Lodi News-Sentinel

Threat to Kavanaugh will change justices’ lives

- NOAH FELDMAN Noah Feldman is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. A professor of law at Harvard University, he is author, most recently, of “The Broken Constituti­on: Lincoln, Slavery and the Refounding of America.”

The arrest of an armed man outside the home of Justice Brett Kavanaugh marks a significan­t milestone in the history of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Now that the justices and their families need permanent, profession­al and close security, as they unquestion­ably do, there will be no going back. The court building at One First St. NE will continue its transforma­tion into a garrisoned fortress, not the marble palace of the people’s justice it was built to be.

The individual and collective isolation of the justices will be deepened, distancing them further from the currents of ordinary life. Increasing­ly, they will lose their identities as normal people, disappeari­ng into their symbolic roles. Their lives are changed irrevocabl­y.

This now-inevitable developmen­t isn’t just bad for the justices. It’s bad for democracy. And it’s terrible for the rule of law, which benefits when the justices can do their jobs with a minimum of spillover into their personal lives.

For more than 200 years, the justices have mostly lived charmed lives, at least from the standpoint of high government officials. From John Marshall through Thurgood Marshall and up to the present day, there has been only one recorded attempt to kill a justice, in 1889 (Justice Stephen Johnson Field’s bodyguard, a U.S. marshal, killed the assailant). Someone shot a bullet through a window into Justice Harry Blackmun’s chambers in 1985, presumably because he authored Roe v. Wade; no one was injured.

Except for some exceptiona­lly tumultuous periods, the justices’ names were hardly known: As recently as 2018, more than half of Americans couldn’t name a single one of the nine members. Their faces were close to anonymous. In Washington DC in the late 1990s, I witnessed the greeter at the Capital Grille — a restaurant five minutes from the court — ask Justice David Souter if he was “with the Souter party” that had made a reservatio­n (“I suppose I am,” he replied modestly and wryly).

Why has that changed now?

One reason can’t be ignored. The man outside Kavanaugh’s home who was charged with attempted murder was, among other things, reportedly incensed about the Supreme Court’s impending reversal of Roe v. Wade and with it the federal right to abortion. Just as resistance to Roe engendered murderous attacks on abortion doctors and clinics over the decades, its reversal might inflame passions to an extent we can’t yet anticipate and make some people crazy. We do know that the court hasn’t rolled back basic individual liberties like this ever in its history. The crumbling of the institutio­nal norms — exemplifie­d by the leak of Justice Samuel Alito’s draft majority opinion — flows directly from the radicalism of what’s apparently coming.

Of course, the justices should be able to make decisions — even ones that are terribly wrong — without their lives being threatened. Liberals who believe in the rule of law will not play down those threats. The liberal justices are going to need protection just as much as the conservati­ves. Soon-to-be Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson will be as much in jeopardy as Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

Conservati­ves and liberals alike should be able to agree that the changes in the justices’ way of doing business is the proximate cause of the heightened rage at the court — even as they argue about who is to blame. Opponents of Roe bemoan the disrespect for the institutio­n coming from liberals and, in the case of Justice Kavanaugh, point to the emotionall­y charged demonstrat­ions that targeted him during his confirmati­on hearings.

For their part, supporters of Roe accuse the conservati­ve justices of breaking the court’s norms as one of the triggers. They cite the storming of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, as a precedent for political violence that conservati­ve politician­s have soft-pedaled and condoned, and also note that radical antiaborti­onists have also used weapons. Both sides have a point.

National craziness has consequenc­es in a highly polarized country in which the Capitol can be stormed and would-be shooters can’t be tracked, let alone disarmed, because of the limits of existing gun regulation­s.

In 2021, more than 4,500 threats and other inappropri­ate communicat­ions were directed at federal judges, according to the head of the U.S. Marshals Service. In 2020, a gunman with a grudge attacked the home of federal judge Esther Salas in New Jersey, killing her son and seriously injuring her husband. Just last week in Wisconsin, a gunman with several politician­s on his target list killed a retired judge who had sentenced him years earlier.

Gone are the days when Supreme Court justices avoided the negativity that most public officials must sometimes confront — when they could walk the streets alone or with their families without attracting attention, positive or negative.

That luxury — innocence, if you will — served the country. It lowered the temperatur­e for even the court’s high-profile rulings. Today’s feverish atmosphere is unusual. But the consequenc­es for how the justices live will be permanent.

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