Miami Herald

Extraordin­ary abortion draft leak threatens trust at Supreme Court

- BY GREG STOHR

A seismic shock hit the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday with the leak of a draft opinion overturnin­g the Roe v. Wade abortion rights ruling, an extraordin­ary breach likely to further decimate trust among the justices at what was already a fractious time.

The Politico-published leak, which included a preliminar­y breakdown of the individual justices’ votes, marked the first time in modern Supreme Court history that a draft opinion was made public months before it was likely to be released. The draft, written by Justice Samuel Alito as a potential majority opinion and stamped with the date

Feb. 10, said Roe was “egregiousl­y wrong.”

“For an employee or member of the court to intentiona­lly leak a draft opinion would be a gross betrayal of trust, particular­ly if the leak were an effort to advance partisan aims or to undermine the court’s work and legitimacy,” said Rick Garnett, a Notre Dame Law School professor who clerked for thenChief Justice William Rehnquist during the 199697 term.

Chief Justice John Roberts said Tuesday he has asked the Supreme Court’s marshal to investigat­e the source of the leak. The court confirmed the authentici­ty of the draft opinion but said it doesn’t represent a final ruling or reflect anyone’s definitive position in the case.

“To the extent this betrayal of the confidence­s of the court was intended to undermine the integrity of our operations, it will not succeed,” Roberts said in a statement. “The work of the court will not be affected in any way.” He added, “This was a singular and egregious breach of that trust that is an affront to the court and the community of public servants who work here.”

A ruling overturnin­g Roe would come less than two years after Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death just before the 2020 election allowed then-President Donald Trump to transform the court’s balance by selecting Amy Coney Barrett to fill the vacancy. Trump’s three Supreme Court appointmen­ts — including one to fill a seat Senate Republican­s held open during the last 11 months of Barack Obama’s presidency — gave the court a 6-3 conservati­ve majority.

Politico said it got its informatio­n, which included the preliminar­y votes of four other Republican-appointed justices to overturn Roe, from “a person familiar with the court’s deliberati­ons.”

That descriptio­n could potentiall­y describe any of the 37 law clerks working at the court this term, a smaller number of staff assistants in the justices’ chambers, or a handful of other court employees. It might also cover spouses to the extent the justices reveal confidenti­al informatio­n at home.

“For a draft opinion to be shared with the public is truly extraordin­ary,” said Allison Orr Larsen, a professor who directs the Institute of the Bill of Rights Law at William & Mary

Law School. “What comes next is anyone’s guess, but I am confident that everyone in the Supreme Court building is rattled this morning.”

Leaks about internal deliberati­ons have occurred in the past, though on a smaller scale. Time magazine reported the results of Roe v. Wade hours before the ruling was scheduled to be issued in January 1973, though without publishing the full opinion.

The disclosure prompted then-Chief Justice Warren Burger to demand his colleagues question their law clerks, and he threatened to call in the FBI to administer lie-detector tests, according to Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong’s landmark book, “The Brethren.” A law clerk for Justice Lewis Powell eventually told Burger he had inadverten­tly disclosed the outcome to a reporter in advance while trying to provide background informatio­n, according to the book.

More recently, several conservati­ve media outlets have hinted at inside informatio­n about the internal wrangling in pending cases over the Affordable Care Act and LGBTQ rights.

Still, nothing in the court’s modern history has reached the level of the new leak in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on, a case that centers on a Mississipp­i law that would ban abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

Alito’s opinion, which spanned 67 pages plus two appendices, said that Roe’s “reasoning was exceptiona­lly weak” and that the ruling had only “enflamed debate and deepened division.”

Conservati­ves were quick to blame abortion rights supporters for the leak. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican from Kentucky, said that “by every indication, this was yet another escalation in the radical left’s ongoing campaign to bully and intimidate federal judges and substitute mob rule for the rule of law.”

McConnell said the Justice Department should pursue criminal charges if applicable, though it wasn’t immediatel­y clear what crime might have been committed.

But others speculated the leak might have come from the conservati­ve wing, as part of an effort to ensure that potential swing justices — Barrett and Trump-appointed Justice Brett Kavanaugh — don’t switch sides and vote to keep Roe intact.

Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch also voted to overturn Roe when the court discussed the case in a private conference in December just after the argument, Politico said.

 ?? JABIN BOTSFORD The Washington Post ?? Chief Justice John Roberts, shown in a photo from 2021, said Tuesday he has asked the Supreme Court’s marshal to investigat­e the source of the leak.
JABIN BOTSFORD The Washington Post Chief Justice John Roberts, shown in a photo from 2021, said Tuesday he has asked the Supreme Court’s marshal to investigat­e the source of the leak.

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