East Bay Times

Why do some justices have such a hard time saying no?

- Robin Abcarian is a Los Angeles Times columnist.

Why do some United States Supreme Court justices have such a hard time saying no?

Believe me, I understand the temptation. Columnists may not be judges in the traditiona­l sense, but we are judges in the court of public opinion. Occasional­ly, I've been offered gifts in exchange for a positive ruling (well, a positive column) on a controvers­ial issue that may come before me.

Attractive as these offers may be, they are just not that difficult to refuse. Especially when the institutio­n's credibilit­y — or your job — is on the line.

The people judges and journalist­s serve expect and deserve transparen­cy, fairness and independen­ce. They do not want either group to be bought off, or materially rewarded for the opinions they deliver. If the public stops believing the courts or the news media are acting on principle, the institutio­ns lose credibilit­y.

It's astonishin­g that newspapers like The Times are stricter about ethics than the Supreme Court, which is required to report some financial dealings each year but otherwise has no compulsory code of ethics at all.

No one has ever offered me a free flight on a private jet to a rustic lodge in Alaska, as in the case of Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., or a free seat on a private jet to a super yacht in Indonesia, as in the case of Justice Clarence Thomas. But I've been offered lots of nice things in my career.

When I was a cub reporter in Ventura County, the owner of an oceanfront vacation home in Oxnard Shores offered me the use of his house. The catch? I was working on a story about a proposed moratorium on beachfront residentia­l constructi­on, which he opposed. If he liked the story, he told me, I was welcome to a weekend at the beach. The invitation was rescinded upon publicatio­n.

Even when a source doesn't want anything, when they simply appreciate something you have written, they may try to thank you with a lavish gift. That creates the appearance of impropriet­y. I have, over the years, sent back a Seiko watch, a gold bracelet, a Blackberry (remember those?) and designer clothing.

Which brings me back to the Supreme Court, which is not bound by the code of conduct that applies to all other federal judges.

If we are ever to regain our trust in the Supreme Court, Congress must adopt a specific and binding code of ethics for the justices, ones that impose well-defined dollar limits on gifts and “personal hospitalit­y,” the dodge that has allowed Thomas, in particular, to feed at the freebie trough.

“The highest court in the land should not have the lowest ethical standards,” Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., said as he announced that his committee would take up legislatio­n tightening ethics rules for the Supreme Court later this summer.

It's not just conservati­ve justices who have failed to declare their conflicts. According to reports, Justice Sonia Sotomayor did not recuse herself in at least three cases involving Penguin Random House, which has paid her millions of dollars for her memoir and children's books.

The idea that the justices can be trusted to police themselves, as all nine declared recently in a joint statement on ethics, is laughable.

Supreme Court justices shouldn't have to be responsibl­e for deciding which freebies to accept, or which cases to bow out of.

Let's remove that terrible burden from their black-robed shoulders. Like journalist­s, they need some hard and fast rules to live by.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito has been criticized for accepting a free flight on a private jet to a rustic lodge in Alaska.
SUSAN WALSH — ASSOCIATED PRESS Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito has been criticized for accepting a free flight on a private jet to a rustic lodge in Alaska.

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