The Arizona Republic

Jackson’s Guantanamo work an issue for GOP

Republican­s decry record of ‘defending terrorists’

- Jessica Gresko and Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden’s Supreme Court nominee will face sharp questions from Republican lawmakers this coming week about the work she did as a public defender representi­ng four Guantanamo Bay detainees.

Some Republican­s say Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson has a record of “defending terrorists” and they plan to raise questions about it at Senate hearings on her nomination that begin Monday. The criticism comes even as prominent Republican­s have previously defended those who represente­d Guantanamo detainees, saying ensuring everyone access to a lawyer is a fundamenta­l part of the American legal system.

Jackson was nominated to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer, and her selection fulfills a campaign promise by President Joe Biden to name the first Black woman to the Supreme Court. Democrats have the votes to confirm her even without GOP support. But three Republican­s on the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is holding the hearings, are considerin­g running for president in 2024 and are likely to use Jackson’s Guantanamo Bay work, among other issues, to try to paint her as soft on crime and terrorism.

Already, the Republican Party has branded Jackson as a “radical, left-wing activist” and suggested her representa­tion of Guantanamo detainees was “‘zealous,’ going beyond just giving them a competent defense.”

Jackson has written that under “the

ethics rules that apply to lawyers, an attorney has a duty to represent her clients zealously,” no matter their own views. That includes the men she represente­d, men alleged to have been an alQaida bomb expert, a Taliban intelligen­ce officer, a man who trained to fight American forces in Afghanista­n and a farmer associated with the Taliban.

None of the men, however, was ever convicted by the military commission­s created to try detainees. Even those who were eventually charged had those charges dropped, and all were eventually released.

Jackson was assigned all four cases while working as a federal public defender from 2005 to 2007. She continued at least some work when she moved on to private practice. In 2010, she joined the U.S. Sentencing Commission. She became a federal judge in 2013.

Earlier this month Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., said after meeting with Jackson

that it was “interestin­g” and in his view “a little concerning” that she had continued to represent the men after going into private practice at Morrison & Foerster, a firm that also had other lawyers representi­ng detainees. Hawley, who also praised Jackson for “substantiv­e answers” in her meeting with him, is one of the Republican­s on the committee with White House aspiration­s. The others are Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Tom Cotton of Arkansas.

A.J. Kramer, Jackson’s former boss at the public defenders’ office, confirmed she was assigned the Guantanamo cases and had not specifical­ly sought them out. She was chosen, he said, for her experience working on appeals court cases. Unlike colleagues, she never went to Guantanamo to visit her clients. Her work was legal research and writing, and the assignment­s were not her main ones while in the office, a former colleague said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson was nominated by President Joe Biden to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer.
GETTY IMAGES Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson was nominated by President Joe Biden to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer.

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