Don't Prosecute the Supreme Court Leaker
If the leaker's identity is ever revealed, he or she will face serious professional and reputational sanctions. There's no need to wish for criminal punishments too.

The anonymous person or persons responsible for the leak of Justice Samuel Alito's draft opinion that would overturn Roe v. Wade (1973) and other cases upholding the right to abortion set off a media whirlwind on Monday night by violating one of the strictest institutional norms in American politics: what happens in the Supreme Court, stays in the Supreme Court.
At this point, we have no idea whether the draft opinion means that the court will actually overturn Roe. And we have no idea whether the leaker or leakers will ever be identified or whether their motives—the subject of wild speculation on Twitter and cable news on Tuesday—will be confirmed.
But that hasn't stopped a rush to condemn the leaker and call for them to be punished, even held criminally liable. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R–Ky.) called the leak "lawless action" and suggested that the Department of Justice could get involved.
That's a rather tame response compared to what some conservative pundits and influencers have been demanding, with suggested punishments for the leaker ranging from the loss of their law license (which assumes that the leaker is a lawyer) to "prosecution to the full extent of the law" and even attempts to declare the leak an act of "terrorism." Arizona state Sen. Wendy Rogers (R–Flagstaff) topped them all by demanding that the leaker be arrested and given "the traitor treatment."
It is, of course, not treason to leak documents from inside the Supreme Court. In fact, it's not even clear that it is a crime. And that's how it should be.
In broad strokes, the First Amendment ought to protect the leaker from prosecution—just as it should anyone who leaks vital government documents to the public. The Supreme Court might be famous for its institutional secrecy, but those institutional norms do not supersede the Constitution.
More narrowly, it doesn't seem like there's an obvious violation of federal law. As Orin Kerr, a professor of law at the University of California, Berkeley explained on Twitter, criminal laws that ban the leaking of classified information and the disclosure of medical records would not apply in this circumstance. "As far as I can tell, there is no federal criminal law that directly prohibits disclosure of a draft legal opinion," he writes. "Maybe there should be, but right now there isn't."
But there are a lot of federal laws that could cover the situation. Even if the leak itself is not a crime, other conduct connected to the leak could be illegal, Kerr notes. After all, the federal government has lots of ways of targeting leakers.
That should not happen. Despite the massive public outcry the leak has caused and the impact it could have on American politics, the incident itself is an internal matter for the Supreme Court and should be dealt with accordingly. So far, that seems to be the way Chief Justice John Roberts is handling it. He's instructed the marshal of the Supreme Court to investigate the leak—seemingly contradicting earlier reports saying he would involve the FBI.
While criminal charges should be off the table, the leaker ought to face the prospect of severe professional and reputational sanctions for undermining the sanctity of the Supreme Court's deliberations.
"Court employees have an exemplary and important tradition of respecting the confidentiality of the judicial process and upholding the trust of the Court," Roberts said in his statement on the leak. "This was a singular and egregious breach of that trust that is an affront to the Court and the community of public servants who work here."
Hopefully, it remains a singular event—not a signal of a coming trend. This is something the court takes very seriously: Late Justice Antonin Scalia reportedly told new law clerks that he would "ruin your career" if any of them betrayed the court's confidentiality. When some deliberations about the original Roe decision leaked to Time magazine in 1973, some of the sitting justices wanted to subject their clerks to lie detector tests to determine who was responsible.
That leak, according to University of Georgia law professor Jonathan Peters, led to the creation of the court's so-called "20-second rule"—any clerk caught talking to a reporter would be fired within 20 seconds.
Of course, leaks still happen. Former law clerks disclosed some of the behind-the-scenes drama from the 2000 Bush v. Gore hearings to Vanity Fair in 2014. Other, smaller leaks have occurred throughout the court's history, with perhaps the most famous dating to 1919 when a law clerk was caught leaking rulings to friends on Wall Street. The clerk, Ashton Embrey, was eventually charged by the Department of Justice for conspiring "to deprive the United States of its lawful right and duty of promulgating information in the way and at the time required by law and at departmental regulation," but the charges were dropped before the case went to trial.
None of those previous leaks compare to this one—the exposure of a complete, authentic, draft opinion on one of the most sensitive topics that the court debates will have permanent ramifications for how the Supreme Court operates. In many regards, this is an unprecedented situation.
Even so, criminal prosecution for the leaker should be out of bounds. There's no way to pursue charges without steamrolling the fundamental rights that are foundational to the court's adjudications. It should be possible to believe that what the leaker did in this instance is wrong—deeply wrong in a way that might permanently shift the way the Supreme Court operates, and not in a good direction—while still recognizing that criminal prosecution is not the correct recourse.
The leaker has the right to leak, even if it was a dreadful decision to do so.
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Good consistency here Eric. Matches your article on the leaking of the libsoftiktok identity.
As far as prosecutions, I believe they treat pending drafts as confidential.
It is a huge violation of legal ethics. They should absolutely lose their law license.
Criminal charges? No. But I also don't think non violent protestors should face 52 months in jail like the J6 rioters who you have claimed committed near treason.
Boehm does not seem to grasp that the standard for losing a professional license is not merely violations of law but also include violations of professional ethics. The effect of the leak is to undermine the Court's internal processes to perform its constitutional functions. This was an attack on judicial integrity.
Agreed.
It was markedly worse than what happened on J6.
^ +1
Yeah, but no boots on the desk.
Or imaginary shit smeared on the walls.
Isn't that technically insurrection?
I don't know. This is Reason. Were they Democrats or Republicans? Was this abortion or baking a cake? We have sides here, you know.
No, for it to be insurrection, the leaker would have to get shot in the face by an incompetent Capitol police officer, and have all the lefturds in the press pile on to pretend he was trying to kill the cop.
-jcr
The intent could, perhaps, have been to pull grassroots support for DNC and progressive candidates, and give those candidates a plank for the midterms.
The leaker has the right to leak, even if it was a dreadful decision to do so.
Anybody else leaking to the public like that would be on a sex offender registry. 😉
All humor aside, this is a shit take. One can only imagine the reaction at any business if confidential documents were intentionally released to opposition press. Yes, this clown will no doubt pick up a job lobbying or w/ a nonprofit, but in a just world, would be shunned and struggle to put food to mouth.
Even better idea. If you can't do the time then don't do the crime. Whoever this person is they should be terminated and face ethics violations.
If a law was broken, or will be broken, I expect jail time.
The FBI is going to interview everyone who had access and someone is either going to take the 5th, or lie to the FBI. That likely lie is going to put them in jail.
The FBI is not investigating though.
The USSC *Marshall* is. The fix is already in.
And the FBI isn't partisan?
They are - but they're not as controllable as your in-house security team with no investigatory powers or experience.
The FBI might *accidentally* uncover real shit.
Good thing the USSC Marshall does have investigatory powers, and about 260 employees to help him use them.
But the main priority should be the protection of the justices and there are no bulls-eyes out on their heads, with Leftists demanding protests at their homes.
What does it say about my country that I can't decide which is more likely to totally just throw the investigation?
The leak violates professional standards, and should be handled accordingly. If crimes were committed, legal punishment is called for.
My concern is that people will be hurt, property will be destroyed, and the leaker, once identified, will be lionized by one political side, vilified by the other, and will likely be celebrated/rewarded by one side while the other looks on powerless.
Loss of professional license would suffice under normal circumstances, but I fear the leaker will A) lose their law license, B) lose their clerkship, and C) Have their law school loans paid-off by the taxpayers...
The more the left champions the leaker, the harder the right should pursue any possible criminal charges.
This is not a leaker exposing illegal/immoral activity by the government, it's a political act that will result in violent protests, loss of life and property. Those used to be bad things.
Behead the piece of shit.
Too lenient. If it's a federal crime and the perp is a federal employee nothing less than a slow public impalement is just.
Ow. But, appropriate, I suppose.
In order for the FBI to investigate, there has to be a crime. This article concurs with a WSJ article: Disclosing classified information can be unlawful, but legal experts questioned whether disclosing internal Supreme Court documents qualified as a crime. “From a pure criminal investigative standpoint, I’m not sure I am aware of what a criminal charge would look like in this instance,” said Ari Redbord, a former federal prosecutor.
Sounds like qualified immunity.
You mean like in the garage in Talladega?
that got, what, 12 Special Agents flown in to investigate all those felonious door pullings
"... there has to be a crime."
A Federal crime, no less.
Which certainly helps explain why Reason was so upset when the FBI raided journalists over a girl's lost diary.
Oh wait, you mean to tell me they didn't seem to see any problems with that?
Journalists are elite and protected well beyond 1A, thus the circling of the outrage wagons.
I wouldn't be surprised one iota if the leaker was John Robert's himself.
That guy is to the Constitution what Park Slope Welchie Boy is to libertarianism.
John Robert is too uptight. He is not a rule breaker.
Let me suggest and alternative. Justice Thomas has been a long-time advocate of reversing Roe. He assigned opinion. The draft was rejected and the idea of overturning is slipping. Virginia Thomas wants a reversal for her husband legacy and let the draft slip to shore up support. Mrs. Thomas has a history of crazy remarks and texts. It is not out of charater.
I think this idea highly unlikely, but it as good an idea as any other at this point.
Take a look at Elizabeth Deutsch. Staunchly pro-abortion. Husband worked with the Politico author.
https://mobile.twitter.com/willchamberlain/status/1521685968939630592
You are, as Sevo likes to say, full of shit. There is no evidence that the draft was rejected. Your fantasy about Thomas' wife somehow getting her hands on it, then, giving it to a media source that isn't anywhere near her sociopolitical viewpoint is, beyond risible. One can only hope you masturbated to completion while dreaming this loopy bullshit up.
Given that Dems are, on record, not caring who leaked indicates it was leaked from the Left.
My money's on Affirmative Action Jackson.
Unprecedented leak right after her confirmation... coincidence?
Hacked materials. Ban from social media at the very least.
Lock him in a dungeon in DC for over a year, and Reason will forget about him
Ha! Nice burn!
What the actual fuck is this?
The leak was illegal as hell.
There will be no professional sanctions against her. The vast majority of the legal community are extreme Leftists. They will reward her with a 6+ figure salary.
Boehm the Birdbrain....The 'right to leak' (whatever the fuck that means) does not absolve one from consequences of leaking.
Loss of law license? Definitely
Criminal charges? Maybe, if there is a law that was broken.
What this person did was done with malice.
"What this person did was done with malice."
Used to be you have to be a Judge, an accredited shrink, or a Highly Esteemed Lawyer to read minds... SOMETIMES a jury is empowered to read minds... Now, I guess, we can ALL read minds!
Willful stupidity is still plain old stupidity.
I do agree... Pretending to be able to read minds IS willful stupidity!
For those who can read minds... Is my religious belief that I should be allowed to decide for myself, whether I can blow upon a cheap plastic flute, "sincerely held"? Or not? Oh, and, what number am I thinking of right now?
PS…
To find precise details on what NOT to do, to avoid the flute police, please see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/DONT_DO_THIS/ … This has been a pubic service, courtesy of the Church of SQRLS!
You don’t have to be a mind reader to discern a person’s intent.
If one has humility, though, one will admit that one's ability to do so, is HIGHLY fallible!
Humility is a MUCH underappreciated virtue! See this: https://www.military.com/daily-news/2019/12/27/army-has-introduced-new-leadership-value-heres-why-it-matters.html Even in a supposedly “proud” profession, wise leaders treasure humility!
I’ll give you that. Evidence of intent is usually circumstantial and is sometimes conflicting.
But under the circumstances of this case, it’s hard for to imagine how malice could not have played into what happened. It sure as hell wasn’t an accident.
Maybe his right to leak involves incontinence?
Meh. Tough to feel much sympathy for the person. If they broke a law, prosecute away. If it was an attorney, disbar as well. If it was a Justice (seems highly unlikely?), impeach.
He'll probably be disbarred as a matter of form, then a few speaking tours, a book deal, several invites to give commencement addresses, then settle into a cushy job with a Dem PAC somewhere, summer house in the Hamptons, etcetera, etcetera..
etc. is a safe seat in Congress.
Impeach? All Benedict Arnold ever did was leak information in hope of becoming of counsel to another side.
It's not to see Reason stop pretending it's anything other than leftist propaganda.
"As far as I can tell, there is no federal criminal law that directly prohibits disclosure of a draft legal opinion," he writes. "Maybe there should be, but right now there isn't."
Theft?
IP theft, maybe. Unless he took a physical copy, no. And even then there'd be some debate as to the monetary value.
It's not IP theft; there's no copyright on government works.
I wonder if the leaker had a right to ever even see the document (I.e. not a lawyer, but an office worker with an axe to grind)?
In such a scenario, there may be an Avenue to criminal prosecution...
Maybe that DC cop who shot Ashli Babbitt for no reason will execute the leaker.
Or at least beat the leaker to death with a wooden bat and then blame an aderoll of as cause of death.
Reckless endangerment...
Nail his ass to the wall. This could very easily result in people dying from these crazy, leftist lunatics...
The leaker may well have "ruined their career" but they will be elevated to a progressive hero in the process. I expect a statue or two to arise on liberal campuses. Somewhat like Snowden is to us who value their privacy [though the US does indeed want to throw him in jail].
Equal protection (and prosecution) under the law?
If I had somehoe accessed some private documents involved with the Kyle Rittenhouse case and passed them on to the press, and got caught I'dfully expect harsh legal consequences.
While there might " not "be a law" specifically naming this action as "criminal" laws of ethics, privacy, security, integrity, should make this action actionable under the law. Prosecute as fully as possible.
This is one more step toward the anarchy certain factions are working very hard toward bringing about.
In that specific sort of case, where an actual person - the defendant - was harmed by the denial of due process, I would argue that a crime was committed and would want to see the offender(s) prosecuted.
This article is a great example of why serious people do not take doctrinaire libertarians seriously.
Anyway, it' s all moot, even if a criminal law was broken there is no way the Garland DoJ would prosecute someone so obviously on their side, whether the crime is a minor misdemeanor or a major felony. Won't happen, the "rule of law" died with the "fortification" of the 2020 election and the establishment's reaction to the Jan. 6 Capitol Riot, if not well before. We now have rule by men, not laws, beyond what even Charles I claimed was his right.
And the legal "profession" is dying before our eyes, as has already happened to education, academia, the media,...
And if a Republican wins in 2024, the odds of the re-opening what will be a 3-year old case are so small as to by undetectable.
What if the leaker was a pro-life advocate who was so excited and wanted to share the news? Would garland DOJ still ignore any possible crimes?
Do not, ever, call bohem a libritarian. He is at best a useful idiot leftist shill.
He has never argued from a libritarian view point, and always supports what the progressives are pushing.
Boehm isn’t a libertarian. He’s a democrat shill.
The writers here are not doctrinaire libertarians.
The are soft leftists who routinely show great "flexibility" when applying libertarian principles.
But walking peacefully through the capital after being let in by the police is a hanging offense.
"Peacefully" is doing a lot of work there, in that it's the complete opposite of how any normal human would characterize an armed coup attempt.
Agreed. But there was no armed coup attempt in D. C. on January 6th.
Your definition of armed seems to be somewhat different than a lot of other folks definition. While some may claim a fire extinguisher or flag pole meets the definition of armed lots of folks think armed means using a weapon designed to be a weapon and not something designed of other uses than being a weapon.
They all had two arms didn’t they?
Most of them probably did, but everyone? Ableist.
At the beginning at least. After being arrested there are no records.
And somewhere in between you two's jackass version of events, people really did spread human feces on the walls.
That's something to be proud of, boys.
The feces thing has been debunked.
Everyone has their own facts at this point.
What liars say when wrong.
Sarc chooses truth over fact.
Do you have a citation for this? I think the feces thing is pretty far-fetched, but it was reported and there does not appear to be anyone correcting that record.
Your in-group is known for stating falsehoods as fact, then repeating them. Which is not to sat that centrists and rightists do not do the same. But the vast majority of what you repeat are false assertions that have been accepted as fact. The absence of a citation for the story is being debunked is important yes, but not as important as an actual report proving that feces were smeared or tracked.
Nobody spread poop.
Chuck Schumer's aide said it looked like someone might have tracked mud or poop on their shoe in one of the bathrooms, and the myth spread from there.
When have facts ever gotten in the way of sarc pushing a leftist narrative blindly?
Still celebrating 5 years over feet on desk?
https://reason.com/2022/04/13/bidens-plan-to-ease-gas-prices-will-save-drivers-a-few-cents-at-some-pumps-2-months-from-now/?comments=true#comment-9445165
Is this another of your infamous quotes? Unless you're a literal retard who equates making fun of one thing with support of another, the quote doesn't mean jack shit. Anyone with minimal cognitive capacity will shrug it off as nothing.
So I suppose it is very important to you.
It links directly to the thread dummy. People are free to read what you wrote. You are free to lie about it.
“Is this another of your infamous quotes?”
It’s literally a link to one of your posts. You do realize that when you post something it’s permanent, right? That’s how the internet works.
FIRE EXTINGUISHERS!
I heard the J6 prisoners made stink eyes at the cops. And Ashli Babbit was going to make the evil eye at them if she got the chance. That brave hero stopped her first.
“Armed coup attempt” is doing a lot of work there, in that it’s the complete opposite of how any normal human would characterize an armed coup attempt.
You really are a failing faggot,
Without pathetic hyperbolic inflating of risk and pretense that situations were far more dangerous than they were, the left & progressives might have to accept their own failures. This way, everything is about angry white men being racist nationalists.
I guess you never heard of martyrdom.
This "leak" is open to interpretation as is the Constitution of The United States of Who Gives A Fuck!
Eric, let me ask you this. Should the person who leaked Project Veritas privileged documents taken illegally from their offices be prosecuted?
They should be held without bond by the DC police for at least 18 months. Unless they plead guilty to insurrection and accept a five year sentence followed by another five of supervised release where they sign away all right to privacy.
Did "The Leaker" commit a crime?
Who made you Chief Justice, Boehm?
The "Leaker", another star in the pantheon of leftist heros like Elsberg, Toricelli (leaked the names of CIA assets, Vindman (why isn't he in Ukraine helping his "countrymen"? and on and on.
(Please feel free to add to the list)
Yeah this smells a lot like the often repeated strategy of the Democrats a la the anonymous Ukraine call "whistle blower" and Blaisy Ford. This is a desperate attempt to save a few seats in the midterm election and intimidate the justices. Anybody who believes Chuck and Nancy weren't involved in this just isn't paying attention. Bernie says it's now time to eliminate the filibuster and codify Roe with the barest of Democrat majorities many of whom will be gone by January.
Polling that I've seen indicates something like 70% of the population doesn't want Roe "overturned". But by about the same percentage they oppose convenience abortions after 20 weeks gestation. In other words most of the population has no clue what Roe is. The Democrats are hoping to exploit that ignorance by convincing the public that 5 evil republican judges will shortly sign onto the proclamation " We hereby overturn Roe V. Wade". It doesn't fucking work that way.
BS, this was not a mistake, but a calculated political move to put pressure on the Justices on the court. It is even very dangerous for the Justices themselves. If it is a crime it must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
1. Was any crime actually committed? Then yes, prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law and let them make a case for why they deserve leniency. Same for every other leaker - sauce for the goose and all that.
2. Are they not terrorists? Have they not 'attacked our democracy's by interfering with government? Are they not using fear generated for a political end? Is this not January 6th?
Contempt for the electoral college and contempt of SCOTUS seem to go hand in hand.
Free the Jan. 6 protestors. Over a year in jail is punishment enough for taking selfies.
Are you fucking kidding me? This person should be nailed to the wall and prosecuted to the fullest extent possible. Get a clue!
I hope no criminal charges are brought, but other discipline is absolutely appropriate. Because, no, government employees do not have constitutional rights to leak confidential government documents.
Cocaine Mitch is more transparent every day.
Are you referring to Bitch McConnell?
This is cliche, but a legal license is a privilege, not a right. It is not "illegal" to be an incompetant lawyer, but that can cost you a license. The leaker ought to be disbarred.
Maybe no criminal punishments. But no one will ever hire this person and they won't have the credentials. That is a start.
Ha. The lefties will ensure this individual gets a important sounding job that doesn't require a law license and a big fat paycheck.
Couple of quick questions:
Who's identity is more newsworthy, libsoftiktok or the person who leaked this draft?
Will Taylor Lorenz support this person being doxxed and/or going to their home to question family and children?
"This wouldn't have had to happen if we could just expand The Court!"
- Progs Everywhere
If they're guilty of breaking a law then, yes, they should be charged and prosecuted.
What if the leaker was a supreme court justice? I would say impeachment at least.
1. Congress has the ability and authority to legalize abortion at the federal level. Maybe they should do their job if this is an issue important to their constituents?
2. The Dems have been wringing their hands endlessly about "the end of Democracy". If Roe is overturned then the abortion issue is thrown back to state legislators to deal with, assuming congress is too spineless to take up the issue at the federal level. You know, Democracy. Democrats will be happy, no?
3. If SCOTUS actually overturns Roe I will be flabbergasted. I think Roe should be overturned because the constitution is silent on the issue, but I did not think it would ever happen.
1. Congress would rather toss that nuclear football to pretty much anyone else. Just like immigration.
2. Not that kind of democracy. By democracy, they mean rule by democrats.
3. I would be pleasantly surprised to see SCOTUS drop its sack and stop pussyfooting around unpleasant rulings.
It would be nice to see Roberts grow a pair, vote to overturn Roe, and then when reading the ruling, end with “and you can eat it, bitches!” While raising both arms with middle fingers extended.
Or have Kavanaugh read it doing the exact same thing.
"Congress has the ability and authority to legalize abortion at the federal level. "
Legalize as in not against federal law? Sure.
Legal as in invalidating state-level restrictions? It's debatable. Which section or amendment would give Congress the authority? 14th privileges and immunities?
That's why the left is apoplectic over this specific draft - it directly addresses that possibility and says that the issue is simply not within the purview of the Federal government.
"If the leaker's identity is ever revealed, he or she will face serious professional and reputational sanctions."
Or be declared a Hero of the Revolution and hired by a liberal law firm.
Remember - when it was Gitmo detainees "defending the principle" that every defendant gets proper representation was sacrosanct.
But harassing and intimidating lawyers into dropping Trump or his associates is totes fine.
Heads: The left wins
Tails: You lose
And Reason writers simply play along.
This cannot be a position from a serious publication. You want clerks to get slapped on the wrist for leaking internal judicial process and discussion? We should allow activists to intimidate what's supposed to be a non partisan, dispassionate interpretation of the constitution?
What would reason writers do if "drug warriors" leaked private email discussions among staff? Personal autonomy is supposed to function within free people consenting. If I don't give you consent, you can't take anything away from me, Not a thing. It doesn't matter if that's government or private business.
Be better.
It doesn't matter if that's government or private business.
I disagree. Government is force. It is people who use force. They are paid with dollars taken under threat of force. They don't get autonomy. At least not while at work.
"Ever notice at one of those anti-abortion rallies? You wouldn't want to fuck any of them anyway!" -George Carlin
I had that same thought when I saw the pictures of pro abortion protesters accompanying related articles, there were males in the pictures too. Given the women around them, they clearly aren’t in it for the chicks. Looks like a bunch of soyboys.
"Ever notice at one of those pro-abortion rallies? You wouldn't want to fuck any of them anyway!" -ragebot
Fixed that for you.
No. You didn't. Frumpy Christian mothers who haven't been laid in a decade aren't at the top of my list of all things fuckable.
Just read all the previous comments and there has been no mention of 618 and while circuits are somewhat split about the economic value needed to apply it it does seem to apply. Hard for me to see how the document does not have economic value even if it is limited to some flavor of billable hours the justices, clerks, and support peeps spent producing it; not to mention the more massive political value.
As for the perp who leaked it while I am not really up to speed on the current SC clerks or underlings I often ask the question 'who benefits?' and it seems to me there is a much greater benefit for the libs in terms of a new shiny object to take eyeballs over the lousy economy, disaster at the border, and Biden shaking hands with mid air. I realize there is a line of analysis that the pubs might have leaked it to try and freeze five votes to overturn Roe but that seems like a much bigger gamble than what the libs get.
"In broad strokes, the First Amendment ought to protect the leaker from prosecution—just as it should anyone who leaks vital government documents to the public."
That is an absurd statement. What if they leak upcoming military operations to an enemy? Keys to diplomatic or military encryption? Names of intelligence sources working undercover in terrorist groups? Real names and locations of people in the witness protection program?
Leaking information to the public necessarily includes leaking it to those who would misuse it in the worst possible way.
I honestly agree with this. But, I can't ignore that this action changes things for the Supreme Court. It was an clear and undeniable attempt by one of the clerks to impose political pressure on the Court separate from the validity of any legal reasoning. Going forward, as long as the clerk program remains in place, the only logical assumption is that the Court is now a blatantly political institution. Any communications to an opposing Justice has to be viewed as a communication to a political rival. This is not to impugn the Justices. But, there's no way for any Justice to know that the clerks around that Justice won't be similarly inclined. In short, the only reasonable path forward is to eliminate the Supreme Court law clerk program. In practice the program has been nothing but resume padding for relatively privileged graduates of a few elite law schools in any case. If the Justices need assistance, they can hire permanent help with a long-term stake in their roles. Let the current crop of clerks be the ones known to have killed the program. Matters will get sorted out quickly enough.
Stop recruiting from Ivy leagues. That scene at Yale was retarded. These are your future clerks. Go to saner pastures. I don't think the Ivy Leagues are all that they're cracked up to be anymore.
That would have been the right thing to do before this. But, even a decision to stop recruiting at the Ivies, given the makeup of the Court, would only ever have been a brief hiatus.
No, the only answer at this point is to eliminate the job. This has proven that this level of responsibility can't be entrusted to entitled 20-somethings doing a stint of a couple of years to pad their resumes. If the Justices need assistance, they can have permanent people whose careers are dependent on the job itself, who won't be able to simply punch politicizing the Court as another score on their resume.
Let all the law schools and all the elite legal community know that ending clerkship was the consequence of the games they've been playing for the last few years. Let them know that all those great jobs that going to their law schools could land a candidate have gone away and they're not coming back. Because the law schools produced the kind of candidate who'd pull something like this. Let all of Big Law know that those stars who had an in at the Supreme Court won't be coming through the pipeline anymore. And if they have a problem with that, take it up with the law schools.
"Stop recruiting from Ivy leagues." Yes. Get some diversity in SCOTUS and I am not talking about skin tone.
Same holds true for the justices themselves. Barrett is the only one not from an Ivy league school, and she is the first in my memory.
While we're at it, why don't we just reduce the size of federal government by 9/10 and stop delegation to agencies and recall pax americana troops and stop all the racial lies bullshit that have plagued the country since Ferguson.
IOW, from the "ain't gonna happen" files.
DC is where one can fail upwards. The leaker will be lionized. And ultimately rewarded.
Look, the real victim here is the hurt feelings of Sam Alito— not the poor people who are going to have to shell out a thousand bucks to travel to Sacramento to get an abortion.
Just like with gay marriage— where the dubious benefits of allowing gay men to marry (Meh.) were overshadowed by the crypto fascistic practice of leaving bad Yelp reviews for homophobic bakers. Let’s keep the real victims here— and you’ll pardon the expression from this gay and Black conservative who is GOP Proud— “str8”, ok?
Man free climbs 1,070-foot Salesforce Tower in San Francisco
The man who posted on Instagram as he ascended is Maison Des Champs, a rock climber who calls himself the "Pro-Life Spiderman."
When he reached the top did the cops throw him off the building to see if he could fly? Should have done that! What a victory for the pro-life movement and its adherents in the libertarian movement.
First, conservatives exhibit their customary gullibility -- at the level that enables an ostensible adult to believe fairy tales are true -- by assuming the leaker is a liberal. The reporter came to Politico from the New York Sun, a downscale right-wing rag, and therefore has an established circle of conservative sources -- one of whom could have sought to prevent defections, and preserve a preferred result, by leaking.
Second, no mention of the leak during the Obamacare deliberations, a leak that fueled plenty of informed, impassioned arguments from the clingers at that white, male, right-wing blog aimed at persuading Chief Justice Roberts to scuttle Obamacare? Was that leaker punished? Identified? Investigated? Did wingnuts call for that leaker to be identified and punished?
Carry on, clingers. But only so far as your better permit, as usual.
Fuck off and die, asshole bigot.
He's just the keyboard asshole. If he ever had to say 1/10th of what he types to someone's face he'd get the Mike Tyson on an airplane treatment.
You’re now losing the culture war. We’ve hurt you, and we wish to go on hurting you.
Seethe. Cope. Rough day, eh?
Do you know how I know when to skip a post?
"Don't Prosecute the Supreme Court Leaker"
Why?
"...That's a rather tame response compared to what some conservative pundits and influencers have been demanding, .."
Oh, because conservatives prefer we let the law take its course!
And Joe Asshole didn't bother to show up and make a public ass of himself as the bigoted asshole did?
Tough day for shitpiles like that.
I'd like to volunteer to be on the pre-dawn no-knock raid on the Politico Headquarters or the reporter who received the briefing. I'm sure that there will be one since the FBI raided Project Veritas and the reporter that received Biden's daughter's diary. I mean there will be one or is this completely different?
Come on man, surely you saw all the Reason articles freaking out over the FBI raids on Project Veritas.
Yeah, me neither.
Behind every apparent double standard is a single operative standard.
Two questions , did they break a law? And if yes should we jail this person indefinitely since they represent a threat to our democracy which depends on an independent SCOTUS that is free to deliberate without threat.
C'mon man this is a threat to our democracy. Just like J6. Oh wait Reason is that weird sect of libertarianism that is pro-regime.
I have noted a tendency in the comments to come down hard on the leaker and I suspect that is because the conservative story line is that it was a liberal. If it should be the other way round will the sentiments remain the same or now shift to it was the "right thing to do".
The likelihood of an anti-abortion activist destroying faith in SCOTUS on a ruling they WANT is near zero, especially since the only way to spin that as a win for the anti-abortion cause is some insane 5D chess that doesn't pan out in reality. That's why nobody has considered your hypothetical.
No, the idea of a conservative is still in the mix. Timing here is the critical element. If the 5-4 majority is slipping, then the leak may force anyone rethinking the opinion back into the fold. What is the logic for a liberal leak now, why not leak it back in February?
It could also be someone outside wanting to change the headlines. Get another story off the front page.
In broad strokes, the First Amendment ought to protect the leaker from prosecution.. Huh? That's so beyond stupid no reply is required. If a law was broken they should be prosecuted. No question legal ethics require immediate disbarment and banishment from obtaining a law license. If the leaker wants to 'die' professionally on this Hill, so be it but the 1st Amendment is no defense here.
At a minimum, there is certainly a violation of ethical standards, and if the leaker is someone who has or is planning to obtain a law license is the leaker, that is going to be damage enough. Theft of government property, which has been touted as the most likely charge, is only icing to the damage that disbarment or even a sanction by licensing body could have. In addition, the point that it may not even be a lawyer is relevant. Reportedly, it was noted by someone, somewhere that either the original Roe decision, or another 70s era decision for which information leaked, the leaker eventually turned out to be a printer, not a law clerk. Also, I would say there is a big difference of talking about deliberations nearly 15 years after the fact versus the period between the hearing of the case and the issuance of the Court's opinion. The Gore v. Bush matter wasn't really a leak at that point, and publicly commenting on it really didn't have any professional harm to the individuals involved. For genuine leaks, the matter is current and has risk of professional or reputational harm to the leaker as well as to the institution or entity the leak is originating from.
Abortion is such a messed up issue that all I can say with a clear conscience is do whatever you think you need to do. Personally, I think people greatly disrespect life and it disgusts me how many abortions are performed every year. People use it as contraception and that is demonic. No way to sugarcoat it. Pure, biblical evil.
I don't want govt to be an instrument of faith. Let the women do as they please. Let God judge them for their crimes. There's no consistent moral standard that respects both the life of the unborn and the mother.
What about the other people who are involved in the process?
Other people such as the doctors? They can do whatever they want.
I've tried before to come up with a standard to prevent "bad" abortions and I don't see any good compromise.
Why does abortion feel wrong to so many people? Because regardless of the reasons, you're killing a kid that would otherwise have a pretty awesome life. Also, every parent I know says the best thing they ever did was have kids. It really rubs people the wrong way to talk about our biological imperative in such negative terms.
Ex. I don't like the idea of someone aborting more than a month or two out from a pregnancy. If you're serious about having a kid, you'll know if you're pregnant by then. Outside of the exceptions that most people agree on (non-viable fetus, rape/incest, injury to mother, etc.), why would I say no to "I changed my mind" or "I'm not ready?" Because you're putting your convenience ahead of everything else.
But think about the implications of this type of policy. What happens if contraceptives fail? Will our standard be that you have to abstain until you're infertile? Get your tubes tied or have a vasectomy if you want risk-free sex? It gets into really murky waters when we start prioritizing the unborn child at all costs. Any law or rule means govt enforcement and I really don't want that.
I really hate this issue as a whole.
Bob Barr thinks it could be a Federal crime.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2022/may/3/bill-barr-former-attorney-general-suggests-supreme/
And to the extent that the events of J6 are an "insurrection" and the left is trying to block people from elected office and neutralize a SCOTUS justice then Barr is correct.
Which is to say that Barr is wrong, there is no black letter law on the leaking of SCOTUS deliberations. And all the "insurrection" talk is pure bullshit.
Not that the writers here are going to show any consistency on such matters.
It was a gross breach of ethics and norms, the person(s) responsible should be disbarred and blocked from any position of responsibility in the judiciary.
Nope. If they broke the law, they should be prosecuted. Disbarment or sanctions are fine too, but jail time for breaking the law is appropriate.
I would not want to be the leaker even if there is no official punishment.
The vast majority of Supreme Court justices, past and present, get there after having clerked for a member. In other words, you need recommendations from insiders. Anyone believed to be the leaker can forget about getting them.
If you take what does not belong to you (even intellectual property), it’s theft. If you accept what was stolen, it’s receiving stolen property. Charges are appropriate.
I like your prosecutorial mind, but it would be difficult to prove that a draft ruling is "property" insomuch as its loss or dissemination could injure the assumed owner. Not necessarily impossible. That's not the real point of this article, though. The author here is actually (not very slyly) trying to connect a 1st Amendment false equivalence to leaking classified material, which is prohibited by very clear criminal code. I assume he has some slobbery, hormonal, gender-confused crush on Ed Snowden or Brad Manning.
Not sure why this article was needed. If there is no crime, then there will be no prosecution. If leaking SCOTUS documents can be construed to be a crime, then it can and should be put before a Grand Jury to decide the societal value of splitting whatever hair the Asst US Attorney might offer for splitting. At that, the Deep State DOJ wouldn't prosecute anyway, especially if the leaker were black, female, a huge sympathizer of pedophilia, and recently put on SCOTUS interoffice distribution list.
"Don't uphold the rule of law!"
"Hopefully, it remains a singular event—not a signal of a coming trend."
Jesus, Eric...
No punishment for the leaker will be needed. Who ever it was will find themselves unemployable. Their career in law is now forever tarnished and what they did will be the albatross around their neck.
Those who serve at the judges pleasure were warned at the beginning of their terms to walk the straight line and under no circumstances were they to do anything other than what they are told to do.
So who ever it was that leaked the decision, will probably be found out and their career in law will go up in smoke. have no fear though, they can always get a job at a dollar store.
Just rearranging the metaphorical deck chairs, Geiger.