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Tag: Sonia Sotomayor

  • How Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s latest book honors her mother’s legacy

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    How Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s latest book honors her mother’s legacy – CBS News










































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    Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor joins “CBS Mornings” to talk about her new children’s book “Just Shine!: How to Be a Better You.” The book is inspired by her mother Celina and features an audiobook narrated by Gloria Estefan.

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  • Suspected carjacker shot by U.S. Marshal outside home of Justice Sonia Sotomayor last week

    Suspected carjacker shot by U.S. Marshal outside home of Justice Sonia Sotomayor last week

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    Alec Baldwin’s trial starts, and other headlines


    Alec Baldwin’s trial starts, and other headlines

    02:24

    Two deputies opened fire on a suspected carjacker just outside the home of Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor last week.

    A deputy U.S. Marshal was at his post outside Sotomayor’s home last Friday, July 5, when at 1:17 a.m., Kentrell Flowers, 18, emerged from a silver minivan and — in an apparent attempt to carjack the officer’s Dodge Durango — allegedly began rapping a pistol against the vehicle, according to court documents and law enforcement officials. 

    The deputy fired from inside the vehicle, striking Flowers in the jaw. The suspect sustained a non-life-threatening injury and was transported to an area hospital. A second deputy also fired his service weapon, D.C. police confirmed, but did not hit Flowers. 

    The teen is now charged with armed carjacking, carrying a pistol without a license and possession of a large-capacity ammunition-feeding device. That last charge indicates the suspect is was allegedly carrying a magazine with more than 10 rounds — which is illegal in Washington, D.C. 

    D.C. Police are still investigating but say there’s no indication Flowers knew who he was attempting to carjack — or that he was near Justice Sotomayor’s home.

    The two U.S. Marshals were not identified.

    Carjackings have been waning and are down by 46% in the District this year, according to D.C. police. 

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  • The ethical quandary facing the Supreme Court (and America)

    The ethical quandary facing the Supreme Court (and America)

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    This past week, the Supreme Court handed down a series of major opinions: on the powers of federal agencies, on homeless encampments, and on the January 6 storming of the Capitol.

    But when it comes to the Supreme Court, Americans have some major opinions of their own – that our confidence in the Court, the main tool it has to enforce its authority, has eroded.

    It’s true that, according to Pew Research, our trust in the Supreme Court has never been lower.

    favorable-views-of-supreme-court-pew-research.jpg

    Pew Research


    Most Americans disagreed with the Court’s decisions on abortion and unlimited campaign donations, and then we got headlines about justices receiving gifts. 

    According to investigations by ProPublica, The New York Times and others, Justice Clarence Thomas has accepted more than $4 million worth of gifts from conservative billionaires, including destination vacations, private jet and helicopter flights, VIP passes to sports events, $150,000 in tuition money, and a $267,000 motor home.

    And then there was Justice Samuel Alito’s private-jet flight to a $1,000-a-night Alaskan fishing lodge, courtesy of conservative hedge fund owner Paul Singer, whose business later came before the Supreme Court at least 10 times.

    Now, it is legal for justices to receive gifts of meals and lodging, provided they publicly disclose the gifts on a financial disclosure form. But Alito and Thomas did not disclose these gifts, at least until they were made public. Both justices deny any wrongdoing.

    According to Harvard Law School professor and retired federal judge Nancy Gertner, “These are not errors. These are, ‘I have a right to do this, and you can’t stop me.'”

    Gertner notes that liberal judges have transgressed, too. Last year, Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s staff was caught aggressively pushing book sales at her appearances. But Gertner said, “This is so totally different. The dimensions of that don’t remotely compare with what Justice Thomas has done.”

    Then, there’s the business of the spouses. Clarence Thomas’ wife, Ginni, attended the January 6 Trump rally, and later texted Trump’s chief of staff Mark Meadows, encouraging Meadows to fight to overturn the election. Citing Trump allies’ claims of fraud, Ginni Thomas texted Meadows on November 19, 2020: “Make a plan. Release the Kraken and save us from the left taking America down.”

    Samuel Alito’s wife, Martha-Ann Bomgardner, made news, too, when The New York Times published a photo of an upside-down American flag flying outside Alito’s home in the days after the January 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol. Alito responded, “I had nothing whatsoever to do with the flying of that flag. … I asked my wife to take it down, but for several days, she refused.”

    To Judge Gertner, it’s obvious that both Alito and Thomas should recuse themselves from cases that involve the January 6 uprising. “The notion that one can say, ‘Well, it was my wife, wasn’t me,’ is flat-out absurd, and really casts doubt on his honesty,” she said.

    But Robert Ray, a former White House Independent Counsel who represented Trump during the former president’s first impeachment, said, “Oh now, come now! A justice’s spouse, just like anybody else, has a First Amendment right to be participating independently of the political process. My impression has been that what most people are really upset about isn’t so much the ethics of Supreme Court justices. What they really are concerned about is they don’t like the outcome of particular cases that they really, really, really care about.”

    Pogue asked Gertner, “It seems like what Alito is saying is, ‘You guys are just coming after me ’cause you don’t like my decisions.’ So, would the same thing apply if it were liberal judges?”

    “It did apply!” Gertner replied. “Abe Fortas resigned from the court.”

    In the 1960s, Justice Abe Fortas received $20,000 from a foundation. “He actually had returned the $20,000 several months later, [but] when that came out, there was immediate, bipartisan condemnation of it,” said Georgetown Law School professor Cliff Sloan, who has written two books about Supreme Court history. “This was such a controversy that it ultimately led to Justice Fortas resigning from the Supreme Court.”

    Here’s what the law says: “Any justice … shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.”

    But “reasonably” means one thing if you’re conservative, and something else if you’re liberal.

    Robert Ray said, “Would a reasonable person question the judge’s impartiality, and I think with regard to January 6th and Ginni Thomas’s activities, for example, I think the answer clearly is no.” Meanwhile, Judge Gertner said, “You have to recuse yourself, based on the appearance of partiality. And that’s a concern, not that you actually are partial, but that it will appear that way to the public that you serve.”

    So, who breaks the tie? Who’s the judge of the judges? Turns out, nobody! 

    Sloan said, “There is absolutely no enforcement mechanism for Supreme Court justices right now. It’s just left up to each justice’s own determination about his or her own propriety.” 

    But haven’t all nine justices now signed a new Supreme Court Code of Ethics? Yes, said Sloan: “They signed a Supreme Court Code of Ethics. And they made very clear that each justice will continue to make his or her own decision, and there is no other enforcement mechanism. And that is just a gaping fundamental hole with the entire structure.”

    There are plenty of ideas for addressing the Court’s trust problem. Maybe there should be term limits. Maybe there should be more than nine justices. Maybe an inspector general should oversee the Court.

    And of course, there’s always the nuclear option: Impeachment. Ray said, “If it’s really a problem, and nobody’s doing anything about it, there’s a clear constitutional remedy: It’s impeachment. That’s the remedy, period.”

    But any of those proposals would require both parties in Congress to work together, and that’s unlikely.

    And yet, according to Gertner, something has to change. “If the public doesn’t believe in the legitimacy of courts, then the fabric of the rule of law begins to become undone,” she said.

    In Sloan’s view, “It could lead to massive defiance of the courts and great kind of civil unrest.”

    But if Congress won’t take action, where does that leave us? Ray says, just trust them; they’ve gotten the message.  “People are paying attention now,” he said, “and I think the Supreme Court knows that people are paying attention. I can imagine that in every one of those nine households, this issue inside the family has been discussed about how to conduct themselves in the future to avoid the problem.”

    But Sloan believes that self-policing will never be enough, noting, “James Madison, in ‘The Federalist Papers,’ famously said that if men were angels, government would not be necessary. And I would hope that somehow, everybody could step back from the current controversies, to restore respect and trust in the Supreme Court.”

         
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    Story produced by Gabriel Falcon. Editor: Ed Givnish. 

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  • How did each Supreme Court justice vote in today’s student loan forgiveness ruling? Here’s a breakdown

    How did each Supreme Court justice vote in today’s student loan forgiveness ruling? Here’s a breakdown

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    The Supreme Court decided 6-3 that the Biden administration does not have the authority to wipe out nearly half-a-trillion dollars in student debt.

    The decision denies relief to about 40 million Americans who stood to have up to $20,000 in student debt erased by the plan using the HEROES Act. 

    There were actually two student loan forgiveness decisions made on Friday: The first was about whether two private citizens had the right to challenge the plan. The court unanimously said that the pair did not have standing, and their challenge was thrown out. 

    However, in the case where the decision to strike down the forgiveness plan was made, the court said that Missouri — one of six states that challenged the plan — did have legal standing. This allowed the court to consider whether the secretary of education could use the HEROES Act to forgive student loan debt. 

    Here’s how the court voted on that case. 

    Supreme Court justices who voted against student loan forgiveness

    The Supreme Court’s decision fell along ideological lines, much like Thursday’s decision to end race-based affirmative action

    Chief Justice John Roberts voted against the student loan forgiveness plan and delivered the majority opinion, saying that U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona has the authority to “waive or modify” the HEROES Act, but not “rewrite that statute from the ground up.” 

    “The Secretary’s comprehensive debt cancellation plan cannot fairly be called a waiver—it not only nullifies existing provisions, but augments and expands them dramatically. It cannot be mere modification, because it constitutes ‘effectively the introduction of a whole new regime,'” Roberts wrote. 

    Associate Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett voted with Roberts.

    Barrett filed a concurring opinion, writing that the court “can uphold the Secretary of Education’s loan cancellation program only if he points to ‘clear congressional authorization’ for it.” 

    Supreme Court justices who voted to uphold student loan forgiveness

    The court’s three liberal voices — Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson — all opposed the decision. Kagan filed a dissent where she called the decision to take up the case, let alone vote on it, an “overreach.” 

    “The plaintiffs in this case are six States that have no personal stake in the Secretary’s loan forgiveness plan,” Kagan wrote. “They are classic ideological plaintiffs: They think the plan a very bad idea, but they are no worse off because the Secretary differs. In giving those States a forum — in adjudicating their complaint — the Court forgets its proper role. The Court acts as though it is an arbiter of political and policy disputes, rather than of cases and controversies.”

    In the dissent, Kagan wrote that Cardona acted within the “broad authority” provided by the HEROES Act, saying that the decision to alter usual rules “fits comfortably within” the parameters set by the statute. 

    Melissa Quinn contributed to this report.

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  • Jackson, in dissent, issues first Supreme Court opinion

    Jackson, in dissent, issues first Supreme Court opinion

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    FILE – Associate Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson stands as she and members of the Supreme Court pose for a new group portrait following her addition, at the Supreme Court building in Washington, Oct. 7, 2022. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File )DCSA122

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  • Buttigieg says Supreme Court case was designed for ‘clear purpose of chipping away’ at LGBTQ equality | CNN Politics

    Buttigieg says Supreme Court case was designed for ‘clear purpose of chipping away’ at LGBTQ equality | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Sunday slammed the Supreme Court’s ruling in favor of a Christian web designer in Colorado who refuses to create websites to celebrate same-sex weddings out of religious objections, saying the case was designed “for the clear purpose of chipping away” at LGBTQ equality.

    “It’s very revealing that there’s no evidence that this web designer was ever even approached by anyone asking for a website for a same-sex wedding,” Buttigieg, the first out Cabinet secretary confirmed by the Senate, told CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union.”

    The Supreme Court’s conservative majority, in a 6-3 opinion, ruled Friday for Lorie Smith, the Colorado web designer, on free speech grounds, with Justice Neil Gorsuch writing, “All manner of speech – from ‘pictures, films, paintings, drawings, and engravings,’ to ‘oral utterance and the printed word’ – qualify for the First Amendment’s protections.”

    Smith said in court filings that a man had inquired about her services for his same-sex wedding. But as CNN previously reported, the man in question says that he never reached out to Smith – and that he’s straight and married to a woman.

    “There’s something in common between this Supreme Court ruling and what we’re seeing happening in state legislatures across the country, which is kind of a solution looking for a problem,” Buttigieg said Sunday. “In other words, sending these kinds of things to the courts and sending these kinds of things to state legislatures for the clear purpose of chipping away at the equality and the rights that have so recently been won in the LGBTQ+ community.”

    Two contenders for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination took a different stance on the Supreme Court ruling in separate interviews Sunday on “State of the Union.”

    Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said the decision “protects all of our First Amendment rights,” adding that “the government doesn’t have the right to tell a business the nature of how they need to use their expressive abilities.”

    Former Texas Rep. Will Hurd acknowledged that the ruling made him “uncomfortable because we’re protecting speech that I don’t agree with. And I don’t agree with an anti-LGBTQ sentiment.”

    “But we have to be protecting the speech even if we don’t like or agree with the speech. That’s a foundational element in our country,” Hurd said.

    In her dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor suggested that the court’s decision in the Colorado case would be more far-reaching.

    “The decision’s logic cannot be limited to discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity,” she wrote.

    “The decision threatens to balkanize the market and to allow the exclusion of other groups from many services,” Sotomayor said, adding that “a website designer could equally refuse to create a wedding website for an interracial couple, for example.”

    Christie pushed back Sunday on that characterization.

    “What Sonia Sotomayor … was saying in her opinion was that … this decision could be used to deny people of LGBTQ backgrounds the ability to access this business. That’s simply not true,” he told Bash.

    “They can access this business. They just can’t force the owner to do something that is against her personal religious beliefs. And so, if they want to come in and they want a web design for their business, they want a web design for a charity, they want a web design for anything else that they’re doing, they could certainly do that,” he added.

    Meanwhile, Buttigieg was asked about a recent video shared by a campaign Twitter account for Ron DeSantis’ 2024 presidential bid that attacked rival Donald Trump over his past promises to protect LGBTQ rights and highlighted measures championed by the Florida governor to curb such protections.

    After cautioning that he was “going to choose my words carefully, partly because I’m appearing as secretary, so I can’t talk about campaigns,” Buttigieg said the bigger issue when sees such videos was: “Who are you trying to help? Who are you trying to make better off?”

    “I just don’t understand the mentality of somebody who gets up in the morning thinking that he’s going to prove his worth by competing over who can make life hardest for a hard-hit community that is already so vulnerable in America,” the secretary said.

    The DeSantis campaign has come under criticism for marking the end of Pride Month by re-posting the video from the DeSantis War Room Twitter account. Both Christie and Hurd on Sunday also criticized the sharing of the video.

    In response to the online criticism, Christina Pushaw, the rapid response director for the DeSantis campaign, said Pride Month was “unnecessary, divisive, pandering.”

    “Opposing the federal recognition of ‘Pride Month’ isn’t homophobic,” Pushaw said in a tweet. “We wouldn’t support a month to celebrate straight people for sexual orientation, either.”

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