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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Judicial accountability and Sandra Day O'Connor
Date: Fri, 8 Dec 2006 10:59:43 EST
From: Comnlawnet@aol.com
To: Comnlawnet@aol.com
SANDRA DAY O'CONNOR ATTACKS, INTIMIDATES CRITICS OF THE
JUDICIARY
http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=18367
Sandra Day O'Connor Connects Court Critics to Cookie Caper
by Jan LaRue, Esq.
Posted Dec 07, 2006
When Justice Sandra Day O’Connor retired from the Supreme
Court, we wished her well riding the range on her Arizona
ranch. So far, she’s been riding herd against “threats to
the judiciary” on the media and academia circuit. O’Connor
says in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, “we must be more
vigilant in making sure that criticism does not cross over
into intimidation.” Anybody feel the chill in the air?
Too many people who’ve been hog-tied to a “hate crime”
prosecution for merely expressing an opinion have learned
the hard way that one man’s criticism is another man’s
“intimidation.”
If O’Connor limited her concerns to cases in which someone
made a threat of physical harm to a judge, every reasonable
person would champion her cause. Such conduct is
indefensible.
The trouble is, each time O’Connor speaks or writes about
“threats,” she combines examples of physical threats with
examples of protected speech and political action directed
at “judicial activists.” You get the feeling you’re being
told to get outta Dodge.
When it comes to speech critical of judicial opinions,
dissenters on the Court often make the rest of us sound like
the Pillsbury Dough Boy. Apparently, O’Connor thinks it’s
only safe to blow off steam while robed in black.
Muddling serious, criminal acts with constitutionally
protected speech and conduct hurts, rather than helps, the
cause. And O’Connor’s assurance that she “does not mean, of
course, that it is somehow improper to criticize judicial
decisions” is hardly convincing.
She admits, “Judges can—and—sometimes render erroneous
decisions,” like we needed reminding. “That’s why appeals
are allowed to higher courts.” In other words, another judge
will have the final and only word. O’Connor reminds us that
“We are a nation of laws and not men or even women.”
But are we a nation of laws and not judges is what a whole
bunch of us would like to know.
In her op-ed, O’Connor describes a South Dakota ballot
initiative, the “Judicial Accountability Initiative Law,” (J.A.I.L.),
which received support from only 10% of voters as “unusually
venomous.”
The J.A.I.L. initiative is a silly idea, but since when did
the right to vote on something stupid become a “threat,”
especially when judges like O’Connor hold the
“constitutional” gavel?
It’s been O’Connor and her former band of brethren, who’ve
told us time and again, that even “venomous” ideas,
including “nonobscene” pornography, are protected by the
First Amendment: “All ideas having even the slightest
redeeming importance—unorthodox ideas, controversial ideas,
even ideas hateful to the prevailing climate of opinion—have
the full protection of the guarantees.” Roth v. United
States, 354 U.S. 476, 484-85 (1957).
They keep telling us that the only way we can be sure that
the political and religious speech the Founders were
concerned about remains securely protected is to protect
perverse gyrations with a moan track, otherwise known as
“expressive conduct.”
So, how is it that no matter how utterly guttural the porn
gets, it’s still cloaked in the First Amendment, but
political and religious speech is becoming thread-bare?
“Every member of the Supreme Court received a wonderful
package of home-baked cookies, and I don’t know why, (but)
the staff decided to analyze them,” the Fort Worth
Star-Telegram quoted O’Connor at the legal conference
November 10 in the Dallas area. “Each one contained enough
poison to kill the entire membership of the court.”
If you got a package of home-made cookies from a total
stranger with a letter tucked in stating, “I am going to
kill you. This is poisoned,” would you feel the need to send
them out for chemical analysis before you called the cops?
Apparently, those at the court who’ve been indoctrinated in
O’Connor and company’s “living” theory of the Constitution
really can’t take words at their face value, as in, “This is
poisoned.” Textualists would have simply called the cops.
The case in point involves Barbara Joan March, a 60-year-old
Connecticut woman, who pleaded guilty in March to 14 counts
of mailing injurious articles to several federal officials,
for which she received 15 years in prison. March’s lawyers
said she had a history of mental problems.
If you’re wondering why you’re just hearing about the March
Cookie Monster, it’s because nobody brought it up “until
O’Connor discussed it last week.” (Watch how plot to poison
justices was revealed -- 1:52.)
What O’Connor apparently didn’t tell her audience is that
March sent packages of poisoned cookies to several other
federal officials, including FBI Director Robert Mueller,
his deputy, the chief of naval operations, the Air Force
chief of staff and the chief of staff of the Army. Neither
CNN, the Star-Telegram, nor an article in the New York Times
mentions that she did.
Supreme Court spokeswoman Kathleen Arberg said the poison
packages never reached the chambers of the justices.
Including those relevant morsels would undermine O’Connor’s
case that judges are the only ones in danger and that the
danger is fueled by citizens who express criticism of
judges.
She has crossed the country warning that “spurious” attacks
on the judiciary—by politicians and other talking
heads—threaten judges’ doing their jobs without fear or
favor.
When federal appellate Judge Danny Boggs said at a Friday
legal conference at Las Colinas that physical assaults aimed
at judges have come mainly from “the deranged,” O’Connor
underscored the safety concerns. (Linda P. Campbell,
“Sitting Ducks on the Bench,” Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Nov.
10, 2006, p. B11.)
According to a study by the U.S. Secret Service, attacks on
judges are rare, usually personal, and are rarely
perpetrated by someone who has made a threat:
As a practical matter, an individual who is committed to
mounting an attack may be less inclined to threaten his or
her potential target directly, particularly if he or she
does not want to be stopped. Following the assassination of
Judge Daronco, U.S. District Judge Dudley H. Bowen Jr.,
spokesman for the Federal Judges Association, noted that the
circumstances of Daronco’s attack highlighted the “problem
that protection is now based on assessment of threat.
Unfortunately, people who are going to kill you ain’t going
to threaten you. They are [just] going to do it” (Blum 1988,
3). Indeed, none of the federal judicial officials murdered
between 1980 and the mid-1990s had been recently threatened
(Berkman 1994). Accordingly, the key threshold question in a
threat assessment is not Did the subject make a threat?
Rather, the question is, Has the subject engaged in recent
behavior that suggests that he or she is moving on a path
toward violence directed at a particular target or targets?
(Bryan Vossekuil, Randy Borum, Robert Fein and Maris Reddy,
“Preventing Targeted Violence against Judicial Officials and
Courts,” United States Secret Service, 2006.)
O’Connor’s continued carping against regular folks who
comment critically about judges is also inconsistent with
her concern for the right of judges to speak freely on legal
and political issues.
O’Connor said “she’s having second thoughts” about a 2002
Supreme Court 5-4 ruling, Minnesota v. White, in which she
wrote a concurring opinion expressing her “misgivings” about
partisan election of judges: “The State’s claim that it
needs to significantly restrict judges’ speech in order to
protect judicial impartiality is particularly troubling,”
she wrote. “If the State has a problem with judicial
impartiality, it is largely one the State brought upon
itself by continuing the practice of popularly electing
judges.” (Campbell, Star-Telegram).
O’Connor prefers that judges are appointed, not elected,
which in her mind means insulating them from political
accountability. What O’Connor seems to miss is that when the
people have a say in selecting judges, they are far more
likely to express their opinion about a judge’s rulings at
the ballot box, rather than having to rely on the soap box.
O’Connor also expressed her concerns about public
unhappiness with the courts in an interview with CNN: “I saw
increasing indicators of unhappiness with judges,” O’Connor
told CNN’s Jeffrey Toobin as part of the network’s “Broken
Government” series. “We heard all kinds of statements by
members of Congress, by state legislators. We saw
legislation introduced to somehow restrict or affect judges
at both the state and federal levels.” (Bill Mears,
“O’Connor: don’t call us activist judges,” Oct. 30, 2006).
Last March, O’Connor spoke at Georgetown University in
Washington, D.C. about her unhappiness with “right-wingers”:
Sandra Day O’Connor, a Republican-appointed judge who
retired last month after 24 years on the supreme court, has
said the US is in danger of edging towards dictatorship if
the party’s right-wingers continue to attack the judiciary.
In a strongly worded speech at Georgetown University,
reported by National Public Radio and the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin, Ms O’Connor took aim at Republican leaders whose
repeated denunciations of the courts for alleged liberal
bias could, she said, be contributing to a climate of
violence against judges.
Ms. O’Connor, nominated by Ronald Reagan as the first woman
supreme court justice, declared: “We must be ever-vigilant
against those who would strong-arm the judiciary.”
Such threats, Ms O’Connor said, “pose a direct threat to our
constitutional freedom”, and she told the lawyers in her
audience: “I want you to tune your ears to these attacks ...
You have an obligation to speak up. (Julian Borger, The
Guardian, “Former top judge says US risks edging near
dictatorship,” March 13, 2006.)
Notice that O’Connor is telling lawyers that they “have an
obligation to speak up” against “these attacks.” After all
her years on the bench excoriating speech discrimination
based on viewpoint, our circuit riding judge is lassoing one
viewpoint about judges while hailing the opposite viewpoint.
Logic compels me to ask why O’Connor fears that “rightwing
attacks” on the judiciary could “be contributing to a
climate of violence against judges,” but she doesn’t seem
concerned that her attacks on the “right-wing” may
contribute to attacks on them.
The federal “hate crimes” law, like the Pennsylvania law,
includes the act of intimidation, which is defined under
federal law as placing “a person in reasonable apprehension
of bodily harm to him- or herself or to another.”
A 17-year-old girl and a 72-year-old grandmother spent the
night in jail in the City of Brotherly love for singing
hymns and carrying signs with Bible verses. They and nine
others were charged with several felonies for engaging in
“intimidation” under the Pennsylvania “hate crime” law. I’m
sure they’d like to tell O’Connor a thing or two about real
intimidation. [
http://www.cwfa.org/articles/7945/LEGAL/judges/index.htm.]
Homosexuals want to silence right-wing criticism because
it’s “intimidating.” “The floor of our agenda is, of course,
the demise of America’s anti-gay industry and putting an
end, once and for all, to their use of us and our families
for cynical culture wars and political gains.” (Matt
Foreman, executive director, National Lesbian and Gay Task
Force, Kansas City, Missouri, Nov. 8-12).
O’Connor thinks right-wing criticism of judges is
intimidating. I wonder if she would consider words like
“demise” and “putting an end, once and for all” a tad
threatening if they were directed at the judiciary by a
“right-winger.”
O’Connor’s muddling of protected speech with criminal
conduct is a compelling reason for Congress not to expand
“hate crime” laws to include sexual orientation and gender
identity because homosexual activists will use them for
“putting an end, once and for all” to religious and
political speech of a different viewpoint.
And a request to Justice O’Connor: Some articles about
Arizona sunsets would be nice.
Ms. LaRue is chief counsel for Concerned Women for America.
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