C. A. ll'th Cir. Certiorari denied.
respecting the denial of certiorari.
On several occasions in the past, I have found it appropriate to emphasize the fact that a denial of certiorari is not a ruling on the merits of any issue raised by the petition.
1
This is a case that raises significant constitutional questions regarding the President’s intrasession appointment of Judge William H. Pryor, Jr., to the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, which occurred
*943
during the 11-day President’s Day break between February 12 and 23, 2004.
2
However, this is also a ease in which, as the Government has urged in its response, there are valid prudential concerns supporting the decision to deny certiorari. Those considerations include the fact that the particular type of appointment in question is “the first such appointment of an Article III judge” in nearly a half century,
3
that petitioners seek review of an interlocutory order,
4
and the fact that the Court of Appeals did “not view the question of the constitutionality of Judge Pryor’s appointment as affecting jurisdiction.”
5
Moreover, the court’s citation to our decision in
Freytag
v.
Commissioner,
1 agree that there are legitimate prudential reasons for denying certiorari in this somewhat unusual case. That being said, it would be a mistake to assume that our disposition of this petition constitutes a decision on the merits of whether the President has the constitutional authority to fill future Article III vacancies, such as vacancies on this Court, with appointments made absent consent of the Senate during short intrasession “recesses.”
Notes
See,
e. g., Equality Foundation of Greater Cincinnati, Inc.
v.
Cincinnati,
The Court of Appeals, sitting en banc, held that Judge Pryor’s appointment was consistent with the Recess Appointments Clause of Article II of the Constitution. See
Brief in Opposition 10.
Id., at 6.
