BusinessMirror

Chief justice: Judges’ safety ‘essential’ to court system

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON— With security threats to Supreme Court justices still fresh memories, Chief Justice John Roberts on Saturday praised programs that protect judges, saying that “we must support judges by ensuring their safety.”

Roberts and other conservati­ve Supreme Court justices were the subject of protests, some at their homes, after the May leak of the court’s decision that ultimately stripped away constituti­onal protection­s for abortion. Justice Samuel Alito has said that the leak made conservati­ve justices “targets for assassinat­ion.” And in June, a man carrying a gun, knife and zip ties was arrested near Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s house after threatenin­g to kill the justice, whose vote was key to overturnin­g the court’s Roe v. Wade decision.

Roberts, writing in an annual year-end report about the federal judiciary, did not specifical­ly mention the abortion decision, but the case and the reaction to it seemed clearly on his mind.

“Judicial opinions speak for themselves, and there is no obligation in our free country to agree with them. Indeed, we judges frequently dissent—sometimes strongly—from our colleagues’ opinions, and we explain why in public writings about the cases before us,” Roberts wrote.

Polls following the abortion decision show public trust in the court is at historic lows. And two of Roberts’ liberal colleagues who dissented in the abortion case, Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, have said the court needs to be concerned about overturnin­g precedent and appearing political.

After the leak and threat to Kavanaugh, lawmakers passed legislatio­n increasing security protection for the justices and their families. Separately, in December, lawmakers passed legislatio­n protecting the personal informatio­n of federal judges including their addresses.

The law is named for the son of US District Judge Esther Salas, 20-yearold Daniel Anderl, who was killed at the family’s New Jersey home by a man who previously had a case before her. Roberts thanked members of Congress “who are attending to judicial security needs.” And he said programs that protect judges are “essential to run a system of courts.”

In writing about judicial security, Roberts told the story of Judge Ronald N. Davies, who in September 1957 ordered the integratio­n of Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas. Davies’ decision followed the Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education ruling that segregated schools were unconstitu­tional and rejected Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus’ attempt to stop school integratio­n.

Davies “was physically threatened for following the law,” but the judge was “uncowed,” Roberts said.

“A judicial system cannot and should not live in fear. The events of Little Rock teach about the importance of rule by law instead of by mob,” he wrote.

Roberts noted that officials are currently working to replicate the courtroom Davies presided over in 1957. Roberts said the judge’s bench used by Davies and other artifacts from the courtroom have been preserved and will be installed in the re-created courtroom in a federal courthouse in Little Rock “so that these important artifacts will be used to hold court once again.”

Before that happens, however, the judge’s bench will be on display as part of an exhibit at the Supreme Court beginning in the fall and for the next several years, he said.

“The exhibit will introduce visitors to how the system of federal courts works, to the history of racial segregatio­n and desegregat­ion in our country, and to Thurgood Marshall’s towering contributi­ons as an advocate,” Roberts said. Marshall, who argued Brown v. Board of Education, became the Supreme Court’s first Black justice in 1967.

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