“Most district judges really try hard to get these cases right, and they spend a lot of time doing that,” Jeremy Fogel, executive director of the Berkeley Judicial Institute, told Law360 Pulse. “So to go through that whole process, and to have an evidentiary hearing and to issue a preliminary injunction and to do the legal analysis with the precedent that you have, and then have an emergency docket order that says nothing other than the district court order is set aside or stayed,” Judge Fogel said, “that is just not a good look.”