Share this @internewscast.com

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin

The U.S. Department of Defense on Monday filed an emergency application with the U.S. Supreme Court asking the nine justices to restore the Pentagon’s deployment authority over Navy SEALs who refuse to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

“The Secretary of Defense has determined, as an exercise of his military judgment, that vaccination against COVID-19 is necessary to protect servicemembers and defend the American people,” the filing by Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar argues.

The request comes after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit refused to stay an injunction that blocks the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate in a ruling issued last week. The preliminary injunction against the mandate was originally granted by a Fort Worth-based district court in early January after dozens of SEALs sued.

That first ruling was issued by George W. Bush-appointed U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of Texas Reed O’Connor, known for attempting to strike down the entirety of the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, in December 2018 after the individual mandate was ruled unconstitutional. The Fifth Circuit later declined to hear a challenge.

According to the filing, the lower court decisions have upended the military command structure by acceding to the SEALs’ requests and placed judicial decision-making ahead of military decisions over “deployment, assignment, and other operational decisions.”

Additionally, the Biden administration notes, the injunction also bars the Navy from changing any of the servicemembers’ assignments, “including special-operations deployment”s in light of “the risks posed” by the SEALs’ refusal to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

“The court’s preliminary injunction not only prohibits the Navy from applying the COVID-19 vaccination requirement to respondents, but also requires the Navy to assign and deploy them without regard to their lack of vaccinations notwithstanding military leaders’ judgment that doing so poses intolerable risks to safety and mission success,” the 42-page request notes. “Indeed, the Navy has informed [the DOD] that the injunction has already compelled it to send one respondent to Hawaii for duty on a submarine against its military judgment.

The filing excoriates the lower courts as playing robed, would-be commanders:

“[J]udges are not given the task of running the Army” or the Navy, and it is the Executive officials charged with protecting our national security and defending our borders — not courts — who have authority to determine servicemembers’ fitness for duty and assignments.

The problems with judicial intervention in military affairs are not limited to formal separation-of-powers concerns, but include practical ones, too.

The preliminary injunction here flouts those principles. By requiring the Navy to deploy and assign respondents without regard for their vaccination status, the district court effectively inserted itself into the Navy’s chain of command, overriding military commanders’ “professional military judgments” about operational needs and requirements.

Calling the injunction an “extraordinary and unprecedented intrusion into core military affairs,” the Biden administration makes clear they are only asking for limited relief by not taking issue with part of the district court ruling that foreclosed against the SEALs being subject to “discipline or discharge for remaining unvaccinated.”

“Instead, the government sought a stay only insofar as the injunction ‘precludes the Navy from considering [respondents’] vaccination status in making deployment, assignment, and other operational decisions,” the filing notes. “The lower courts denied even that modest relief. [The Supreme] Court should grant a partial stay.”

The filing asks for the partial stay to take effect “pending completion of further proceedings in the court of appeals and, if necessary” if the DOD files a petition for a writ of certiorari with the high court.

“[W]hatever the merits of respondents’ challenges, the public has no interest in an injunction that requires the Navy to subordinate its professional judgment that vaccination is necessary for military readiness to the lower courts’ contrary views,” the filing states.

The SEALs have until Monday of next week to file their response.

[image via screengrab/YouTube]

Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

Source: This post first appeared on

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like

Police: Suspect in murder case attempts to hire inmate to eliminate witnesses

Inset: DeAndre Williams (Milwaukee County Jail). Background: Williams during his first hearing…

Judge Delivers Sentence for Man Who Used Extension Cord to Discipline Stepchildren

Lerenzo Legardy (Dona Ana County Jail). A man from New Mexico, who…

Police: Woman Used Insect Foggers to Remove Family from Apartment

Ervyana Davis (Metropolitan Nashville Police Department via WZTV). A Tennessee woman is…

Woman Assaulted with Rock and Screwdriver and Raped, Says DA

Inset: Daysnel Hernandez (Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office). Background: The area near the underpass…

Florida Attorney General Criticizes Judge and Immigration Groups in Supreme Court Response

Background: Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier at a press conference on June…

Brave Woman Prevents Theft of Boy’s Water Sales: Police Report

Mikaya Williams (Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office). Background: Intersection of Edgewood Avenue and Moncrief…

Melbourne Arson Case: Police Explore Potential Connections

Five people are sought over an arson attack on a business in…

Mother Accused of Stabbing Children and Starting Fire Believing They Were ‘Possessed by the Devil’: Prosecutors

Inset: Wendy Tolbert (Chicago Police Department). Background: The home of Wendy Tolbert…

Verdict Anticipated in Erin Patterson Court Case

The jurors have reached a verdict in the murder trial of Erin…

Alachua Resident Charged with Sexual Assault on Homeless Woman

Staff report ALACHUA, Fla. – Taverous Tywon Lorenza Williams, aged 47, residing…

Couple Arrested Following Nightclub Incident Involving Gun Threat

Staff report GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Early this morning, law enforcement apprehended Juan…

Prosecutor Accuses “Deal with the Devil” as Kohberger Found Guilty in Court Outburst

In a recent court appearance, Bryan Kohberger confessed to the murder of…