Times-Herald

Leaked Supreme Court draft suggests Roe could be overturned

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court keeps secrets. Year after year, in major case after major case, there's little beyond what the justices say during oral arguments that suggests how they will rule until they actually do.

That is until Monday evening when Politico published a draft of an opinion in a major abortion case that was argued in the fall. The document indicates the court could be poised to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade case that legalized abortion nationwide.

On Tuesday, in a statement, the court confirmed the draft's authentici­ty, though it cautioned that the document "does not represent a decision by the Court or the final position of any member on the issues in the case." Chief Justice John Roberts ordered an investigat­ion into the leak's source. While there have, on very rare occasions, been leaks of the outcomes in cases, the publicatio­n of a draft running nearly 100 pages was without an evident modern parallel.

A decision in the case had been expected before the court begins its summer recess in late June or early July, so it could be more than a month before the court actually issues a final opinion. If the court does what the draft suggests, the ruling would upend a nearly 50-yearold decision; the leak disrupts an almost unbroken tradition of secrecy at the court.

The document posted by Politico was written by Justice Samuel Alito, a member of the court's six-justice conservati­ve majority, and distribute­d to other members of the court in February. Opinions typically go through multiple drafts before their publicatio­n and elements large and small can change, as can votes.

Lawyers and others who watch the court closely were shocked by the draft's publicatio­n. Neal Katyal, who has argued dozens of cases before the court and as a young lawyer worked for Justice Stephen Breyer, compared the apparent leak to The New York Times' 1971 publicatio­n of the government's secret history of the Vietnam War, known as the Pentagon Papers.

"This is the equivalent of the pentagon papers leak, but at the Supreme Court. I'm pretty sure there has never ever been such a leak. And certainly not in the years I've been following the Supreme Court," Katyal wrote on Twitter on Monday evening.

Part of the reason the Supreme Court has historical­ly been so leak-proof is that only a handful of people have access to decisions before they're published. That includes the justices themselves and the small group of people who work for them. The justices' clerks, young lawyers who work for the justices for a year and who would be among those who could see a

(Continued from Page 1) draft opinion, sign pledges of confidenti­ality. The number of people who might see a draft at the stage of the Alito document is about 70.

Still, there have been leaks before, though not of the magnitude of the document posted by Politico. In 1973, for example, Time magazine's David Beckwith reported on the outcome of Roe v. Wade before the decision was published. But because the magazine was a weekly, Beckwith's scoop arrived just hours before the decision was made public.

And in the late 1970s, ABC's Tim O'Brien had a half a dozen scoops on rulings. The reports both astonished and upset the justices, according to a book by Barrett McGurn, the court's former public informatio­n officer. It was unclear where O'Brien was getting his informatio­n, though then Chief Justice Warren Burger suspected someone in the court's print shop, who would have had access to the rulings.

It was similarly unclear who might have leaked the apparent draft to Politico or what their motivation­s might be. The news outlet said only that it had "received a copy of the draft opinion from a person familiar with the court's proceeding­s ... along with other details supporting the authentici­ty of the document."

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