in violation of this Court’s Protective Order.”
Trahant and Appellants separately appealed the June 7 order without seeking leave to file an interlocutory appeal.
The appeals from both Trahant and his clients were allocated to Judge Greg Guidry.
Trahant Ashe Opinion, 678 F. Supp 3d. at 812.
In the meantime, the Trustee appointed three new Committee members who were also abuse claimants, bringing its membership total to five.
The Archdiocese filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, arguing that the Appellants lacked standing to appeal the June 7 order and that the district court lacked jurisdiction to hear the interlocutory appeal given the lack of exceptional circumstances.
On August 11, 2022, Judge Guidry granted the Archdiocese’s motion to dismiss the appeal, concluding that that the Appellants lacked standing to appeal their removal from the Committee because they identified no direct and adverse impact on their pecuniary interests that flowed from the bankruptcy court’s order.
Judge Guidry further rejected the Appellants’ argument that they were “sanctioned” by the removal, in which instance the more lenient Article III or sanctions standing test would apply to their case.4
Bankruptcy court proceedings against Trahant, however, continued.
In August 2022, the bankruptcy court held a show-cause/contempt hearing.
Id. at *7.
Two months later, the bankruptcy court issued an opinion and order imposing a $400,000 sanction on Trahant for his knowing and willful breach of the protective order.
4 Below, we affirm Judge Guidry’s conclusion that Appellants lacked standing, but we do so on different grounds.
Id. at *9.
This amount was just over half of the $760,884.73 in attorney’s fees and costs that the Archdiocese and Committee incurred in investigating and dealing with the breach of the protective order.
Id.5
Trahant’s clients, meanwhile, appealed to the Fifth Circuit, but after the case was fully briefed and set for argument, Judge Guidry entered an order of recusal in Trahant’s consolidated appeals in April 2023.
Judge Guidry informed the parties in Trahant’s cases that the Committee on the Codes of Judicial Conduct had opined that he was not required to recuse because of his prior donations to and service on the board of Catholic charities that were not parties to the Archdiocese’s bankruptcy case.
But Judge Guidry decided to recuse voluntarily in Trahant’s appeals after the Associated Press published a widely reprinted article suggesting that Judge Guidry could not be impartial because of his prior association with Catholic charities.
Id. at *10.
Within days, Trahant’s clients moved to vacate Judge Guidry’s August 11, 2022, order in their case and disqualify him.
Judge Guidry recused himself shortly after this court stayed the appeal pending resolution in the district court.
District Judge Ashe was reassigned a number of appeals stemming from the Archdiocese’s bankruptcy.
On June 21, 2023, Judge Ashe denied the Appellants’ Rule 60(b)(6) motion to vacate the removal order, while also denying their motion to access the sealed Trustee Report from June 2022. See Adams Ashe Opinion, 652 B.R. at 141–42. Appellants appealed this order. The same day, Judge Ashe also issued an order holding that because
5 Trahant’s appeal of the bankruptcy court’s sanction against him is pending in this court in case number 23-30466.
Judge Guidry’s failure to recuse earlier was harmless error, he (Ashe) would not vacate the prior orders in Trahant’s consolidated appeals.
Trahant Ashe Opinion, 678 F. Supp 3d. at 831.
Both of the Appellants’ appeals in this court were consolidated, and a further round of briefing followed on whether Judge Guidry’s failure to recuse earlier was harmless error.
Children deserve safeguarding from chaplains accused of sexual misconduct, yet tragically, institutions like the Boy Scouts—frequented by the offspring of countless judges—remain shrouded in legal protection. Similarly, the Catholic Church operates as a sanctuary for wrongdoers, shielded by a network of legal privileges. These patterns not only perpetuate injustice but also underscore the dire need for systemic reform in our society’s most revered institutions.vv
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We apply the same standard of review as did the district court: the bankruptcy court’s factual findings are reviewed for clear error; its legal conclusions and mixed questions of fact and law, de novo.”
In re Mercer, 246 F.3d 391, 402 (5th Cir. 2001) (en banc).
We review the district court’s ruling on the Rule 60(b)(6) motion for abuse of discretion.
Roberts v. Wal- Mart La., L.L.C., 54 F.4th 852,854 (5th Cir. 2022).
ANALYSIS
Because Judge Guidry’s failure to recuse himself was harmless error, Judge Ashe did not err in denying the Appellants relief under Rule 60(b)(6).
Further, the Appellants lack Article III standing to appeal their removal from the Committee; Judge Guidry did not err in dismissing their appeal.
A. Judge Guidry Recusal
The Supreme Court affirms that 28 U.S.C. § 455, which governs judicial recusals, “does not, on its own, authorize the reopening of closed litigation.”
Liljeberg v. Health Servs. Acquisition Corp, 486 U.S. 847, 863, 108 S. Ct. 2194, 2204 (1988).
But as this court has noted:
In the § 455(a) context, however, the Supreme Court has held that Rule 60(b)(6) relief be analyzed according to these three factors:
“the risk of injustice to the parties in the particular case, the risk that the denial of relief will produce injustice in other cases, and the risk of undermining the public’s confidence in the judicial process.”
Roberts, 54 F.4th at 854 (quoting Liljeberg, 486 U.S. at 864, 108 S. Ct. at 2205).
A review of the law and facts makes clear that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the Appellants’ Rule 60(b)(6) motion.6
On the first Liljeberg factor, Judge Ashe did not err in concluding that the availability of review before this court eliminated any risk of injustice from declining to vacate the judgment under Rule 60(b)(6).
In the unique procedural posture of bankruptcy appeals, our review of Judge Guidry’s underlying order is conducted under the same standards used by the district court.
In re ASARCO, L.L.C., 650 F.3d 593, 600 (5th Cir. 2011).
Such essentially duplicative review is available to Appellants regardless of Judge Ashe’s ruling on the Rule 60(b)(6) motion.
This duality eliminates the risk of injustice. Decades ago, this court held that where the merits of a ruling would be subject to de novo review—such as a summary judgment ruling— “the parties are guaranteed a fair, impartial review of the merits of the ruling,” and that “[i]n cases where we would otherwise affirm such a ruling,
6 We reject the Appellants’ argument that they were entitled to de novo review by the district court.
This circuit recently held in a similar case that another district judge did not err in applying the harmless error standard to another Rule 60(b)(6) motion based on Section 455.
See Roberts, 54 F.4th at 855.
Appellants’ alternative arguments that they were entitled to de novo review by the district court because their due process rights were violated also fail.
See United States v. Brocato, 4 F.4th 296, 301 (5th Cir. 2021)
(“If a failure to recuse constitutes a due process violation, such error is not subject to harmless-error review.”).
Appellants argue that their due process rights were violated because Judge Guidry’s dismissal sanctioned them without notice and a hearing.
This is wrong.
First, as elaborated below, the bankruptcy court’s removal of the Appellants from the Committee was not a sanction.
Second, any procedural due process errors committed by the bankruptcy court cannot be bootstrapped into Judge Guidry’s failure to recuse and the Liljeberg analysis as applied to him.
little would be gained by vacating and remanding with instructions that it be essentially reinstated.”
Patterson v. Mobil Oil Corp., 335 F.3d 476, 485–86 (5th Cir. 2003) (quoting In re Cont’l.
Airlines Corp., 901 F.2d 1259, 1263 (5th Cir. 1990)).
This precedent of our court compels our resolution of the first factor, rather than contrary precedent from the Federal Circuit.7
On the second Liljeberg factor, Appellants contend the district court created injustice to the Trahant case by failing to vacate Judge Guidry’s order.
Appellants claim that there will continue to be injustice in one or both cases if they are not resolved together, and that the district court’s reliance on the facts and record in the Trahant appeal demonstrated as much.
Not so.
The Trahant appeal turns, ultimately, on the bankruptcy court’s imposition of sanctions on Trahant and whether Trahant was afforded procedural due process rights when the bankruptcy court sanctioned him.
In contrast, this case primarily turns on whether the Appellants have standing to challenge their removal from the Committee.
Moreover, these cases are not mutually dependent such that the disposition of one would necessarily control the disposition of the other.
Specifically, the Appellants’ removal from the Committee was the product of Trahant’s misconduct, not theirs.
If Appellants terminated their attorney- client relationship with Trahant tomorrow, they and their new lawyer(s) could request their re-appointment to the Committee by the Trustee.
The outcome of that request could then moot or significantly modify the relevant issues in this appeal.
Judge Ashe did not abuse his discretion in concluding
7 See Shell Oil Co. v. United States, 672 F.3d 1283, 1294 (Fed. Cir. 2012)
(holding that “a judge’s failure to recuse does not automatically constitute harmless error whenever there is de novo review on appeal”).
that there was no risk of injustice in the Trahant case due to Judge Guidry’s order in this case.
Finally, Judge Ashe did not err in his analysis of the third Liljeberg factor.
Appellants assert that Judge Guidry’s order undermines public confidence in the judicial process because his silence as to the reasons for his recusal has engendered much public speculation.
This is fallacious.
The public was placed on notice of Judge Guidry’s reasons from news reports and Judge Ashe’s published opinions.
Further, extensive public interest in the Archdiocese’s bankruptcy does not inherently justify vacating Judge Guidry’s order.
As Judge Ashe’s opinion states, there is a countervailing risk, which this Circuit has noted, to “mindlessly vacat[ing]” a recused judge’s rulings—especially where that ruling rested on sound legal reasoning.
See Patterson, 335 F.3d at 486.
B. Standing.
Until 1978, bankruptcy appellate standing was governed by a statute that stated:
“A person aggrieved by an order of a referee may. . . file with the referee a petition for review ”
In re Coho Energy, Inc., 395 F.3d 198, 202 (5th Cir. 2004) (emphasis added) (quoting 11 U.S.C. § 67(c) (1976) (repealed 1978)).
“Congress expressly removed this provision when it enacted the Bankruptcy Code in 1978.”
Matter of Highland Cap. Mgmt., L.P. (In re Highland Cap. Mgmt.), 74 F.4th 361, 366 (5th Cir. 2023).
Nonetheless, various of this court’s opinions, relying largely on a footnote’s worth of dicta in a 1994 opinion,8 have continued to apply the “person aggrieved” standard for appeals from bankruptcy courts.
Not only that, but the courts have described this as a higher and “more exacting” standard for evaluating
8 Rohm & Hass Tex., Inc. v. Ortiz Bros. Insulation, 32 F.3d 205, 210 n.18 (5th Cir. 1994).
standing in bankruptcy appeals than in cases arising under Article III.
Id.; see also Matter of Dean (In re Dean), 18 F.4th 842, 844 (5th Cir. 2021);
Matter of Technicool Sys., Inc. (In re Technicool), 896 F.3d 382, 385 (5th Cir. 2018);
Fortune Nat. Res. Corp. v. U.S. Dep’t of Interior, 806 F.3d 363, 366 (5th Cir. 2015);
In re Coho Energy, Inc., 395 F.3d at 202.9
In light of the statutory change, the ground for imposing this superseded gloss on the provisions governing bankruptcy appeals to district courts and courts of appeals is uncertain at best.
See 11 U.S.C. §§ 158(a), 158(d)(2);
see also In re Cap. Contracting Co., 924 F.3d 890, 896 (6th Cir. 2019).
Indeed, this court’s “exacting” “person aggrieved” test may be incompatible with the Supreme Court’s decision in Lexmark, which cast doubt on the role of prudential standing rules in federal courts.
Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc., 572 U.S. 118, 134 S. Ct. 1377, 1386 (2014);
see also In re GT Automation Grp., Inc., 828 F.3d 602, 605 n.1 (7th Cir. 2016).
But even if we were to assume, arguendo, that the “narrower” bankruptcy appellate standing test did not apply and that Article III standing controls this appeal, the outcome would be the same.
Appellants cannot show that the bankruptcy court’s order removing them from the Committee injured a legally protected interest.
Specifically, they were not in any way “sanctioned,” and no creditor has a “right” to serve or continue serving on a Creditors Committee.
“To establish injury in fact, a plaintiff must show that he or she suffered an invasion of a legally protected interest that is concrete and
9 This would appear to put our court in conflict with at least the Eleventh Circuit.
See In re Ernie Haire Ford, Inc., 764 F.3d 1321, 1325 n.3 (11th Cir. 2014);
see also In re Schubert, No. 21-3969, 2023 WL 2663257, at *2–*3 (6th Cir. Mar. 28, 2023)
(insinuating that the “person aggrieved” test had likely been overruled by the Supreme Court).
particularized and actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.”
Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 339, 136 S. Ct. 1540, 1548 (2016), (quotation marks omitted) (quoting Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560, 112 S. Ct. 2130, 2136 (1992)), as revised (May 24, 2016).
Here, the Appellants have failed to demonstrate an injury to any legally protected interest.
The statutory procedures for appointing members of a Creditors Committee do not guarantee any member the right to remain on the Committee.
Instead, Section 1102 of the Bankruptcy Code, which authorizes the formation of Creditors’ and Equity Security Holders’ Committees, states that the United States Trustee shall appoint an Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors and other committees “as the United States Trustee deems appropriate.”
11 U.S.C. § 1102(a)(1).
The provision goes on to specify the procedures that should be taken to remove a committee member:
On request of a party in interest and after notice and a hearing, the court may order the United States trustee to change the membership of a committee appointed under this subsection, if the court determines that the change is necessary to ensure adequate representation of creditors or equity security holders.
Id. § 1102(a)(4). It is undisputed that the bankruptcy court issued the June 7 Order sua sponte, without notice and hearing or a formal request from a party in interest.
Nonetheless, if there is a right to be removed from a committee according to the procedures specified under Section 1102(a)(4), it is distinct from the right to serve on the committee in the first place.10
We hold that a lack of proper notice and hearing under Section 1102(a)(4) cannot violate a legally protected interest when there is no
10 Further, even if the Bankruptcy Court did give short shrift to the procedural requirements of Section 1102(a)(4), its order specified that it was also acting pursuant to its powers under Section 105(a) of the Bankruptcy Code in order to “prevent an abuse of process and to ensure adequate representation of creditors.” 11 U.S.C. § 105(a).
underlying right to remain on a Creditors Committee, and when the ultimate outcome of the proceeding would have been the same.
Here, Trahant had admitted to violating the protective order, the Appellants had participated in the Trustee’s investigation and testified under oath, and the Trustee had already submitted its report after a comprehensive investigation to the bankruptcy court.
The Appellants were clearly on notice that Trahant’s continued representation of them, and his open violation of the protective order, would have significant consequences for the course of the bankruptcy case.
But Appellants chose to continue retaining him as their counsel, and the court’s action was geared towards protecting their choice of counsel.
In short, by the time the bankruptcy court removed Appellants from the Committee, the evidentiary record justifying their removal was well settled and well known to the Appellants and all other parties.
That the bankruptcy court did not reveal the full contents of the Trustee’s report, which dealt with extremely sensitive information that the bankruptcy court had designed specific procedures to protect, does not change this analysis.
In addition, this case is readily distinguishable from constitutionally- footed due process cases, where courts have identified a legally protected property interest requiring a pre-deprivation hearing.
See, e.g., Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532, 546, 105 S. Ct. 1487, 1495 (1985)
(holding that a public employee must be provided with “some kind of hearing” before termination);
Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254, 263–64, 90 S. Ct. 1011, 1017–18 (1970)
(holding that the government may not terminate welfare benefits without providing a pre-termination evidentiary hearing).
Appellants have not pointed to any authorities suggesting that there is any right to serve on a Creditors Committee, nor have they identified any property rights that have been negatively affected by their removal from the Committee.
Their substantive rights as creditors in the bankruptcy case have not been impaired in any way by their removal from the Committee.
Further, in removing the Appellants from the Committee, the bankruptcy court did not personally sanction them.
Removal did not flow from their individual conduct, but from the conduct of an attorney they could fire at any time.
That distinguishes this case from In re Cleveland Imaging & Surgical Hospital, L.L.C., 26 F.4th 285, 295 (5th Cir. 2022).
In Cleveland, the bankruptcy court levied over $40,000 in sanctions against parties for a bad-faith violation of an automatic stay.
Id.
The sanctioned parties’ property rights in assets outside the bankruptcy were curtailed by the sanctions order.
Here, however, Appellants have lost nothing.
Finally, the bankruptcy court’s order did not amount to an “injunction” granting them standing to appeal the bankruptcy court’s order, and the Appellants do not have separate standing as ex-committee members.11
In sum, Judge Ashe did not abuse his discretion in denying the Appellants’ Rule 60(b)(6) motion, and the Appellants lacked standing to appeal from the bankruptcy court to the district court.
Accordingly, the district court’s orders and judgment are AFFIRMED for the reasons stated in this opinion.12
11 The authorities cited by the Appellants for that argument relate to the standing of the Committee—not its individual members, and certainly not its former members.
See In re Dow Corning Corp., 212 B.R. 258, 264 (E.D. Mich. 1997);
S. Pac. Transp. Co. v. Voluntary Purchasing Grps., Inc., 227 B.R. 788, 791–92 (E.D. Tex. 1998);
The Off. Comm. of Unsecured Creditors of W. Pac. Airlines, Inc. v. W. Pac. Airlines, Inc. (In re W. Pac. Airlines, Inc.), 219 B.R. 575, 578 (D. Col. 1998);
Masters, Mates & Pilots Plans v. Lykes S.S. Co. (In re Lykes S.S. Co.), 200 B.R. 933, 936 (M.D. Fla. 1996).
12 Accordingly, we DENY the Appellees’ motion to dismiss the appeal and DENY the Appellants’ motions to view and obtain sealed documents and to unseal the entire appellate record.
Doe v. Career Tech. Ctr., CIVIL ACTION No. 3:20-0088, at *21 (M.D. Pa. Mar. 11, 2020)
(“The court finds that plaintiffs’ well-pleaded facts allege the existence of continuous sexual harassment and abuse by Humphrey at CTC towards C.D. and the other male students, and that plaintiff has pled the essential elements of his Title IX claim in Count I against SSD.”)
Lucente v. Cnty. of Suffolk, 980 F.3d 284, 308 (2d Cir. 2020)
(“As in Matusick , plaintiffs here have presented evidence that raises genuine issues of material fact as to whether Suffolk County supervisory officials had knowledge of Foti’s alleged widespread unconstitutional conduct sufficient to create an official policy or custom of inaction through actual or constructive notice of (and constructive acquiescence to) that conduct. The district court erred in concluding otherwise.”)