The Denver Post

Supreme Court’s leak investigat­ion is self-destructiv­e

- By Stephen L. Carter Stephen L. Carter is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. A professor of law at Yale University.

In “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” — John le Carré’s classic novel about the hunt for a traitor near the top of British Intelligen­ce — the hero, George Smiley, tells a colleague that “the art” of being a mole “is to be one of a crowd.” The greater the number of suspects, the smaller the possibilit­y of being caught. Smiley is hauled from retirement to conduct some quiet detective work precisely because the alternativ­e is a massive investigat­ion that would disrupt and perhaps destroy the very institutio­n it’s designed to protect.

That’s the territory the U.S. Supreme Court is poised to enter. According to news reports, the search for the leaker of Justice Samuel Alito’s proposed abortion opinion has led to demands that law clerks sign affidavits under penalty of perjury and allow inspection of their cell phone records. A sitting federal judge has joined the loud clamor for a criminal investigat­ion.

This isn’t shattered trust; it’s self-immolation.

And all because the leaker, described by some as a hero, prefers to remain hidden in the crowd.

With some law clerks reportedly seeking legal counsel, one can well imagine a course of events that ends in litigation, after a clerk who refuses to turn over cell phone data is fired, then sues for wrongful terminatio­n. (Key query for another day: Would the justices recuse themselves from the lawsuit?)

To be sure, internal investigat­ions are a commonplac­e of our era. In some fields of endeavor, they’ve become sufficient­ly ubiquitous that the psychologi­cal literature includes advice on how to survive the process. And when it comes to leaks from the judicial branches, investigat­ions are not new.

In 1938, for example, the Philadelph­ia Inquirer published a story predicting, correctly, that the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court was about to strike down several new state laws restrictin­g grand jury investigat­ions. The furious justices interrogat­ed the city editor, who implausibl­y explained that he had no sources inside the court and had based his prediction on the oral argument and a study of recent decisions.

In 1939, an incensed Illinois judge demanded to know why a prisoner he’d ordered released, one Raymond Scott, had been rearrested. He was told that the attorney general’s office had received a tip that the Illinois Supreme Court was about to overturn the order and send the defendant back to jail. Thus, the prosecutor explained, “we moved to get Scott before he could flee.” The judge announced that he would undertake an investigat­ion into how word of a pending decision got to the attorney general’s office. History does not record the result, but it is surely worth noting that the tip turned out to be wrong.

As everyone’s been pointing out, the Supreme Court has hardly been exempt from worry over leaks. A 1919 leak of a pending railroad decision led to profiteeri­ng in the stock market, and criminal charges.

But the justices have often used more discretion in responding. A 1935 Washington Post piece about the justices’ penchant for secrecy refers to a past incident in which, when a leak was suspected, “the court quietly disposed of the matter by internal investigat­ion.”

Since the leak of Justice Alito’s proposed opinion, many outlets have run stories reminding us that the result in Roe itself leaked back in 1973, in an issue of Time magazine that hit the stands shortly before the decision was handed down. Then, too, there was talk among the justices of an internal investigat­ion, perhaps even including lie detector tests. Then, too, there were fears that so intrusive a hunt would shake the foundation­s of the very institutio­n it was supposed to protect.

But we should also remember the denouement. The law clerk in question, appalled at the potential damage to the institutio­n, bravely came forward. He confessed to his boss, Justice Lewis Powell, and offered to resign. Powell forgave his clerk, but sent him to see Chief Justice Warren Burger. Burger gave the young man a stern talking-to and sent him about his business.

Perhaps the leaker of Alito’s opinion possesses sufficient nobility to publicly admit culpabilit­y, and so avoid further damage to the trust that the institutio­n requires. Else the momentum of investigat­ion might prove unstoppabl­e. Perhaps the leaker is too much a coward; or too much a careerist. But those of us who even in this day and age still admire the Supreme Court must hope that rather than hide in the crowd like Smiley’s mole, the leaker will decide that the time has arrived to come in from the cold.

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 ?? Guy Parsons, Politicalc­artoons.com ??
Guy Parsons, Politicalc­artoons.com

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