Since then, Juliana v. United States has inspired winning human rights climate cases globally. In the United States, it has faced more government opposition than any case in history where the U.S. government is a defendant.
Here's what just happened:
On May 1, 2024, a three-judge panel in the Ninth Circuit granted the seventh petition for a writ of mandamus brought against Juliana in nearly ten years telling Judge Ann Aiken to end the youths’ case. The prior six petitions were all rejected by other Ninth Circuit judges and the Supreme Court.
And here's the problem:
This new three-judge panel didn’t follow the rule of law. They flagrantly disregarded the limits Congress and the Supreme Court placed on their jurisdiction. SCOTUS itself set the threshold on granting this type of extraordinary petition and the DOJ didn’t meet it by a longshot. The panel also tried to keep it out of the headlines in a three-page unpublished order.