The Denver Post

Ex-marine, professor, MLB draft pick among clerks

- By Jessica Gresko

WA SHINGTO N » A former Marine who deployed twice to Afghanista­n. A patent law professor. A woman who’s blind. Two Rhodes scholars.

They’re among the lawyers starting work this summer as law clerks at the U.S. Supreme Court.

The group of 16 women and 23 men hired by the justices were already on paths to become leading judges, professors and Supreme Court advocates. The one-year clerkship will cement their highprofil­e status.

“I think clerking on this court affects everybody’s career who does it . ... You put it on your résumé, and all of a sudden doors open, sometimes justifiabl­y so and sometimes not,” Justice Elena Kagan has said.

She should know.

Kagan, who clerked for Justice Thurgood Marshall, is one of five current justices who was once a Supreme Court clerk. So was Chief Justice John Roberts. Justices Stephen Breyer, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh also clerked.

Justices hire four clerks annually; retired justices hire one. The clerks review potential cases, help their justice prepare for arguments, conduct research and write draft opinions.

Scholars disagree about how much influence the clerks have. But what is clear is that while the justices are the public face of the court, the clerks are their behindthe-scenes assistants who help the place run. Clerks generally decline to give interviews until after their clerkships are over. Even then, they are careful about what they will say.

For their work, they’re paid about $83,000. When they’re done, law firms recently have been offering bonuses of $400,000 to clerks who join them.

This year’s clerk group is not without some controvers­y.

One Kavanaugh clerk is Sophia Chua-rubenfeld, whose mother, Yale law professor Amy Chua, wrote a Wall Street Journal article praising Kavanaugh as a mentor to women after his nomination.

The article came out before Kavanaugh was accused of a sexual assault alleged to have happened decades ago; he denied the accusation. Chua’s article was criticized as self-serving, given that her daughter already was in line to clerk for Kavanaugh before President Donald Trump nominated the federal appeals court judge.

Another incoming clerk is Clayton Kozinski, who clerked for Kavanaugh at the appeals court and is now working for retired Justice Anthony Kennedy. Kozinski’s father, Alex, retired abruptly in 2017 from the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals after accusation­s by women, including former law clerks, that he had touched them inappropri­ately, made lewd comments and shown them pornograph­y. Kozinski said many of the things being said about him were not true.

Justices are looking for different things in their clerks. Top academic credential­s are a must. Half the group this year attended law school at Harvard or Yale.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor has said she wants clerks “committed to making a contributi­on to the world.” Kavanaugh, during his confirmati­on hearing last year, highlighte­d his record of hiring female and minority clerks as an appeals court judge. His first group of Supreme Court clerks was all women, a court first.

“There’s all sorts of quirky reasons to explain choices,” said law professor Todd Peppers, who wrote a book about clerking and noted that Chief Justice William Rehnquist liked clerks who played tennis. Justice John Marshall Harlan II preferred golfers.

While most clerks are relatively recent law school graduates, two Breyer and two Gorsuch clerks are older. One Gorsuch clerk is Notre Dame law professor Stephen Yelderman, who clerked for Gorsuch when Gorsuch was an appeals court judge.

Kagan clerk Jordan Bock rowed at Harvard, where she studied physics, astrophysi­cs and government. Roberts clerk Joseph Falvey served in the Marines. Megan Braun, another Roberts clerk, played college water polo and was a Rhodes scholar. Mark Jia, retired Justice David Souter’s clerk, was also a Rhodes scholar.

Among Justice Clarence Thomas’ hires this year is Notre Dame graduate Laura Wolk, who lost her eyesight to retinal cancer as a child.

Thomas also chose for his team this year James “Matt” Rice, a law school graduate of the University of California. A catcher at Western Kentucky, he was picked 1,525th — dead last — in the 2010 major-league draft but returned to school for his senior year. He signed with Tampa Bay after being chosen in the ninth round the next year and played two summers in the minor leagues.

 ?? Bruce Newman, The Oxford Eagle ??
Bruce Newman, The Oxford Eagle

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