Orlando Sentinel

Roberts: Courts must review rules on harassment complaints

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — Chief Justice John Roberts said Sunday that the federal court system needs to examine its rules and procedures to make sure law clerks and other employees can report wrongdoing if they are subjected to sexual harassment or other inappropri­ate behavior.

“Events in recent months have illuminate­d the depth of the problem of sexual harassment in the workplace, and events in the past few weeks have made clear that the judicial branch is not immune,” Roberts said in his year-end report on the federal judiciary.

He appeared to be referring to veteran Judge Alex Kozinski, who served on the 9th Circuit Court in California but decided to retire two weeks ago after a series of women reported he had shown them pornograph­y or made sexual comments when they worked for him as law clerks.

Their accounts put a spotlight on a special problem for the judiciary, where law clerks frequently work in close quarters and in confidence for a powerful judge.

Several of the women said they felt they had nowhere to go if they were mistreated or subjected to harassment while at work. They also knew the judge’s positive recommenda­tion could be crucial for future career opportunit­ies.

Their complaints followed similar concerns about sexual harassment or abuse of women working in Hollywood, the media, Congress and elsewhere.

Roberts said the judiciary will undertake “a careful evaluation of whether its standards of conduct and its procedures for investigat­ing and correcting inappropri­ate behavior are adequate to ensure an exemplary workplace for every judge and every court employee.”

He said he had appointed a working group to consider if changes are needed “in our codes of conduct, our guidance to employees — including law clerks — on issues of confidenti­ality and reporting of instances of misconduct, our educationa­l programs, and our rules for investigat­ing and processing misconduct complaints. These concerns warrant serious attention from all quarters of the judicial branch.”

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