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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hope Praytochange who wrote (525589)1/17/2004 4:19:35 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
End Run for Mr. Pickering

Sunday, January 18, 2004; Page B06

PRESIDENT BUSH'S decision Friday to install controversial judicial nominee Charles W. Pickering Sr. on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit using a recess appointment is yet another unwarranted escalation of the judicial nomination wars. We have lamented some of the attacks on Mr. Pickering, but his record as a federal trial judge is undistinguished and downright disturbing, and Senate Democrats are reasonable to oppose his nomination. Installing him using a constitutional end run around the Senate only inflames passions. The right path is to build consensus that nonpartisanship and excellence are the appropriate criteria for judicial selection.

The recess appointment -- the president's power to temporarily install federal officers without Senate confirmation -- is a uniquely bad instrument for federal judges. Judges are supposed to be politically independent. Yet Mr. Pickering will be a controversial nominee before the Senate as he considers cases and will lose his job in a year if he is not confirmed. Even his supporters should understand that he will be subject to the political pressures from which judges are supposed to be insulated.

We don't rule out the recess appointment in all circumstances. At times judges have commanded such uniform support that presidents have used the power to get them in office quickly, leaving the formality of confirmation for later. We supported, moreover, President Bill Clinton's lame-duck recess appointment to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit of Roger Gregory, who, like Mr. Pickering, was held up in the Senate. But there was a big difference: Mr. Gregory was not controversial. His nomination, in fact, was eventually resubmitted to the Senate by none other than President Bush. It was held up initially because of a long-standing dispute over appointments to that court, not because of any concerns about the nominee himself. There was reason to hope that Mr. Gregory would be confirmed -- as, indeed, he was. In this case, Mr. Bush has used a recess appointment for someone who cannot, on his merits, garner a vote of confidence from the Senate and who has no prospect of confirmation in the current Congress.

We don't support the filibuster of nominees, but the answer to Democratic obstruction cannot be the appointment or installation of temporary judges who get to hear a few cases over a few months, all the while looking over their shoulders at the senators who oppose them. The great damage the judicial nomination wars threaten over the long term is to erode judicial independence, to make judges constantly aware of how they might have to answer to the Senate for a given opinion. Using the recess appointment to place Mr. Pickering on the 5th Circuit has made that danger into a reality.



To: Hope Praytochange who wrote (525589)1/17/2004 4:20:12 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
WHAT DO YOU EXPECT WHEN THE CROOK CHENEY IS KILLING ANIMALS WITH SCALIA~?!?!?!?!?!?!!
IT"S INCREDIBLE.....They can get away with ANYTHING AT THIS POINT.....
Trip With Cheney Puts Ethics Spotlight on Scalia
Friends hunt ducks together, even as the justice is set to hear the vice president's case.

By David G. Savage, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — Vice President Dick Cheney and Supreme Court Justice
Antonin Scalia spent part of last week duck hunting together at a private camp
in southern Louisiana just three weeks after the court agreed to take up the
vice president's appeal in lawsuits over his handling of the administration's
energy task force.

While Scalia and Cheney are avid hunters and longtime friends, several
experts in legal ethics questioned the timing of their trip and said it raised
doubts about Scalia's ability to judge the case impartially.


But Scalia rejected that
concern Friday, saying,
"I do not think my
impartiality could
reasonably be
questioned."

Federal law says "any
justice or judge shall
disqualify himself in any
proceeding in which his
impartiality might be
questioned." For nearly three years, Cheney has
been fighting demands that he reveal whether he
met with energy industry officials, including
Kenneth L. Lay when he was chairman of Enron,
while he was formulating the president's energy policy.

A lower court ruled that Cheney must turn over documents detailing who met with his task force, but
on Dec. 15, the high court announced it would hear his appeal. The justices are due to hear arguments
in April in the case of "in re Richard B. Cheney."

In a written response to an inquiry from the Times about the hunting trip, Scalia said: "Cheney was
indeed among the party of about nine who hunted from the camp. Social contacts with high-level
executive officials (including cabinet officers) have never been thought improper for judges who may
have before them cases in which those people are involved in their official capacity, as opposed to their
personal capacity. For example, Supreme Court Justices are regularly invited to dine at the White
House, whether or not a suit seeking to compel or prevent certain presidential action is pending."

Cheney does not face a personal penalty in the pending lawsuits. He could not be forced to pay
damages, for example.

But the suits are not routine disputes about the powers of Cheney's office. Rather, the plaintiffs — the
Sierra Club and Judicial Watch — contend that Cheney and his staff violated an open-government
measure known as the Federal Advisory Committee Act by meeting behind closed doors with outside
lobbyists for the oil, gas, coal and nuclear industries.

Stephen Gillers, a New York University law professor, said Scalia should have skipped going hunting
with Cheney this year.

"A judge may have a friendship with a lawyer, and that's fine. But if the lawyer has a case before the
judge, they don't socialize until it's over. That shows a proper respect for maintaining the public's
confidence in the integrity of the process," said Gillers, who is an expert on legal ethics. "I think Justice
Scalia should have been cognizant of that and avoided contact with the vice president until this was
over. And this is not like a dinner with 25 or 30 people. This is a hunting trip where you are together for
a few days."


The pair arrived Jan. 5 on Gulfstream jets and were guests of Wallace Carline, the owner of Diamond
Services Corp., an oil services company in Amelia, La. The Associated Press in Morgan City, La.,
reported the trip on the day the vice president and his entourage departed.

"They asked us not to bring cameras out there," said Sheriff David Naquin, who serves St. Mary
Parish, about 90 miles southwest of New Orleans, referring to the group's request for privacy. "The
vice president and the justice were there for a relaxing trip, so we backed off."

While the local police were told about Cheney's trip shortly before his arrival, they were told to keep it
a secret, Naquin said.

"The justice had been here several times before. I'm kind of sorry Cheney picked that week because it
was a poor shooting week," Naquin said. "There weren't many ducks here, which is unusual for this
time of the year."

Scalia agreed with the sheriff's assessment.

"The duck hunting was lousy. Our host said that in 35 years of duck hunting on this lease, he had never
seen so few ducks," the justice said in his written response to the Times. "I did come back with a few
ducks, which tasted swell."

In October, Justice Scalia announced he would not participate in the court's handling of a case involving
the Pledge of Allegiance; that case is due to be heard in March. It stems from a U.S. 9th Circuit Court
of Appeals ruling two years ago that declared unconstitutional the use of the words "under God" in the
Pledge that is recited daily by millions of schoolchildren. These words were added to the Pledge by
Congress in 1954, and they amount to an official government promotion of religion, the appeals court
said.

Last year, Justice Scalia appeared to criticize that ruling in a speech at a Religious Freedom Day event
in Fredericksburg, Va. "We could eliminate 'under God' from the Pledge of Allegiance," he said. "That
could be democratically done."

But this is contrary to the wishes of most Americans, and it should not be done by judges or courts, he
added.

The California school district that was on the losing end in the Pledge case appealed to the Supreme
Court last summer.

Its lawyers urged the justices to restore the use of the words "under God."

While the appeal was pending, the Sacramento-area atheist who won the ruling in the 9th Circuit filed a
motion suggesting Scalia withdraw from the case. He cited news account of Scalia's speech and the
federal law mandating disqualifications whenever the judge's impartiality "might reasonably be
questioned." When the court announced it would hear the case, Scalia also announced he would not
participate.

Steven Lubet, who teaches judicial ethics at Northwestern University Law School, said he was not
convinced that Scalia must withdraw from the Cheney case but said the trip raised a number of
questions.

"It's not clear this requires disqualification, but there are not separate rules for longtime friends," he said.
"This is not like a lawyer going on a fishing trip with a judge. A lawyer is one step removed. Cheney is
the litigant in this case. The question is whether the justice's hunting partner did something wrong. And
the whole purpose of these rules is to ensure the appearance of impartiality in regard to the litigants
before the court."

The code of conduct for federal judges sets guidelines for members of the judiciary, but it does not set
clear-cut rules. A judge should "act at all times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the
integrity and impartiality of the judiciary," it says. "A judge should not allow family, social or other
relationships to influence judicial conduct or judgments," it says. Nor should a judge "permit others to
convey the impression that they are in a special position to influence the judge."

In the lower courts, litigants may ask a judge to step aside. And if the request is refused, they may
appeal to a higher court.

At the Supreme Court, the justices decide for themselves whether to step aside. On occasion, Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor has withdrawn from business cases because she owns stock in one of the
companies.

The justices have been reluctant to withdraw from a case simply because a former clerk is handling the
dispute, or their son or daughter works at a law firm participating in the case. Last year, for example,
Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist said he did not see a need to withdraw from a pending appeal in the
Microsoft antitrust case simply because his son, a lawyer, was working on a related case.