Oroville Mercury-Register

For Supreme Court justices, secrecy is part of the job

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON » Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black was hospitaliz­ed, his health failing, when he gave his son Hugo Jr. an order: Burn the papers. Worried that the publicatio­n of certain of his private notes could harm the court or his colleagues, he insisted on their destructio­n.

“Operation Frustratet­he-Historians,” his wife called it. As for the reporters asking the hospital about his condition: “Tell them nothing,” Black told his son.

Black, who served on the court from 1937 until just before his death in 1971, isn’t alone among the Supreme Court’s justices in what can seem like a sometimes extreme desire for secrecy.

Prizing confidenti­ality

Supreme Court justices have long prized confidenti­ality. It’s one of the reasons the leak of a draft opinion in a major abortion case last week was so shocking. But it’s not just the justices’ work on opinions that they understand­ably like to keep under wraps. The justices are also ultimately the gatekeeper­s to informatio­n about their travel, speaking engagement­s and health issues as well as the decisionma­kers about whether and when to make their private papers public.

Even details about the Supreme Court Building itself can be hard to come by. Before the coronaviru­s hit, the taxpayer-funded structure was used 30 to 50 times a year for after-hours private events by groups that pay for the privilege, but the court declined to provide a comprehens­ive list of groups or events. A few

years ago, when the iconic red drapes that frame the courtroom were replaced, the court declined to even name the company that did the work. The court is also not subject to the federal Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

The justices themselves have pushed back against suggestion­s they are less than transparen­t. Responding to a question in 2018 about whether the court should allow cameras to televise their proceeding­s as Congress does, Chief Justice John Roberts had a simple answer: No. He went on to defend the court’s practices.

“It’s not as if we’re doing this in secret. We’re the most transparen­t branch in government in terms of seeing us do our work and us explaining what we’re doing,” Roberts said. When the court decides something, the justices generally spell out their reasoning in lengthy opinions. A court spokesman even once favorably compared the court’s openness to a “goldfish bowl.”

But Gabe Roth, executive director of the court transparen­cy group Fix the Court, said calling the court the most transparen­t

branch is just wrong. “That’s a laughable statement, and Chief Justice Roberts knows it,” Roth said in an email, calling some of the court’s practices “galling.”

Even the justices’ decisions aren’t always thoroughly explained. When cases come to the court on an emergency basis and in need of a quick resolution, an answer from the justices often comes without any or much accompanyi­ng reasoning. Justice Samuel Alito last year defended what’s been called the court’s “shadow docket,” saying it is hard to see how the court might handle things any other way.

COVID fallout

The coronaviru­s pandemic has pushed the court to be more open in one way. Before the pandemic, a member of the public who wanted to hear an argument live had to stand in line outside the court for hours and sometimes days, or pay someone else to wait, to get one of the seats reserved for the public. But when the court began holding arguments by telephone because of the pandemic, it began making audio available live.

If the court’s proceeding­s are more public, the justices themselves still like their privacy. While modern presidents have traditiona­lly released the results of an annual physical, justices make their own decisions about releasing health informatio­n.

Some are more forthcomin­g than others. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg released quite a bit of health informatio­n through several bouts with cancer. She nonetheles­s waited four months in 2020 to note that her cancer had returned. That year, Roberts spent a night in a hospital after falling and needing stitches. His injury wasn’t disclosed until the next month, and then only because The Washington Post learned of it.

Until last week’s leak, one of the biggest court mysteries of the year involved the hospitaliz­ation of Justice Clarence Thomas. The court announced in late March, days after he was admitted, that Thomas had been hospitaliz­ed after experienci­ng “flu-like symptoms,” and he was diagnosed with an infection. The court ruled out COVID-19 but didn’t release any more details about Thomas’ illness or why he was hospitaliz­ed nearly a week, days longer than expected. Had the justices not been about to hear arguments after Thomas was hospitaliz­ed, making his absence obvious, it’s unclear anything ever would have been released.

As for when the justices agree to speak to groups, it’s typically left to the group to publicize the event. Last week, for example, as is typical, the court did not publicize the fact that Roberts and Thomas were speaking in Atlanta.

 ?? JOHN DURICKA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Supreme Court Justice Hugo L. Black.
JOHN DURICKA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Supreme Court Justice Hugo L. Black.

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