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Politics : The Judiciary

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From: TimF12/20/2010 4:07:51 PM
   of 817
 
Faux Concern for Judicial Ethics

Jonathan H. Adler • December 20, 2010 1:27 am

For many years Community Rights Council (CRC), a small, progressive non-profit organization, waged war on privately funded judicial education. According to CRC, allowing judges to attend expense-paid educational seminars sponsored by organizations such as the Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment (FREE) and George Mason University’s Law and Economics Center threatened the independence, impartiality and integrity of the federal judiciary. So, CRC hounded judges who attended these seminars, publishing reports and even filing ethics complaints. CRC liked to claim it was concerned about judicial ethics, but it was always clear the real driver was concern that some seminars were too solicitous of conservative or market-oriented views. The substance of their complaints was rebutted time and again, as in this article by Judge A. Raymond Randolph, but CRC was unrelenting, and eventually encouraged Senator Russell Feingold to introduce legislation that would effectively put an end to privately funded judicial education. (For more on this campaign, see here, here, and here.)

CRC metastasized into a new organization with a much broader mission – the Constitutional Accountability Center (CAC), but the campaign against judicial seminars continues. Earlier this month, former CRC executive director, now CAC President Doug Kendall renewed his attacks, calling upon three federal judges to resign from FREE’s Board of Directors, a Board on which I’ve served since 2008. This latest attack was prompted by the disclosure of an 2005 ethics opinion in response to a judge’s inquiry suggesting service on FREE’s Board could be improper for a federal judge.

We have been here before. CRC filed ethics complaints against the federal judges sitting on FREE’s board in 2004, prompting some to resign. Judge Danny Boggs of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit stood his ground, however, and CRC’s complaint against him was dismissed with a strongly worded opinion by Judge James Loken of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. Judge Loken found CRC’s charges meritless and suggested CRC’s attacks did more to undermine public confidence in a partial judiciary than any judge’s involvement with FREE. I wrote about this for NRO here.

The 2005 opinion cited by Kendall suggests it would be improper for a judge to serve on the Board of an organization if such service would “reflect adversely upon the judge’s impartiality.” This could occur if Board service caused a judge to be associated with an organization’s specific policy positions. The opinion concluded service on FREE’s Board could cause such a problem — though another contemporaneous evaluation concluded the precise opposite. As the opinion noted, judges have served on the boards of various policy organizations, such as the Urban League, that are far more active in policy debates than FREE has ever been. Like many non-profits, FREE has a philosophical orientation, but it does not get involved with contemporary policy debates, let alone advocacy or litigation. Judges also serve on the Board of Governors of the American Bar Association, which has taken explicit positions on issues such as abortion, gun control, and same-sex marriage. The most FREE has done in recent years is espouse a general philosophy, sponsor rigorous and well-regarded seminars, and distribute occasional op-eds by FREE staff. It’s hard to see how any of this could reflect adversely on a judge’s impartiality.

The aim of these attacks have always been to discourage judges from attending judicial education seminars at which they might be exposed to ideas Kendall and his colleagues dislike, if not shut down the seminars altogether. After numerous reports attesting to the value and substance of such seminars, and rejecting as unfounded negative ethical complaints, it’s time to leave such seminars well enough alone.

volokh.com

Patty Shundynide says:

The NYT also thinks that Justice Scalia shouldn’t be addressing members of Congress on the separation of powers, because apparently, not only will he be unable to modulate their “extreme point of view about the Constitution,” his own views might be malignly influenced by the “give and take” of the seminar...

volokh.com
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