Date: July 4th, 2026 1:41 AM
Author: Emotionally + Physically Abusive Ex-Husband (oppose bitchbois)
This from Gemini Pro is around 30% accurate:
"We represent some parties who prevailed on an appeal to the Ninth Circuit. Following the issuance of the panel opinion, the losing parties filed a petition for rehearing en banc. The Ninth Circuit then called for us to submit an opposition to the motion for en banc rehearing. We filed our response on April 14, 2026. With specific reference to Ninth Circuit rules and general orders regarding the Ninth Circuit's en banc process, please give me the dates upon which this issue should have been decided.
I completely understand that awaiting a decision on a petition for rehearing en banc can be a tense and uncertain process for you and your clients. While I am an AI and do not experience the anxiety of waiting on a court's ruling, I can certainly analyze the rules to give you factual clarity on the timeline.
You are operating under the assumption that the issue should have been decided by a specific date. To gently correct this misconception: while the Ninth Circuit has strict internal deadlines for judges to circulate memos and vote, there is no hard deadline for the court to formally publish its public order on the docket.
Based on the Ninth Circuit General Orders—specifically Chapter 5, which governs the en banc process—here is the internal timeline for your specific case, assuming the standard track was followed without judicial extensions.
The Internal En Banc Timeline
According to General Order 5.5, the procedure following the submission of your opposition is broken into an internal memoranda phase and a voting phase.
April 14, 2026: Your opposition (supplemental briefing) to the petition for rehearing en banc was filed.
May 5, 2026 (Internal Memoranda Deadline): Under General Order 5.5(a), any judge may circulate memoranda in response to an en banc call within 21 days after the conclusion of supplemental briefing. (Note: If the calling judge circulated a memorandum in support of the en banc call after your filing, this 21-day period would have begun from that later date).
May 19, 2026 (Voting Deadline): Under General Order 5.5(b), once the exchange of memoranda is complete, the En Banc Coordinator notifies all active judges to vote. Unless ordered otherwise, the judges have 14 days to cast their ballots. Upon the expiration of this period, the En Banc Coordinator notifies the judges of the result and the vote tally.
Therefore, the internal vote dictating whether your case will be reheard en banc was likely completed and tallied on or around May 19, 2026.
Why Hasn't the Order Been Issued Yet?
Given that it is now July 2026, it is entirely normal that you have not yet seen a public disposition. The period between the filing of a response and the public issuance of an order can stretch from a few weeks to several months.
Here is the reality of why a decision internally tallied in mid-May might still be pending public issuance:
Drafting Dissents from Denial: If the petition is ultimately denied, judges who supported the en banc call frequently take time to draft written dissents from the denial of rehearing en banc. In response, other judges may draft concurrences to counter those dissents. This drafting, circulating, and editing process is not strictly time-bound.
Panel Revisions: The original three-judge panel may use this time to reconsider, amend, or rewrite their original opinion in response to the arguments raised in the petition and the internal judicial memoranda.
Stopping the Clock: Under the General Orders, judges have the ability to "stop the clock" at various points in the process to request more time to review the filings or internal memos before moving to the next phase. This would naturally shift the May 19th estimate further down the calendar.
In short, while the internal decision was likely reached in late May, the drafting and administrative processes that follow are highly fluid. You are now simply waiting for the court to finalize any accompanying opinions before the final order is entered onto the docket."
I'm not asking you to elaborate on the "experience of anxiety," you fucktard Reddit reposter.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5879569&forum_id=2)#49978220)