USA TODAY International Edition

High court whodunit launches

Speculatio­n, suspicions abound; facts are few

- John Fritze and Bart Jansen

WASHINGTON – A leaked draft opinion in a Supreme Court abortion case set off a flurry of speculatio­n about the identity and motivation of whoever exposed the document as the court launched its probe into the unpreceden­ted breach.

The whodunit, like everything else in Washington, took on political overtones as theories spun furiously over the leaker’s identity.

Could it have been a clerk, one of the 20- something law school graduates that put in punishing hours helping to research and craft opinions? Maybe it was a justice, a member of the court’s liberal wing trying to scuttle the outcome or a conservati­ve hoping to galvanize support for Associate Justice Samuel Alito’s position. What if the leak didn’t come from any of them? What if it was the result of a computer hack?

“Look, there are lots of theories,” said Sean Marotta, a veteran appellate attorney who follows the Supreme Court. “Anybody can construct a theory, but at this point, nobody has any evidence to back any of them up.”

Alito’s 98- page opinion laying out the conservati­ve case for overturnin­g the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision was published by Politico on Monday, a revelation that thrust abortion and the court into the midterm election – at least temporaril­y stealing attention from the war in Ukraine, spiraling inflation and COVID- 19.

In a statement Tuesday, the Supreme Court said Gail Curley, the high court’s marshal, would handle the investigat­ion. Curley’s office supervises about 260 employees with a wide range of responsibi­lities, including security, maintainin­g order in the courtroom, overseeing contracts and some human resources functions.

Marotta said that although the office manages the Supreme Court police, many of its jobs are more

“I’m 100% certain that they haven’t investigat­ed anything like this before.”

Paul Rosenzweig Red Branch Consulting

administra­tive. The fact that Chief Justice John Roberts assigned the probe to Curley instead of to the counselor to the chief justice – essentiall­y his chief of staff – is telling.

“It’s notable that the chief assigned this to somebody who is an institutio­nal officer of the court,” Marotta said. “He sort of took it away from his personal office, so to speak, and put it more just in the institutio­nal area of the court.”

A Supreme Court spokeswoma­n did not respond to questions about the investigat­ion.

Part of the speculatio­n around the investigat­ion stemmed from the nature of the breach.

Leaks piercing the veil of secrecy around the Supreme Court happen rarely, and experts couldn’t recall a draft opinion ever being disclosed in this fashion.

In their 1979 book “The Brethren,” Washington Post journalist­s Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong noted that Chief Justice Warren Burger was so dismayed by a Time magazine scoop about the outcome of the Roe v. Wade decision that he threatened to bring in the FBI to conduct lie detector tests.

A clerk in Associate Justice Lewis Powell’s chambers fessed up and, according to the book, was not forced to resign.

It’s not likely that such a leak is illegal, experts said, but it would probably be a career- ending move for a clerk, making it impossible to pursue opportunit­ies in the top tiers of the legal profession. If the document was stolen or obtained through a hack, that would be different.

Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor, said bringing in the Justice Department to help with the investigat­ion would raise separation of power issues – the kind of outside involvemen­t Roberts has long been keen to avoid. It could subject the justices to a level of scrutiny they might find unwelcome.

Mariotti said he could envision justices refusing to cooperate with investigat­ors, which would raise the prospect of issuing subpoenas or search warrants.

“If I was conducting such an investigat­ion, I would, for example, seize digital devices and have them imaged. I would seek and obtain email accounts and review private email,” said Mariotti, a partner at the Thompson Coburn law firm. “It’s not clear to me that the chief justice of the Supreme Court wants an investigat­or – whether the marshal or someone else – seizing the cellphones of justices and families and associates, going through their private emails and so forth.”

Investigat­ors of the leak are heading into uncharted waters, some experts said. “I’m 100% certain that they haven’t investigat­ed anything like this before,” said Paul Rosenzweig, a former senior counsel with Ken Starr’s independen­t counsel investigat­ion of President Bill Clinton and the founder of Red Branch Consulting.

A liberal leaker?

Alito’s draft opinion was a fullthroat­ed repudiatio­n of Roe, a decision that – if embraced by the court – would not only overturn a landmark precedent but amount to a change in the way Americans have understood reproducti­ve rights for the past five decades. If the idea was to call attention to that outcome, a leak from the left might make sense.

“Whoever committed this lawless act knew exactly what it could bring about,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R- Ky., said Tuesday. “Everybody knows what kind of climate the far left is trying to fuel: one that is antithetic­al to the rule of law.”

Like all the other theories floating around, McConnell’s was speculativ­e – offered without evidence.

Conservati­ve strategy on Roe?

A counter- theory is that a conservati­ve might have leaked the draft in an effort to hold together a majority. A wavering justice might be less willing to switch sides in the case if there is a perception of doing so because of the fallout from the disclosure.

“In terms of who leaked it and why, it seems much more likely to me that it comes from the right in response to an actual or threatened defection by one of the five who voted to overturn Roe,” said Kermit Roosevelt, a professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia Carey Law School. “Leaking this early draft makes that more costly for a defector because now people will think that they changed their vote after the leak.”

Justices can and do switch sides after seeing draft opinions. Dissents can become majority opinions. There was wide speculatio­n that the court’s liberals joined a major decision last year curbing LGBTQ rights to head off a much more far- reaching opinion that would have represente­d a major win for religious groups.

CBS News reported in 2012 that Roberts initially sided with the court’s conservati­ve wing to strike down the Affordable Care Act but changed his mind.

Clerk? Aide? Someone else?

In the cloistered world of the Supreme Court, heavy on tradition and slow to embrace technology, there should in theory be a relatively small number of people who would have access to a draft opinion – namely the justices and their clerks.

Associate Justice Elena Kagan noted in 2013 that the nine jurists still largely communicat­ed by paper. It’s likely that’s changed, particular­ly during the COVID- 19 pandemic as proceeding­s and meetings were held virtually, though the court hasn’t detailed those changes, probably in part because of security reasons.

In 1979, after ABC News reported in advance the outcome in a major libel case, Burger reassigned a typesetter in the court’s printing room after concluding he was responsibl­e. In other words, the leaker could be someone completely unexpected.

Washington was abuzz with similar speculatio­n four years ago, when a writer The New York Times described as a “senior administra­tion official” penned an anonymous essay describing President Donald Trump as erratic and amoral. Rumors that the writer was the chief of staff at the White House or member of Trump’s Cabinet circulated.

The writer, it turned out, was a former chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security.

Complicati­ng all of the theories this week is a lack of clarity about the opinion leaker’s motives.

“I just don’t see someone leaking early an opinion that many people believed was a strong possibilit­y anyhow,” Joyce Vance, former U. S. attorney for the Northern District of Alabama, said on the CAFE Insider podcast this week. “I don’t see how anyone could think that that would move the needle at all.”

Vance predicted the court’s internal investigat­ion should be relatively simple, given how tightly the court has generally held such draft opinions.

“That just makes me think it’s so unlikely that a clerk would have been the one to leak this,” she said. “What I wonder is if we would get to the bottom of this mystery.”

 ?? ?? Alito
Alito
 ?? MEGAN SMITH/ USA TODAY ?? Demonstrat­ors rally outside the Supreme Court on Tuesday after a draft opinion was leaked.
MEGAN SMITH/ USA TODAY Demonstrat­ors rally outside the Supreme Court on Tuesday after a draft opinion was leaked.

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