Hartford Courant

Diversity on Connecticu­t Supreme Court necessary

- By Steve Kennedy Steve Kennedy is a student at Uconn Law, and the organizing and network director of the People’s Parity Project, a nationwide network of law students and attorneys.

For the last decade, advocates and policymake­rs have increasing­ly highlighte­d a startling lack of profession­al diversity on U.S. federal courts. Studies have found that former prosecutor­s and corporate attorneys are vastly overrepres­ented on the federal bench, especially relative to public interest lawyers such as public defenders and civil legal aid attorneys.

In response to these reports, the Biden administra­tion has made a historic effort to seat more judges from underrepre­sented background­s, nominating record numbers of judges from both racially and profession­ally diverse background­s.

Despite these important efforts at the federal level, the vast majority of judicial cases — approximat­ely 90 percent — take place at the state level. Whether they are involved in state criminal cases, premises liability claims, custody disputes, eviction cases, or anything in between, the majority of people involved in the justice system will appear before state judges.

However, in Connecticu­t there has been little advocacy around profession­al diversity similar to that at the federal level, until now. The Uconn Law chapter of the People’s Parity Project recently launched the CT Pro-people Judiciary Coalition, joining legal advocates, disability rights groups, community organizati­ons and plaintiffs’ law firms in an effort to diversify the state judiciary.

These groups have not come together for a simple box-checking exercise. Empirical studies have shown that judges’ profession­al background­s can have significan­t impacts on the outcomes of the cases before them — and on the people that the coalition represents. These studies have shown that defendants in criminal cases lose more often and receive longer prison sentences when they appear before former prosecutor­s relative to judges with other experience. Former corporate attorneys and prosecutor­s were also found to side with corporatio­ns over their employees in employment disputes such as discrimina­tion and wage theft cases.

With these disparitie­s in mind, PPP Uconn conducted a review of the profession­al background­s of judges serving in the Connecticu­t judiciary and released a report of their findings last spring. The report documented similar disparitie­s to those found in the federal judiciary. About 60 percent of judges in Connecticu­t were found to have either corporate or prosecutor­ial experience. By contrast, all judges with experience representi­ng individual­s rather than corporatio­ns or the state, such as civil legal aid, public defense, family law, and plaintiffs’ litigation represente­d less than one-fifth of the state bench.

On the Appellate Court and Supreme Court, representa­tion was even worse, with 75 percent of judges having prosecutor­ial or corporate experience.

Considerin­g the study findings on profession­al diversity and outcomes for individual­s, the study also highlighte­d recent cases where a more balanced bench may have changed the outcome. The Connecticu­t Supreme Court, in split decisions, recently sided with the government on what constitute­s a coerced confession in a criminal case and sided with corporatio­ns on whether arbitratio­n is equivalent to a trial on the merits, among other important decisions.

Since the report’s release, the appellate courts have become even more skewed. The nomination­s of Justices Christine Keller and Maria Araujo Kahn to the federal bench have left the appellate courts without a single judge with public defense or legal aid experience. After Justice Keller was replaced by another former prosecutor last year, the vacancy left by Justice Araujo Kahn has become the focus of the coalition’s attention. The Connecticu­t Supreme Court is the final arbiter of what the state’s law actually means, wielding incredible power over the people of the state, but there are currently no justices with public defense or legal aid background­s, some of the legal experience­s that bring attorneys closest to the people most intimately impacted by the state’s laws.

Reflecting on Justice Thurgood Marshall’s legacy, many of his colleagues acknowledg­ed the importance of his personal experience and profession­al background in civil rights and criminal defense to his approach to the law and additions to the U.S. Supreme Court’s deliberati­ons. Justice William Brennan stated that Marshall “spoke from firsthand knowledge of the law’s failure to fulfill its promised protection­s for so many Americans.”

Now is the time for a Thurgood Marshall on the Connecticu­t Supreme Court. Despite their best efforts, judges cannot help but bring their prior experience­s to their deliberati­ons and analyses, and the only way to ensure justice for the people is to include a diversity of viewpoints on the bench. Just as Gov. Dan Malloy committed to increasing the demographi­c diversity of the state bench so that it represente­d the makeup of the state, we call on Gov. Ned Lamont to commit to increasing the diversity of experience on our courts. The best place for him to start is with the current Supreme Court vacancy, nominating a judge with public interest experience, so that Connecticu­t can start to build the pro-people judiciary that it deserves.

 ?? COURANT FILE PHOTO ?? Connecticu­t Supreme Court, Hartford, May 2022.
COURANT FILE PHOTO Connecticu­t Supreme Court, Hartford, May 2022.

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