The Guardian Australia

Rights group calls for Samuel Alito to be investigat­ed after claims of leaked 2014 ruling

- Edward Helmore

A civil rights group issued a call Saturday for US supreme court justice Samuel Alito to be investigat­ed over allegation­s that the judge leaked a 2014 landmark ruling involving contracept­ion and religious rights at a private dinner with wealthy political donors.

The claim was contained in a New York Times article in which minister Rob Schenck, an anti-abortion activist, said he was told of the decision weeks before it was announced and had used the informatio­n to prepare a public relations push.

Schenck also claimed he tipped off Hobby Lobby, the craft store chain owned by Christian evangelica­ls that brought and won the case allowing privately-held, for-profit businesses to be exempt from regulation­s to which its owners religiousl­y object, in this case requiring employers to cover certain contracept­ives for their female employees.

“The Senate judiciary committee should immediatel­y move to investigat­e the apparent leak by Justice Alito,” said Brian Fallon, the executive director of Demand Justice.

“This bombshell report is the latest proof that the Republican justices on the court are little more than politician­s in robes. It’s no wonder trust in the court has hit a record low. Structural reform of the court, including strict new ethics rules, is needed now more than ever.”

Fallon added that Schenck “should be called to testify about both the leak and the years-long lobbying effort he once led to cultivate Alito and other Republican justices”.

Claims of the judicial leak, potentiall­y for political purposes, comes six months after a draft opinion of the Dobbs decision overturnin­g the nationwide abortion rights establishe­d by the 1972 case Roe v Wade was leaked ahead of its June publicatio­n.

In a letter to supreme court chief justice John G Roberts Jr dated 7 June, Schenck wrote that he was reaching out to the judge “to inform you of a series of events that may impinge on the investigat­ion you and your delegates are undertakin­g in connection with the leak of a draft opinion”.

He described a dinner at which an unnamed political donor invited to dine at the home of Alito and his wife, Martha-Ann, had offered to try to glean informatio­n about the pending decision in the Hobby Lobby case.

The next day, the Times reported, the dining guest called Schenck and told him Alito had written the majority opinion in the case and that Hobby Lobby would win. That exact decision was publicly announced less than a month later.

Schenck concluded the letter to Roberts

by saying he “thought this previous incident might bear some considerat­ion by you and others involved in the process”.

How that directly reflects on the current investigat­ion into the leak of the Dobbs decision is not clear, but it arrives at a time of concern for the court’s legitimacy as it works under the sway of a conservati­ve supermajor­ity. Polls show that a majority of Americans are losing confidence in the supreme court.

After the leak in May of the Dobbs decision draft, Alito called the unauthoriz­ed disclosure “a grave betrayal” and ordered an investigat­ion by the supreme court’s marshal.

The Times noted that Schenck’s account has “gaps”. But the newspaper’s examinatio­n of the claim uncovered emails and conversati­ons that “strongly suggested” that Schenck knew of the decision before it was made public.

 ?? Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP ?? US supreme court Justice Samuel Alito has been accused of leaking a landmark 2014 ruling on contracept­ion and religious rights.
Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP US supreme court Justice Samuel Alito has been accused of leaking a landmark 2014 ruling on contracept­ion and religious rights.

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