New Thread merged with the original thread.
In the case, Parker v. California (case #22 in the list), the CA court of appeals recently ruled for the plaintiffs, in its entirety. This is now a citable case, inasmuch as Sheriff Clay Parker sued the State in his official capacity. The CA courts held that he had standing, in his professional capacity, in enforcement of vague laws.
The Judge here, says the Sheriffs have suffered no harm, in their official capacity, other than not knowing how to enforce a vague law (the Judge accepts the CO AG's "Technical Guidance," even though this can be changed at a whim). This decision is appeallable.
Whether or not this is appealed, is up to the Sheriffs and their attorney (David Kopel). If it is, by the Courts own timeline, it must be done within 14 days, or the lawsuit proceeds without them. If appealed, all action at the District Court stops, until the CA10 renders its opinion (technically, the Sheriffs have the same 90 days to appeal the decision as any other case would. Practicality deems 14 days).
The
docket has been updated and the decision (doc #96) has been recapped.