Greenwich Time

U.S. Senate confirms Connecticu­t’s Maria Kahn as 2nd Circuit Court judge

- By Lisa Hagen

The U.S. Senate on Thursday confirmed Maria Araújo Kahn to sit on the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, becoming the latest of President Joe Biden’s judicial nominees to secure approval and opening up a vacancy on the Connecticu­t Supreme Court.

Kahn, 58, was confirmed in a 51-42 vote with support from two Republican senators. She will replace Judge José Cabranes, who was appointed to the 2nd Circuit by former

President Bill Clinton in 1994 and will now be semiretire­d as he takes senior status.

Kahn has served as an associate justice for Connecticu­t’s highest court since 2017. Her legal career also includes time as a former federal prosecutor and public defender and has served as a judge for a state Superior Court in New Haven and the Connecticu­t Appellate Court. Sens. Chris Murphy and Richard Blumenthal, both D-Conn., supported her nomination.

The influentia­l 2nd Circuit Court, which handles appeals on cases related to securities and antitrust issues, is based in New York City with jurisdicti­on over Connecticu­t, New York and Vermont. Three of the 13 lifetime appointmen­ts go to nominees from Connecticu­t. Biden filled two of those Connecticu­t seats, while former President Donald Trump appointed William Nardini in 2019.

Her nomination is part of an ongoing effort by Biden to reshape the federal judiciary and expand diversity when it comes to not only gender and race but also profession­al background. Biden set the record last year for the number of public defenders appointed to federal appellate courts. Kahn became Biden’s 116th judicial nominee to be confirmed since he took office in 2021.

“Maria Kahn epitomizes public service. She’s the real deal — with unexcelled breadth of experience — and will bring to the federal bench truly extraordin­ary expertise and intellect,” Blumenthal said Thursday. “Dedicated to opening the courthouse doors to underserve­d communitie­s, she also has qualities of compassion and empathy which so deeply impressed me and my Senate colleagues.”

Murphy echoed a similar sentiment, saying that he was “so glad to recommend” Kahn to the president.

“Justice Kahn spent the last five years serving on our state Supreme Court and a lifetime committed to public service. She’s one of Connecticu­t’s most respected jurists and will bring a depth of legal experience to this new role,” Murphy said.

Because the Senate did not complete the confirmati­on process for Kahn before the end of the year, Biden and lawmakers had to restart it during the new session of Congress. Biden initially nominated her for the vacancy last July and renominate­d her in early January. The Senate Judiciary Committee voted for her nomination again in February, prompting the full Senate to consider her confirmati­on.

When she appeared before the Judiciary Committee for her confirmati­on hearing in September, Kahn spoke to her experience­s as both a law clerk and an immigrant and how they have informed her time on the bench. She largely avoided tough questionin­g as Republican members focused most of their attention on a fellow judicial nominee who testified alongside Kahn.

“None of us could have imagined that, one day, I would be before this committee as a nominee to the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals. This could only happen in this great nation,” Kahn said before the Judiciary Committee in September. She was born in Angola to Portuguese parents and emigrated from Africa to the U.S. at the age of 10.

At the hearing, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin, D-Ill., highlighte­d her work as the lead investigat­or and prosecutor looking into a ponzi scheme in the early 2000s. She worked on the case involving Hakan Yalincak, a former student of New York University, who defrauded the school and convinced investors to give money to a fake hedge fund company.

In addition to Kahn, Biden also appointed Sarah Merriam to sit on the 2nd Circuit for Connecticu­t. The president first nominated Merriam for the U.S. District Court in Connecticu­t, but with less than a year in that position, he elevated her to serve on the federal appellate court. The Senate confirmed Merriam to the 2nd Circuit in September in a bipartisan 53-44 vote.

With Kahn leaving the Connecticu­t Supreme Court, Gov. Ned Lamont will be tasked with nominating a new associate justice, who will then be considered by the General Assembly for the eight-year term.

 ?? Arnold Gold/Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Connecticu­t Supreme Court Justice Maria Araújo Kahn listens to arguments in a labor dispute concerning the firing of Nichole Jefferson, former executive director of the Commission on Equal Opportunit­ies, in Hartford on Oct. 13, 2020.
Arnold Gold/Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Connecticu­t Supreme Court Justice Maria Araújo Kahn listens to arguments in a labor dispute concerning the firing of Nichole Jefferson, former executive director of the Commission on Equal Opportunit­ies, in Hartford on Oct. 13, 2020.

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